Sports NBA

NBA: 2026-27 Rookie of the Year

Cameron Boozer
$9.32K Vol.
21.5%
AJ Dybantsa
$7.02K Vol.
17.5%
Darryn Peterson
$9.39K Vol.
17.5%
Caleb Wilson
$10.56K Vol.
9.5% 1.5%
Darius Acuff Jr.
$2.44K Vol.
8%
25 more outcomes Listed by current odds

Current odds summary

Cameron Boozer currently leads the NBA: 2026-27 Rookie of the Year prediction market at 21.5% reported probability on Polymarket. The figures below combine live odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest so readers can compare the market signal before reading the full analysis.

Volume$7.74M Liquidity$484.59K Open Interest$5.37K Last updated5 mins ago

Odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest are sourced from Polymarket and last synced at Jul 15, 2026 1:37 am.

CryptoSlate Market Analysis

Boozer Leads Tight Rookie Race As Summer League Pulls Four Ways

Draft order has given the market a structure, while Summer League has already complicated it. Boozer’s lead rests on a broader production case, yet Dybantsa, Peterson, and Wilson each have a clean path to becoming the rookie voters notice first.

Young basketball player walking from a dark arena tunnel toward a glowing Rookie of the Year-style trophy at center court.

The 2026-27 Rookie of the Year market is pricing a four-player race built around immediate opportunity, draft capital, and early NBA-stage scoring signals. Cameron Boozer’s lead at 21.5% suggests the market gives extra weight to a balanced statistical profile with Memphis, while AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, and Caleb Wilson sit close enough that one rotation signal or preseason scoring run could change the hierarchy quickly.

Boozer’s edge comes from the shape of his box score

Boozer’s 21.5% price sits ahead of Dybantsa at 17%, Peterson at 17.5%, and Wilson at 16.5%, a narrow spread that matters because the market is granting no prospect a dominant claim. The clearest inference is that Boozer’s case is being priced around a wider award profile: scoring, rebounding, passing flashes, and early consistency.

NBA.com logged Boozer’s early Memphis Summer League work as a 15-point debut followed by 18 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists, and a steal. That combination gives the market a reason to treat him as more than a scorer. Rookie of the Year voting often follows simple counting stats, but multi-category production can protect a player when scoring efficiency dips or usage fluctuates. For Boozer, the market-implied story is that he can remain visible even on nights when he does not lead the rookie class in points.

His landing spot also matters. Memphis selected him No. 3, and the draft slot itself supports an expectation of early developmental priority. The price is therefore doing two things at once: rewarding the prospect profile and assigning value to the likelihood that the Grizzlies give him enough minutes to compile regular-season numbers by the time the award resolves after the 2026-27 season.

The No. 1 pick still has the cleanest narrative runway

Dybantsa’s 17% price is striking because he is the No. 1 pick and has already delivered a Summer League performance that supports the hype case. NBA.com lists him with Washington after the Wizards took him first overall, and his opening Summer League line against Utah was 27 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, and a block in a 92-88 win.

That matters because the No. 1 pick usually begins with the broadest media runway. If Dybantsa opens the regular season as a high-usage wing and keeps producing defensive events alongside scoring, his profile can become easy for voters to process: top pick, primary option, two-way flashes, rebuilding-team touches. The market is still keeping him behind Boozer, which implies some hesitation around how quickly his offensive role and efficiency will translate across a full NBA schedule.

The hidden assumption is that draft status alone will not carry the award. Dybantsa likely needs his Washington role to look central from the start, because the market has already seen strong Summer League signals from several rivals. A preseason announcement that he will start, a high shot volume in October, or a run of early 20-point games would strengthen the case that the Wizards are building their rookie-season offense around him.

Peterson is priced like a guard who can seize the narrative late

Peterson’s 17.5% price, slightly ahead of Dybantsa, reflects a different award path: on-ball creation. Utah selected him No. 2, and his Salt Lake City Summer League performance gave the market a clean scoring-and-clutch template. NBA.com reported 28 points, 18 after halftime, and a go-ahead three in overtime.

That specific game context matters. Rookie guards can move award perception quickly because they accumulate visible statistics through usage: points, assists, late-clock possessions, and highlight plays. Peterson’s second-half surge and overtime shot support the idea that Utah may trust him with the ball in pressure possessions, at least in developmental settings. If that carries into preseason rotations, his price could react before official games begin.

The risk embedded in his profile is also clear. Rookie guards often face efficiency pressure once NBA defenses load up, and a high-usage role can create turnovers that dampen the ballot case. The market’s near tie between Peterson and Dybantsa suggests a debate between creator volume and wing scalability. Peterson’s confirmation signal would be sustained control of possessions with acceptable efficiency, because that would give him the simplest statistical route to separating from forwards who share touches.

Wilson’s record debut explains the compression behind the leader

Wilson at 16.5% shows how quickly a single Summer League performance can compress a rookie market. Chicago selected him No. 4, then NBA.com reported he scored 35 points in his Las Vegas Summer League debut, the most points ever in an NBA Summer League debut. That is the kind of clean headline that can reshape perception before preseason minutes are known.

