π NBA Power Rankings: Young risers on all teams
The NBA regular season is in full swing ahead of a blockbuster slate of games on Christmas Day.
In the East, the New York Knicks are riding their NBA Cup championship, surging to second in the East. However, the rest of the conference remains in flux as the other eight teams besides the Knicks and Pistons remain within 1.5 games of each other.
The Western Conference is beginning to show just how much of a gauntlet it has proved to be in the past few seasons. Besides the league-leading Oklahoma City Thunder, other contenders -- San Antonio Spurs, Denver Nuggets, Los Angeles Lakers, Minnesota Timberwolves and Houston Rockets -- are neck and neck in a race toward the top.
This week we asked our NBA insiders to pick one young player on each team who is making an outsize impact so far this season -- and what that might mean for the franchises they play for.
Here is where all 30 teams stack up in this week's Power Rankings.
Note: Team rankings are based on where members of our panel (ESPN's Anthony Slater, Dave McMenamin, Jamal Collier, Kevin Pelton, Michael C. Wright, Ohm Youngmisuk, Tim Bontemps, Tim MacMahon, Vincent Goodwill and Zach Kram) think teams belong this season.
Previous rankings: Preseason | Oct. 29 | Nov. 5 | Nov. 12 | Nov. 19 | Nov. 26 | Dec. 3 | Dec. 10 | Dec. 17
Jump to a team:ATL | BOS | BKN | CHA | CHI | CLEDAL | DEN | DET | GS | HOU | INDLAC | LAL | MEM | MIA | MIL | MINNO | NY | OKC | ORL | PHI | PHXPOR | SAC | SA | TOR | UTAH | WAS
2025-26 record: 26-4
Previous ranking: 1
Next games: vs. SA (Dec. 25), vs. PHI (Dec. 28), vs. ATL (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Ajay Mitchell
There was some belief that Jalen Williams' return would send Mitchell back to the rotational basement in Oklahoma City, but that hasn't been the case. Mitchell is averaging 11.3 points on an efficient 8.1 shots in 25 minutes per game in December. That's a tick down from his opening-month surge. There aren't quite as many minutes or creation opportunities with Williams back from a 19-game absence. But Mitchell, in his second season, has done enough to surge into a nightly rotation staple on the league's best team regardless of circumstance, becoming one of the more reliable young bench playmakers in the NBA. -- Anthony Slater
2025-26 record: 24-6
Previous ranking: 2
Next games: @ UTAH (Dec. 26), @ LAC (Dec. 28), @ LAL (Dec. 30)
Young riser: Jalen Duren
Duren probably won't win Most Improved Player, but he has made a sizable leap this season. Surely a decent amount of motivation comes from being in a contract year, with restricted free agency looming. (He's making the decision quite easy for the front office.) But this feels like natural growth, as he just turned 22 a month ago. Not just the lob talent Cade Cunningham desperately needs for vertical spacing, but Duren has taken big strides as a defender -- in space and especially in the interior. He grabbed 10 offensive rebounds in last Thursday's loss to Dallas and is third in offensive rebounding per game. Opponents will have to account for him in the playoffs when extra possessions are critical. -- Vincent Goodwill
2025-26 record: 20-8
Previous ranking: 6
Next games: vs. CLE (Dec. 25), @ ATL (Dec. 27), @ NO (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Tyler Kolek
Kolek is the closest thing the Knicks have to true youth on this roster, but he's earning more playing time over the past couple of weeks. Mike Brown even experimented with Kolek playing alongside Jalen Brunson late during the NBA Cup, just to see how the duo would fare. It did well enough for him to be on the floor late in the Knicks' comeback win over the Pacers -- his 26 minutes were a season high, as well as his 16 points and 11 assists. With a healthy Brunson, the minutes available for Kolek might dwindle, but considering the Knicks were looking for backup point guard help, Kolek may fit the role himself. -- Goodwill
2025-26 record: 21-8
Previous ranking: 3
Next games: vs. MIN (Dec. 25), @ ORL (Dec. 27), @ MIA (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Peyton Watson
Watson, 23, has seized his opportunity as a starter after injuries led to his role changing. He has averaged 14.6 points and 5.6 rebounds while shooting 54.3% from the floor and 45.0% from 3-point range in 16 starts this season entering Tuesday. The bigger-picture question about Watson, a rangy wing who provides rim protection, is whether he will fit into the Nuggets' budget beyond this season. He will be a restricted free agent this summer after Denver didn't get him locked into an extension of his rookie deal. -- Tim MacMahon
2025-26 record: 22-7
Previous ranking: 4
Next games: @ OKC (Dec. 25), vs. UTAH (Dec. 27), vs. CLE (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Dylan Harper
We're seeing a new iteration of San Antonio's famed Big 3 play out in real time with back-to-back NBA Rookie of the Year winners Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle playing alongside rookie Harper, who has a real opportunity to help the Spurs become the first franchise to produce three consecutive winners of that award. The smooth, 19-year-old lefty plays with a craftiness and poise uncommon for players his age, and it's clear he figures prominently into San Antonio's future. As a rookie, Harper is shooting 27.7% from 3-point range. But he's gaining confidence in that area, especially from the left wing. -- Michael C. Wright
