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Get to Know: Caleb Wilson, North Carolina

By Thomson Reuters Jun 22, 2026 | 7:17 PM

Field Level Media’s Ethan Ward breaks down the top prospects in the 2026 NBA Draft.

Caleb Wilson, North Carolina

The Skinny: Easily among the top prospects in this class as a can’t-miss frontcourt presence and arguably the best two-way prospect in the 2026 NBA Draft. Wilson makes ​his basketball living in every imaginable way and should only improve with physical maturity and ‌a professional weightroom and nutrition plan. He’s 6-foot-10 with a few additional inches to his wingspan to add to his NBA-ready qualities.

Strengths: Boasts striking measurables accompanied by incendiary athleticism and an unrelenting motor that he puts to great use on both sides of the ball. Eye-catching verticality at the cylinder. Drilled an absurd 49 percent of his 51 mid-range jumpers outside of ‌14 feet, ​per Draft Ballr. In particular, has a buttery turnaround jumper on ⁠post-ups. Palpable feel as a high-post ⁠facilitator with great accuracy on leads passes, especially in high-low sequences. Has a knack for sealing on the interior to create an easy passing angle. Punishes mismatches by rising above smaller opponents on jumpers. Covers considerable ground with the ball on halfcourt straight-line drives and while sprint dribbling in the ​open floor. Relentlessly attacks defenders head on and embraces contact. Adept at screeching to a halt on his second step. Drew almost seven fouls per 36 minutes which ranked 99th percentile among bigs, per CBB ⁠Analytics. High work rate on the offensive and defensive glass. ⁠Astronomical defensive upside as a rangy ball hawk. Elite defensive playmaking (stocks per 36 ​minutes and a 7.2 “stock” percentage) while avoiding fouls. Active in defensive passing lanes. Relishes physicality as a defender with ​bump-check of cutters with intent. Terrific scramble defender and secondary contester. First-rate mobility at ‌his size. Played stretches at the front of a full court press and held his own. Projects as a multi-positional stopper at the next level who can moonlight as a small-ball five.

Negatives: Converted less than 50 percent of his layups and lacks a healthy equilibrium between power and finesse as a finisher. Limited track record ⁠as a long-range shooter is a cause for concern. A 25.9 percent 3-point shooter on 27 total attempts and 71.3 percent free throw shooter. Guide hand has too much bearing on the flight of the ball when ⁠launching from distance. Relatively movable with ‌such a slender build (210 pounds). Clear need to add mass and bulk ⁠to avoid being dislodged down low by NBA bigs. Dimes primarily stemmed from ​set plays ‌rather than ad lib individual offense. Has a loose handle at times ​that disrupts his ⁠downhill momentum. Defensive consistency needs improvement. Over-exuberant at times in pursuit of the ball. Sometimes haphazard rotationally, floating without any real directive.

Best fit: Chicago Bulls

No matter what size and shape the Bulls take in their latest rebuild, Wilson can be a fit because of his extreme versatility and skill. A centerpiece type of talent with all the trimmings and upside, Wilson would likely be in the conversation as the No. 1 pick if not ​for durability questions.

–Field Level Media