The reason he still trails Boozer, despite the loudest scoring marker, is likely award translation. A one-game scoring record creates visibility, but the market still needs evidence that Chicago will give Wilson enough regular-season role stability to repeat high-volume scoring against NBA rotations. His price gives credit for offensive ceiling while stopping short of treating Summer League eruption as regular-season proof.

PlayerTeamMarket priceEarly signal
Cameron BoozerMemphis21.5%Multi-category Summer League production
Darryn PetersonUtah17.5%28 points and overtime shot creation
AJ DybantsaWashington17%No. 1 pick with 27-7 debut line
Caleb WilsonChicago16.5%Record 35-point Summer League debut

The next repricing points are role clarity and voter-friendly volume

The market has $6.89 million in volume and $471,870 in liquidity, so the top cluster is already deep enough to absorb changing information. The listed close date of May 31, 2027 places the market after the regular season award cycle, which means early Summer League signals matter because they shape expectations, while regular-season opportunity will eventually dominate the pricing.

Several catalysts could force a sharper split among the top four. Official preseason starting lineups would matter because starters can reach award-level counting stats faster. A coach describing one rookie as a primary ball-handler or first-unit forward would matter because role language often precedes usage. A hypothetical injury to a veteran on Washington, Utah, Memphis, or Chicago could alter touches and minutes, though no such development is established in the supplied sources. Early-season efficiency will matter because voters tend to accept volume more easily when it comes without damaging shooting nights or turnover narratives.

The main counter-signal to Boozer’s lead is a scoring race that becomes too loud to ignore. Wilson’s 35-point debut, Peterson’s clutch scoring, and Dybantsa’s top-pick platform each provide a path to a simpler ballot story than Boozer’s balanced case. If one of those three opens the season as a clear offensive focal point while Boozer’s production is spread across lower-usage categories, the market’s current preference for all-around production could give way to the rookie with the cleanest nightly headline.

Sources

What could move the odds?

Informational summary of factors that may affect the reported prediction-market probabilities.

Market-implied thesis

The board is pricing 2026-27 ROY as a tight top-pick race, with Boozer, Peterson, Dybantsa and Wilson all treated as viable usage-led winners.

Draft slot and early Summer League production matter more here than team quality because the award usually follows minutes, role and counting stats.

Strong signal 72% CatalystPreseason role clarity RiskEarly hype can fade

What could reprice it

Remaining Summer League games, training camp reports and preseason rotations can quickly shift odds if one rookie earns primary scoring or playmaking duties.

Official lineups, injury updates and coach comments from Washington, Utah, Memphis and Chicago are the next practical role signals after July 14.

Mixed signal 68% CatalystSummer League and preseason RiskExhibition stats mislead

Where the market may be weak

Despite large headline volume, open interest is modest for a 10-month award market, so thin depth can overreact to highlights or single-box-score narratives.

Multi-outcome pricing also fragments liquidity across long-shot names, making fair-value comparisons harder than in a simple head-to-head market.

Thin signal 54% RiskLiquidity fragmentation

Counter-signal

The current leaders may be underpricing context: Wilson faces frontcourt competition, while Peterson’s Utah role could produce cleaner counting stats.

ROY voters often reward opportunity as much as pedigree; a rebuilding Jazz team may give Peterson a heavier on-ball workload than rivals receive.

Counterweight 61% CatalystCamp usage reports RiskRole assumptions wrong

AI-generated market summary, reviewed for clarity. This summary is informational only, may contain errors, and is not financial, investment, betting, or trading advice.

Market details

Resolution criteria
This market will resolve to the player who wins the Rookie of the Year award for the 2026-27 NBA regular season.
Platform
Category
Sports NBA
Close date
May 31, 2027, 11:59 PM UTC
Market rules summary
Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market. View full rules

Frequently asked questions

What are the current NBA: 2026-27 Rookie of the Year odds?

Polymarket reports NBA: 2026-27 Rookie of the Year odds with Cameron Boozer at 21.5%, AJ Dybantsa at 17.5%, Darryn Peterson at 17.5%, and Caleb Wilson at 9.5%. These probabilities are market-implied and can change as liquidity and trading activity update. The latest market snapshot includes $7.74M volume, $484.59K liquidity, and $5.37K open interest. CryptoSlate last synced this market data at Jul 15, 2026, 00:37 UTC.

What could move the NBA: 2026-27 Rookie of the Year prediction market odds?

The board is pricing 2026-27 ROY as a tight top-pick race, with Boozer, Peterson, Dybantsa and Wilson all treated as viable usage-led winners. Draft slot and early Summer League production matter more here than team quality because the award usually follows minutes, role and counting stats. Catalysts to watch include Preseason role clarity, Summer League and preseason, and Camp usage reports.

How does the NBA: 2026-27 Rookie of the Year prediction market resolve?

This market will resolve to the player who wins the Rookie of the Year award for the 2026-27 NBA regular season. Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market.