Mikel Brown Jr. selected by Brooklyn Nets with No. 6 pick in 2026 NBA Draft

Mikel Brown Jr. selected by Brooklyn Nets with No. 6 pick in 2026 NBA Draft


The Athletic has live coverage of the 2026 NBA Draft.

The Brooklyn Nets selected Mike Brown Jr. with the No. 6 pick on Tuesday in the NBA Draft.

What makes Brown so special is the potential combination of shooting and passing ability. He has an elite intersection of arguably the two most important skills in the modern NBA. As soon as he gets an outlet pass or grabs a rebound, he immediately gets his eyes up to look for early hit-aheads. He plays quickly and is accurate on his hit-aheads as he always seems to hit guys in stride. Brown plays a team-friendly game.

His shot opens the rest of his game. At the FIBA Under-19 World Cup last summer, he shot 47.6 percent on 3-point shots (averaging six attempts per game). In six tracked games on Synergy for DME Academy, he shot 37 percent on more than 11 3-point attempts per game, many of which were of the completely absurd pull-up variety. Brown has no conscience when it comes to pulling up from distance.

But a lack of strength permeates Brown’s game more than you’d hope. He came in at the combine at 190 pounds, but doesn’t really play that heavily and needs to fill out his frame with more muscle — that’s arguably his biggest area for improvement. Brown doesn’t have the power aspect to his game that a player needs to be successful in the highest-leverage moments right now. You see the lack of strength most in his defensive game. Brown is a poor defender and t ends to be contact-averse on defense. He can stay in front of his man because he has quick, fluid feet, but he isn’t strong enough to absorb contact through his chest on drives and tends to get pushed backward.

Sam Vecenie’s draft guide summary

Why Mikel Brown Jr. is one of the highest upside guards in the 2026 NBA Draft

Sam Vecenie

The pitch with Brown is simple. In today’s NBA, there might not be a more important intersection of skills than shooting and passing ability. Brown has those skills in a big way. He’s a monster 3-point shooter who hits them at volume, and he is a tremendous live-dribble passer who reads the court well and makes good decisions while also being able to separate in ball screens. With those two skills alone, it sets him up for a tremendous amount of success.

Brown needs to keep taking steps with his frame, however. On-ball players this skinny who have entered the NBA recently have struggled. The NBA is a man’s league. There’s no other way to put it. Brown is going to have to keep filling out now that he has grown to 6 feet 4. He is set to be one of the most interesting players to evaluate this cycle. On one hand, I tend to be hard on smaller guards — and despite Brown’s height, he plays like a smaller guard. On the other hand, I tend to value skill, high IQ and shooting ability as much as anything. Brown possesses those skills in an immense quantity for such a young player.

John Hollinger’s analysis

Brown played as an on-ball guard at Louisville but was wracked by a massive turnover rate. However, I think he has a backstop as a strong 3-and-D guy. While his defense wasn’t consistent, the tape showed he has a really good first slide that consistently cut off an opponent’s first move, and he’s good in passing lanes.

Offensively, he has a very good left hand around the rim, but his other game inside the paint needs work; in addition to the massive turnover rate, he only shot 47.4 percent on 2s in ACC play.

However, the shooting piece is perhaps getting underrated. Brown made 38.1 percent from 3 in conference play on nearly the highest 3-point volume of any player in this draft cycle, and he shot 82.2 percent from the line. Watching his shooting form makes it clear that wasn’t a fluke; this guy can stroke it. That piece of his game figures to be a weapon regardless of whether he can be a high-usage on-ball player at the next level.

David Aldridge’s draft confidential

College head coach No. 1 (his team played Louisville): He’s big-time. He was always really, really good and knew how to play the position. But between his junior and senior year (of high school), he grew. That’s the big thing. And all of a sudden, athleticism popped in. That took his whole thing to another level. Last year, (at the U.S. men’s World Cup Under-19), the two best guys were A.J. (Dybantsa) and him. He was magical, as a facilitator. He can score it, he can shoot it, he can get to the rim and finish on top of you. … Louisville runs more pattern stuff, more pattern sets. They did allow him to (iso) some. And when he played, if they were in tight games, down the stretch, they put him in spread ball screen and let him go. I’ve seen him hold up (defensively) OK. This year, it was hit or miss. When he wants to, because he’s long and athletic, and he can really move and slide his feet, so when he wants to, yeah, he can. And I think he’ll want to in that league.

This story will be updated.

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