2026 NBA draft combine: The top measurements, including wingspans

The 2026 NBA draft combine tipped off on Monday as prospects hit the court for strength and agility testing, anthropometric measurements and more in Chicago, Illinois.

The NBA announced on May 1 that 73 players were invited to the annual scouting event at Wintrust Arena. Five more players earned invitations to the festivities after emerging as the top scrimmage performers from the G League combine.

The combine this year marks the third time prospects will be required to participate in drills and other testing, as outlined in the collective bargaining agreement. Prospects can be ruled ineligible to be drafted if they skip certain portions without sufficient reasoning.

With revamped rules in place, the early results from the testing and measurement portion of the event featured several of the top prospects, including Darius Acuff Jr., Cameron Boozer, AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson and Caleb Wilson, among others.

Here are some of the top measurements and testing at the combine:

Height (without shoes)

The 10 tallest heights:

  1. Aday Mara, Michigan: 7′ 3″
  2. Luigi Suigo, Mega Basket (Serbia): 7′ 2.75″
  3. Malachi Moreno, Kentucky: 6′ 11.25″
  4. Henri Veesaar, North Carolina: 6′ 11.25″
  5. Ugonna Onyenso, Virginia: 6′ 11″
  6. Baba Miller, Cincinnati: 6′ 10.5″
  7. Chris Cenac Jr., Houston: 6′ 10.25″
  8. Hannes Steinbach, Washington: 6′ 10.25″
  9. Felix Okpara, Tennessee: 6′ 10″
  10. Tarris Reed Jr., UConn: 6′ 9.75″

Standing Reach

The 10 highest standing reaches:

  1. Aday Mara, Michigan: 9′ 9″
  2. Luigi Suigo, Mega Basket (Serbia): 9′ 6″
  3. Ugonna Onyenso, Virginia: 9′ 5″
  4. Felix Okpara, Tennessee: 9′ 4″
  5. Rueben Chinyelu, Florida: 9′ 3.5″
  6. Malachi Moreno, Kentucky: 9′ 3.5″
  7. Baba Miller, Cincinnati: 9′ 3″
  8. Henri Veesaar, North Carolina: 9′ 3″
  9. Tarris Reed Jr., UConn: 9′ 2″
  10. Nate Ament, Tennessee: 9′ 1.5″

Wingspans

The 10 longest wingspans:

  1. Rueben Chinyelu, Florida: 7′ 7.5″
  2. Aday Mara, Michigan: 7′ 6″
  3. Luigi Suigo, Mega Basket (Serbia): 7′ 5.5″
  4. Jayden Quaintance, Kentucky: 7′ 5.25″
  5. Chris Cenac Jr., Houston: 7′ 5″
  6. Ugonna Onyenso, Virginia: 7′ 4.75″
  7. Tarris Reed Jr., UConn: 7′ 4.25″
  8. Trevon Brazile, Arkansas: 7′ 3.75″
  9. Morez Johnson Jr., Michigan: 7′ 3.5″
  10. Flory Bidunga, Kansas: 7′ 3.25″

Weight

The 10 heaviest weights (pounds):

  1. Luigi Suigo, Mega Basket (Serbia): 289
  2. Tarris Reed Jr., UConn: 263.6
  3. Tobe Awaka, Arizona: 261.4
  4. Aday Mara, Michigan: 259.8
  5. Rueben Chinyelu, Florida: 259.4
  6. Jayden Quaintance, Kentucky: 253.4
  7. Cameron Boozer, Duke: 252.8
  8. Morez Johnson Jr., Michigan: 250.6
  9. Hannes Steinbach, Washington: 248
  10. Joshua Jefferson, Iowa State: 246.2

Weight

The 10 lightest weights (pounds):

  1. Braden Smith, Purdue: 166.6
  2. Tyler Tanner, Vanderbilt: 166.8
  3. Nick Boyd, Wisconsin: 176.2
  4. Labaron Philon Jr., Alabama: 176.2
  5. Christian Anderson Jr., Texas Tech: 180.4
  6. Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Tennessee: 181.8
  7. Kingston Flemings, Houston: 183.4
  8. Cameron Carr, Baylor: 184.4
  9. Milos Uzan, Houston: 185
  10. Darius Acuff Jr., Arkansas: 185.8

Max Vertical Jump

The 10 highest max vertical jumps (inches):

  1. Tobi Lawal, Virginia Tech: 45.5
  2. Amari Allen, Alabama: 42.5
  3. Cameron Carr, Baylor: 42.5
  4. AJ Dybantsa, BYU: 42
  5. Trevon Brazile, Arkansas: 41.5
  6. Andrej Stojaković, Illinois: 41.5
  7. Billy Richmond III, Arkansas: 41
  8. Christian Anderson Jr., Texas Tech: 40.5
  9. Flory Bidunga, Kansas: 40.5
  10. Kingston Flemings, Houston: 40.5

Standing Vertical Jump

The 10 highest standing vertical jumps (inches):

  1. Tobi Lawal, Virginia Tech: 40
  2. Cameron Carr, Baylor: 38
  3. Trevon Brazile, Arkansas: 36
  4. Brayden Burries, Arizona: 35
  5. Amari Allen, Alabama: 34.5
  6. Koa Peat, Arizona: 34.5
  7. Caleb Wilson, North Carolina: 34.5
  8. Flory Bidunga, Kansas: 34
  9. Zuby Ejiofor, St. John’s: 34
  10. Tounde Yessoufou, Baylor: 34

Shuttle Run

The 10 fastest shuttle runs (seconds):

  1. Aaron Nkrumah, Tennessee State: 2.48
  2. Kingston Flemings, Houston: 2.69
  3. Baba Miller, Cincinnati: 2.70
  4. Trevon Brazile, Arkansas: 2.71
  5. Tounde Yessoufou, Baylor: 2.75
  6. Zuby Ejiofor, St. John’s: 2.76
  7. Tarris Reed Jr., UConn: 2.77
  8. Flory Bidunga, Kansas: 2.78
  9. Cameron Carr, Baylor: 2.80
  10. Yaxel Lendeborg, Michigan: 2.80

Shuttle Run

The 10 slowest shuttle runs (seconds):

  1. Koa Peat, Arizona: 3.39
  2. Aday Mara, Michigan: 3.36
  3. Allen Graves, Santa Clara: 3.18
  4. Ugonna Onyenso, Virginia: 3.16
  5. Peter Suder, Miami (OH): 3.14
  6. Jaden Bradley, Arizona: 3.13
  7. Labaron Philon Jr., Alabama: 3.13
  8. Malachi Moreno, Kentucky: 3.11
  9. Caleb Wilson, North Carolina: 3.11
  10. Jeremy Fears Jr., Michigan State: 3.10

Hand Length

The 10 longest hand lengths (inches):

  1. Rueben Chinyelu, Florida: 10
  2. Keyshawn Hall, Auburn: 9.5
  3. Morez Johnson Jr., Michigan: 9.5
  4. Karim López, NZ Breakers (NBL): 9.5
  5. Ugonna Onyenso, Virginia: 9.5
  6. Jayden Quaintance, Kentucky: 9.5
  7. Tobe Awaka, Arizona: 9.25
  8. Flory Bidunga, Kansas: 9.25
  9. Chris Cenac Jr., Houston: 9.25
  10. Zuby Ejiofor, St. John’s: 9.25

This article originally appeared on Rookie Wire: 2026 NBA draft combine: The top measurements, including wingspans

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