What is projected to happen in the 2021 NBA draft lottery?
This will be the third lottery since the NBA flattened the odds, which introduced more uncertainty at the top of the draft order. Last season, the Minnesota Timberwolves won the lottery with the league’s third-worst record and the Charlotte Hornets jumped up to No. 3 after finishing with the ninth-worst record.
There’s a new wrinkle to the tank race this season: teams that finish No. 9 or No. 10 in each conference will make the playoff play-in round. That gives more teams incentive to remain competitive through the end of the regular season rather than trying to help their lottery odds.
With some of the top prospects taking the court in the NCAA tournament and the NBA trade deadline approaching, here’s what you need to know about the most likely lottery winners and the traded picks at stake. We’ll use ESPN’s revamped Basketball Power Index (BPI) for projections.
MORE: Top draft prospects in the NCAA tournament
This year’s lottery odds
In 2019, the NBA began drawing the top four selections in the lottery with new odds for each slot. A full breakdown of those changes can be found here, but these are the key things to know:
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The teams with the three worst records have the same odds for both the No. 1 pick (14%) and staying in the top four (52%).
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The team with the worst record has a 47.9% chance to fall to No. 5.
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Teams in slots 9 through 6 have a 20-37% chance of jumping into the top five. Previously, that range was 6-22%.
Here’s this season’s current lottery odds via BPI, including each team’s play-in chances.
Minnesota Timberwolves | Expected position: 3.8
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Top pick: 13.9%
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Top three: 40.0%
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Top five: 90.5%
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Make play-in:
Houston Rockets | Expected position: 4.3
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Top pick: 12.6%
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Top three: 36.9%
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Top five: 66.0%
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Make play-in:
Detroit Pistons | Expected position: 4.4
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Top pick: 12.8%
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Top three: 36.1%
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Top five: 62.6%
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Make play-in: 0.3%
Cleveland Cavaliers | Expected position: 4.4
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Top pick: 12.5%
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Top three: 36.5%
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Top five: 63.2%
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Make play-in: 0.4%
Orlando Magic | Expected position: 4.9
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Top pick: 11.1%
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Top three: 33.3%
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Top five: 52.9%
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Make play-in: 2.0%
Washington Wizards | Expected position: 6.6
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Top pick: 7.7%
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Top three: 23.3%
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Top five: 33.1%
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Make play-in: 17.7%
Oklahoma City Thunder | Expected position: 6.8
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Top pick: 7.2%
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Top three: 22.2%
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Top five: 31.5%
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Make play-in: 7.1%
Sacramento Kings | Expected position: 8.5
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Top pick: 5.1%
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Top three: 16.0%
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Top five: 22.4%
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Make play-in: 14.0%
New York Knicks | Expected position: 9.3
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Top pick: 4.0%
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Top three: 12.3%
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Top five: 17.2%
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Make play-in: 45.9%
Chicago Bulls | Expected position: 10.1
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Top pick: 3.3%
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Top three: 10.2%
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Top five: 14.2%
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Make play-in: 59.3%
Memphis Grizzlies | Expected position: 10.6
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Top pick: 2.9%
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Top three: 9.7%
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Top five: 13.6%
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Make play-in: 40.1%
Atlanta Hawks | Expected position: 12.5
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Top pick: 1.5%
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Top three: 5.1%
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Top five: 7.2%
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Make play-in: 78.4%
San Antonio Spurs | Expected position: 12.7
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Top pick: 1.7%
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Top three: 5.7%
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Top five: 7.9%
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Make play-in: 67.9%
New Orleans Pelicans | Expected position: 12.8
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Top pick: 1.6%
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Top three: 5.3%
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Top five: 7.4%
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Make play-in: 69.7%
Indiana Pacers | Expected position: 13.5
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Top pick: 1.2%
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Top three: 3.6%
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Top five: 5.0%
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Make play-in: 79.1%
The top prospects
This lottery is all about the top five — a rare level of depth.
“The top five of this class is pretty spectacular — definitely one of the best I’ve seen in my nearly 20 years of covering the draft,” ESPN draft expert Jonathan Givony wrote recently. “I have to think any team would be happy landing anywhere in this range.”
Here are those top five prospects, per scouting and inside intel from Givony and Mike Schmitz:
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Oklahoma State guard Cade Cunningham: Establishing a tier of his own as the consensus No. 1 overall prospect, with Schmitz describing his game as a Luka Doncic-Jayson Tatum hybrid with shades of Khris Middleton
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USC center Evan Mobley: His defensive versatility, shooting potential and ability to handle and pass at 7 feet give him a ceiling that resembles something between Anthony Davis and Chris Bosh
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G League Ignite guard Jalen Green: An exciting perimeter shot creator who could lead the league in scoring with his off-the-dribble shot-making and dynamic abilities at 6-foot-6
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G League Ignite forward Jonathan Kuminga: The most physically impressive prospect in the draft — strong, quick and explosive at 6-foot-8 and 225 pounds with a 7-foot wingspan — with shot-creation potential
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Gonzaga guard Jalen Suggs: The best player on the best team in the country thanks to his toughness and all-around feel for the game
No team will enter the lottery with a better than 14% chance to land the No. 1 pick and the opportunity to draft Cunningham, but — pending trade obligations — the team that finishes with the worst record in the league is guaranteed to have an opening to pick one of these five prospects. Every other franchise will be hoping on the ping pong balls.
The traded picks
This loaded draft also features some key traded first-round picks to monitor heading into the deadline and the rest of the season. Here’s a rundown.
Wolves-Warriors
Minnesota will send its pick to Golden State if the selection falls outside of the top three. If the pick doesn’t convey this season, it becomes unprotected next year.
The Wolves are currently projected to finish with the league’s worst-record, which would give them a 40% chance of staying in the top three and keeping their pick, but a 60% chance of sending the Warriors pick No. 4 or No. 5 and a chance to draft one of the star prospects.
Thunder-Rockets
OKC will receive the two most favorable first-rounders between its own pick, Houston’s pick and Miami’s pick, but the Houston pick is top-four protected. If Houston’s pick falls within the top four, then OKC receives its own first-rounder as well as Miami’s.
This one is going to be close. As long as the Rockets finish with a bottom-three record — projected as a likely outcome at this point — they will have a 52% chance of landing in the top four via the lottery drawing. A winning streak that vaults them out of the bottom three would start to hurt those odds.
In an unlikely yet plausible scenario, the rebuilding Thunder could end up with Cunningham at No. 1 via their own pick and the last remaining star prospect from the top five via the Rockets.
Mavs-Knicks
The Mavericks owe the Knicks their first-rounder unprotected this season. After a shaky start, Dallas has climbed up to No. 8 in the West with an 84.9% chance of making the playoffs, according to BPI projections.
It looks unlikely that this pick ends up in the lottery, but it’s still one to monitor. Given the unpredictable nature of this season and the flattened odds, a losing streak or a play-in dud that drops the Mavericks down the standings could turn into a valuable high-lottery pick for New York.