NBA
Which College Has the Most First-Round Draft Picks in NBA History?
The 2024 NBA draft is right around the corner.
While the ’24 draft class isn’t as highly touted as years past—there is no generational talent like San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama this year, although the two top projected picks Zaccharie Risacher and Alexandre Sarr are also from France—there are a few prospects from the typical schools that are often producing first-round talents.
Kentucky guard Reed Sheppard leads that list, as he likely will be the top prospect off the board from a collegiate blue blood program. Other blue-blood products expected to go in the first round are former UConn teammates Stephon Castle and Donovan Clingan as well as Duke guard Jared McCain.
Entering the 2024 draft, Kentucky has seen an NBA-best 58 players taken in the first round in program history. That is three more than the Blue Devils (55) in second place, and the rival North Carolina (53) in third.
Forty of the Wildcats’ 58 first-round picks played for coach John Calipari over his dominant 15-year run on Kentucky’s sidelines from 2009 to ’24. The Calipari era started with a bang, as the Wildcats produced five first-round picks after his first year with the Wildcats in 2010—guard John Wall, forward DeMarcus Cousins, forward Patrick Patterson, guard Eric Bledsoe and forward Daniel Orton.
Sheppard and former Wildcats teammate Rob Dillingham are expected to be taken in the first round on June 17 to round out Calipari’s stint in Lexington, as the 65-year-old left Kentucky for Arkansas in April.
The Wildcats have seen at least one player be selected in the first round of the NBA draft in 14 straight years, dating back to 2010. Over half of Duke’s 55 first-round picks—29 to be exact—have come since 2009.
RANK |
COLLEGE |
FIRST-ROUND PICKS |
MOST RECENT FIRST-ROUND PICK |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Kentucky |
58 |
Carson Wallace (2023) |
2 |
Duke |
55 |
Dereck Lively II and Dariq Whitehead (2023) |
3 |
North Carolina |
53 |
Day’Ron Sharpe (2021) |
4 |
UCLA |
41 |
Jaime Jaquez Jr. (2023) |
5 |
Kansas |
36 |
Gradey Dick (2023) |
6 |
Michigan |
30 |
Jett Howard and Kobe Bufkin (2023) |
7 |
Indiana |
28 |
Jalen Hood-Schifino (2023) |
8 |
Arizona |
26 |
Bennedict Mathurin and Dalen Terry (2022) |
9 |
Ohio State |
25 |
Brice Sensabaugh (2023) |
t-10 |
Louisville |
24 |
Donovan Mitchell (2017) |
t-10 |
Syracuse |
24 |
Tyler Lydon (2017) |
12 |
UConn |
22 |
Jordan Hawkins (2023) |
t-13 |
Michigan State |
21 |
Miles Bridges and Jaren Jackson Jr. (2018) |
t-13 |
Notre Dame |
21 |
Blake Wesley (2022) |
15 |
Maryland |
20 |
Jalen Smith (2020) |
t-16 |
Georgia Tech |
19 |
Josh Okogie (2018) |
t-16 |
Texas |
19 |
Kai Jones (2021) |
t-16 |
Alabama |
19 |
Brandon Miller and Noah Clowney (2023) |
t-19 |
Tennessee |
17 |
Keon Johnson and Jaden Springer (2021) |
t-19 |
LSU |
17 |
Tari Eason (2022) |
t-21 |
NC State |
16 |
Dennis Smith (2017) |
t-21 |
Minnesota |
16 |
Kris Humphries (2004) |
t-21 |
St. John’s (NY) |
16 |
Maurice Harkless (2012) |