Arizona Forward Koa Peat Keeps Name in NBA Draft as First-Round Projection Draws NBA Interest

Arizona Wildcats forward Koa Peat is staying in the 2026 NBA Draft, forgoing his remaining college eligibility after a freshman season that positioned him as a projected first-round selection. Sources told ESPN on Wednesday that Peat, who averaged double figures during his debut campaign in Tucson, has elected to pursue the professional route rather than test the draft waters with a return to Arizona in mind.
The decision arrives as NBA teams conduct final evaluations of college prospects ahead of the June draft. Peat's projection places him among the first 30 picks, a range that carries guaranteed rookie-scale contracts and the security that comes with being drafted rather than pursuing a free-agent path. For a player who turned 19 during the college season, the financial and developmental calculus of entering now differs meaningfully from the more patient approach increasingly favored by top collegiate programs.
What Peat Leaves Behind
Peat's lone season with the Wildcats showed enough to convince NBA scouts that hisTools are better evaluated through professional development than a second collegiate year. His offensive repertoire included scoring from multiple levels, while his rebounding and defensive instincts drew specific mention in scouting assessments. The sources ESPN cited did not elaborate on which teams have shown the strongest interest, but first-round projections typically reflect dialogue that has progressed beyond informal inquiry.
Arizona, under head coach Tommy Lloyd, has built a reputation for developing players capable of contributing at the NBA level. The Wildcats' recent track record includes multiple draft picks who arrived as high school recruits and departed as professionals. Peat's early departure continues that pattern, though it also raises questions about the program's ability to retain one-and-done talent for multiple seasons of collegiate competition.
The First-Round calculus
NBA teams holding first-round picks face a specific set of pressures that shape how they value prospects like Peat. A first-round selection obligates a guaranteed contract, typically two seasons with team options for a third and fourth. That guarantee means teams conduct more rigorous due diligence on character, medical history, and scheme fit than they apply to second-round picks, who can be signed to non-guaranteed deals or Summer League invitations.
Peat's decision to keep his name in the draft eliminates the ambiguity that sometimes surrounds borderline first-round prospects who submit paperwork to test the process before ultimately withdrawing. Teams picking in the late first round will now factor Peat's commitment into their board calculations, potentially moving him up or down depending on how their specific roster needs align with his skill set.
The Broader Draft Landscape
The 2026 draft class features several high-profile early entrants, though the specific landscape varies year to year based on which upperclassmen declare and which top recruits reclassify or reclassify to delay their entry. Peat's decision places him in a cohort of players who bypassed the option of returning for additional college development in favor of the professional apprenticeship model that the NBA G League and international leagues increasingly offer as an alternative pathway.
For players in Peat's age range, the calculus is not straightforward. Staying in college offers developmental infrastructure, alumni networks, and the possibility of improved draft positioning through a stronger statistical season. Entering the draft offers immediate earning potential, professional coaching, and the chance to begin accumulating service time toward free agency. Both paths have produced successful NBA careers; the choice reflects individual circumstances, financial need, and self-assessment of readiness.
What Remains Uncertain
The ESPN reporting did not specify which NBA teams have expressed the strongest interest in Peat or the specific range of his projected draft position beyond the first round general designation. The sources cited did not address whether Peat had received feedback from the NBA's Draft Combine or individual team workouts that influenced his decision. His agency representation and family communication around the choice also remain outside the public record at this time.
NBA teams conduct private workouts and medical evaluations that remain confidential until draft night. The specificity of Peat's decision to stay in the draft suggests that feedback from those private channels was sufficiently encouraging to remove the option of a return from consideration. Without confirmation of which teams engaged most seriously, the exact draft range where teams view him remains a projection rather than a confirmed consensus.
This desk covers NBA and college basketball developments as they affect draft-eligible players and professional pathways. The Peat decision is the second significant early-entry announcement in the 2026 class to generate first-round projection coverage this cycle.