Home US SportsNBA Knicks 2026 NBA Mock Draft Roundup: Is New York on the hunt for size?

Knicks 2026 NBA Mock Draft Roundup: Is New York on the hunt for size?

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The Knicks just finished off a season in which they ended a 53-year long championship drought by hoisting the Larry O’Brian Trophy after beating the San Antonio Spurs, 4-1.

They’ll now look to defend their title next year and will do so by adding some young talent to the roster in this year’s NBA Draft. New York owns the No. 24 pick, as well as the No. 31 pick (via the Washington Wizards) and the No. 55 pick.

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So, here’s what the draft experts have the Knicks doing in the first round.

Isaac Trotter, CBS Sports

No. 24: PF Karim Lopez, Mexico

Lopez possesses a powerful, yoked frame and projects as a big-bodied forward who can, in theory, be a three-and-D threat. Both the jumper and the defense are a work in progress, but the good thing for the Knicks is that they have time to wait to see if the potential can turn into production. New York would be a strong landing spot because Lopez wouldn’t be overextended.

Zach Buckley, Bleacher Report

No. 24: C Chris Cenac Jr., Houston

The Knicks hadn’t even enjoyed their championship parade yet when team governor James Dolan warned of possible spending restrictions this summer. If Mitchell Robinson didn’t feel like a major flight risk in the afterglow of that title run, the bouncy big fella sure feels like one now.

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Frontcourt reinforcements might be a must here, in other words, and Cenac could intrigue for the possibility of filling multiple roles within it. He lacks polish (with his skills and his approach), but he has big man size and swingman fluidity, so with the right amount of patience, he could handle minutes at the 4 and the 5 with ease.

Bryan Kalbrosky, USA Today

No. 24: G Ebuka Okorie, Stanford

The Knicks have prioritized scrappy, high-motor players capable of winning the possession battle through rebounds and turnovers like Stanford freshman Ebuka Okorie.

The first-team All-ACC guard was a day-one starter in the NCAA who is potentially capable of earning rotation minutes for a team like the 76ers. He averaged 23.2 points per game, recording 40 points against conference rival Virginia Tech and seven other games with at least 30 points. Okorie has earned serious first-round buzz and should intrigue teams in this range, who may like the high assist-to-turnover ratio he recorded (2.3) last season.

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Jeremy Woo, ESPN

No. 24: C Henri Veesaar, North Carolina

Veesaar’s perimeter shooting and sheer size should give him a path to rotation minutes relatively early and have put him in play for first-round teams that need depth at center. The Knicks are a team that probably will look at bigs, whether at this spot or later, with Robinson a pending free agent.

The Knicks also have the No. 31 pick, giving them bookend picks on this next range of the draft and a pathway to adding two potential rotation players in a cost-effective way — a highly important task as they work to sustain a contending roster.

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Kevin O’Connor, Yahoo! Sports

No. 24: F Koa Peat, Arizona

Congratulations to Knicks fans for winning the championship! Robinson grabbed a clutch offensive rebound in the closing moments of the game, but he’s a free agent this offseason so the Knicks may need to replace him. Peat’s bloodline is so loaded with offensive linemen that it’s almost funny he ended up playing basketball. His father played nine NFL seasons. His uncle was a Pro Bowl tackle. Two brothers played college ball on the line. And you can absolutely see it in how he plays: powerful, physical, relentless, and it genuinely takes something special to stop him from getting to where he wants to go.

He opened the season with a 30-point game against defending champion Florida and backed it up as one of Arizona’s best players all year on its way to the Final Four. Since Peat can’t shoot yet, it’ll be important that he’s paired with a floor-spacing center like Karl-Anthony Towns. Or he could serve as a small-ball center in switchable lineups. So even though Peat entered the year with top-10 hopes, it might be a blessing in disguise for him to fall to the end of the first round.

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