San Antonio Spurs' Dylan Harper is fourth on the team in points (12.6) and had a career-high 24 points against the Washington Wizards last Thursday. ESPN
2025-26 record: 17-10
Previous ranking: 5
Next games: @ LAL (Dec. 25), vs. CLE (Dec. 27), vs. IND (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Reed Sheppard
A second-year veteran, Sheppard became the first Rocket to rack up 25 points with five assists off the bench since Lou Williams back in 2017 on Saturday, when he knocked down six 3-pointers on the road in Denver as Houston snapped the Nuggets' six-game winning streak. Sheppard has shown a willingness to work on the weaknesses of his game. He spent three weeks over the summer working primarily on improving as a defender and didn't even touch a basketball during that span. -- Wright
2025-26 record: 19-9
Previous ranking: 7
Next games: vs. HOU (Dec. 25), vs. SAC (Dec. 28), vs. DET (Dec. 30)
Young riser: Adou Thiero
The Lakers moved up from the 55th pick to the 45th pick and then the 45th pick to the 36th pick to acquire Thiero in the second round of the draft in June. The chiseled 6-foot-8 forward's stats don't jump off the page just yet (he averages less than one point, one rebound and one assist per game), but he has already impressed many within the organization with his work ethic in getting healthy from surgery on his left knee. He is clearly a project, but at just 21 years old, L.A. views Thiero as an up-and-coming player with major defensive potential. -- Dave McMenamin
2025-26 record: 19-10
Previous ranking: 9
Next games: @ DEN (Dec. 25), vs. BKN (Dec. 27), @ CHI (Dec. 29)
Young risers: Jaylen Clark and Terrence Shannon Jr.
The larger concern for the Timberwolves is that this answer isn't Rob Dillingham, the former top 10 pick who has been excised from the rotation in favor of Bones Hyland. But we'll give the nod instead to the combination of Clark and Shannon, both of whom will continue to have cracks at earning a consistent rotation spot on the wing as a long-term replacement for the departed Nickeil Alexander-Walker. -- Tim Bontemps
2025-26 record: 18-11
Previous ranking: 10
Next games: @ IND (Dec. 26), @ POR (Dec. 28), @ UTAH (Dec. 30)
Young riser: Jordan Walsh
Entering this season, it wasn't clear whether Walsh would become a rotation player for Boston. But the 2023 second-round pick has done just that, becoming a consistent starter on the surprising Celtics and, although on low volume, shooting well over 40% from 3-point range. Walsh's combination of length, athleticism and energy has made him a perfect complementary player alongside Jaylen Brown, Derrick White and Payton Pritchard in Boston, and he has a chance to carve out a long-term role in Boston if he keeps this play up. -- Bontemps
2025-26 record: 17-13
Previous ranking: 8
Next games: vs. CHA (Dec. 26), vs. DEN (Dec. 27), @ TOR (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Anthony Black
Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner and Jalen Suggs have proved, when healthy, how good and promising they can be. But one young Magic player who is rising with more minutes is Black. Entering Tuesday's game at Portland, Black had scored in double figures in 15 of his previous 16 games. Black has stepped up with Wagner and Suggs currently sidelined, and his minutes and role also coincided with when Banchero was injured earlier this season. Black's versatility has been big for the team this season with his ability to defend, score, pass and rebound. He averaged 13.8 points, 4.1 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 1.2 steals entering Tuesday and should still be a valuable contributor once Orlando is fully healthy again. -- Ohm Youngmisuk
2025-26 record: 16-12
Previous ranking: 11
Next games: @ CHI (Dec. 26), @ OKC (Dec. 28), @ MEM (Dec. 30)
Young riser: VJ Edgecombe
It remains remarkable to think that, at this time a year ago, the 76ers thought they had no chance at keeping their top-six protected first-round pick, and now they find themselves with their backcourt of the future in Tyrese Maxey and rookie Edgecombe after managing to do so. Edgecombe has shown the ability to take on an increased playmaking role lately when Maxey has been sidelined with an illness, and is the team's leader in plus-minus, which falls in line with coach Nick Nurse's willingness to trust a rookie guard to take on a big role for a team with playoff ambitions. -- Bontemps
2025-26 record: 18-13
Previous ranking: 13
Next games: @ WAS (Dec. 26), vs. GS (Dec. 28), vs. ORL (Dec. 29)
Young riser: Jamal Shead
Nikola Jokic leads all qualified players with 11.6 assists per 36 minutes, and in second place -- right ahead of Josh Giddey and Cade Cunningham -- is Shead, a backup in Toronto, who's averaging 9.6 dimes per 36 minutes. Shead has a rough jump shot (35.5
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9 of January 2026