15 NBA Draft Picks That Took a Team Nowhere for Years

The NBA Draft is supposed to be a franchise-altering event—a night when teams land their future stars and build toward greatness. But sometimes, instead of lifting a franchise, a high draft pick just leads to years of spinning in circles, watching the playoffs from home, and wondering what could’ve been.

This list is for those picks—the ones that didn’t just bust, but actively stalled a team’s momentum for multiple seasons. Whether it was bad timing, poor development, or simply the wrong guy in the wrong situation, these selections ended up taking the team absolutely nowhere.

15. Frank Ntilikina – New York Knicks (2017)

Frank Ntilikina
Wikimedia Commons

The Knicks thought they were getting a two-way floor general. Instead, they got years of waiting for a breakout that never arrived.

14. Anthony Bennett – Cleveland Cavaliers (2013)

Anthony Bennett
Wikimedia Commons

The most infamous No. 1 overall pick in modern NBA history. Cleveland used their top selection on a player who didn’t look ready from day one and never found his footing.

13. Hasheem Thabeet – Memphis Grizzlies (2009)

Hasheem Thabeet
Flickr

Drafting a 7’3″ project over James Harden and Steph Curry still haunts Grizzlies fans. He was supposed to anchor the defense, but ended up buried at the end of the bench.

12. Marvin Williams – Atlanta Hawks (2005)

Marvin Williams
Wikimedia Commons

Atlanta picked Williams second overall despite already needing a point guard, and passed on Chris Paul and Deron Williams to do it. He had a long career, but not the kind that changes a franchise’s direction.

11. Wesley Johnson – Minnesota Timberwolves (2010)

Wesley Johnson
Wikimedia Commons

He had the athleticism and the smile, but not the game to back it up. The Wolves were stuck in neutral during his run, and he was gone after just two seasons.

10. Michael Kidd-Gilchrist – Charlotte Bobcats/Hornets (2012)

Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
Wikimedia Commons

His defense was solid, but his jumper never arrived. Charlotte spent years trying to make it work, but they were never more than a fringe playoff team with him as a key piece.

9. Dragan Bender – Phoenix Suns (2016)

Dragan Bender
Wikipedia

The Suns were dreaming of the next international unicorn. What they got was four forgettable seasons and a whole lot of missed potential.

8. Jimmer Fredette – Sacramento Kings (2011)

Jimmer Fredette
Wikimedia Commons

The hype was unreal coming out of college, but the NBA game was not kind to Jimmer. Sacramento bet big on a scorer who couldn’t defend or keep up, and it slowed their rebuild badly.

7. Jan Vesely – Washington Wizards (2011)

Jan Vesely
Flickr

The Wizards swung for upside and got…a guy who couldn’t shoot or stay on the floor. Washington lingered in mediocrity while Vesely struggled to find his place.

6. Derrick Williams – Minnesota Timberwolves (2011)

Derrick Williams
Flickr

He was supposed to be the perfect modern forward. Instead, Minnesota got inconsistency, poor fit, and another detour in their never-ending rebuild.

5. Thomas Robinson – Sacramento Kings (2012)

Thomas Robinson
Flickr

He was gone before you could blink. The Kings took him fifth overall and traded him in the middle of his rookie year—never a great sign.

4. Darko Miličić – Detroit Pistons (2003)

Darko Miličić
Wikipedia

The Pistons were a contender that somehow got the No. 2 pick. Instead of adding a future Hall of Famer, they got Darko—and missed out on Carmelo, Bosh, and Wade.

3. Adam Morrison – Charlotte Bobcats (2006)

Adam Morrison
Wikipedia

Morrison was a college scoring legend, but his game didn’t translate. His time in Charlotte was short, ineffective, and symbolic of the Bobcats’ early struggles.

Read More: Ranking the 15 Worst NBA Franchises of All Time

2. Michael Beasley – Miami Heat (2008)

Michael Beasley – Miami Heat (2008)
Reddit | GanacheInfinite

The Heat took Beasley second overall, hoping he’d be Wade’s running mate, but got inconsistency and off-court issues instead. He stalled their progress and was eventually dumped to clear space for LeBron.

Read More: 10 NBA Teams That Got Blinded by a Single Great College Season

1. Kwame Brown – Washington Wizards (2001)

Kwame Brown
Wikipedia

He was the first high schooler to go No. 1, and the hype was massive. Unfortunately, so was the disappointment—Washington got nearly nothing from the pick and paid the price for years.

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