Collegiate players dominated the NBA draft for decades since its inception in 1950. From 1995 to 2005, NBA teams drafted a slew of just-graduated high school standouts like
Kobe Bryant,
LeBron James,
Kevin Garnett,
Dwight Howard,
Tracy McGrady and
Amar'e Stoudemire. To counteract this, the NBA implemented an age requirement in July 2005. This meant that high school seniors were no longer eligible for the NBA draft in 2006 and thereafter. The league did allow draft eligibility for high school
postgraduates, as long as they were at least one year removed from their high school graduation and were 19 years old by the time they entered the league. This option was exercised first in 2015 when Indian prospect
Satnam Singh Bhamara was drafted in the second round and again in 2016 when South Sudanese–Australian prospect
Thon Maker was drafted in the first round.
Selecting foreign players Foreign players have made a large impact on how teams draft. Early on, foreigners were not part of the draft. The NBA's appeal was limited to the United States and the league was not yet attempting to expand internationally. The first foreign player, in the sense of being a national of a country other than the U.S., to be chosen first overall in the draft was
Bahamian Mychal Thompson in
1978. However, Thompson's selection was not a true harbinger of the game's globalization, as he had spent much of his childhood in
Florida, and had played college basketball at
Minnesota. One of the first foreign players selected in the draft to play in the NBA was
Manute Bol out of the Sudan in 1983 in the 5th round by the San Diego Clippers. Bol's selection was later deemed ineligible by the NBA. Two years later Bol was drafted again by the NBA, this time out of Division II
University of Bridgeport in 1985 as the 31st pick overall in the second round. Although Bol did not have a stellar career, he is known for being one of the tallest players ever to play the game at 7 feet and 7 inches. He holds the record for being the tallest player ever to hit a 3-point field goal. The following two years saw two players born outside the U.S. selected first overall—
Nigerian
Hakeem Olajuwon in
1984 (he would later gain U.S. citizenship) and
Jamaica-born American
Patrick Ewing in
1985. By the late 1990s, the number of foreign-born players drafted had dramatically increased. Some commentators incorrectly designate the top pick in the
1997 NBA draft,
Tim Duncan, as the third international player picked number 1 overall. But Duncan is from the
United States Virgin Islands and, like all USVI natives, is a U.S. citizen by birth. He also had played U.S. college basketball at
Wake Forest. Not counting Duncan, 11 international players were selected in the two rounds of the 1997 draft. Like top-pick Duncan, 5 of those 11 players (including the second and third overall picks) had played college basketball in the U.S. The
1998 draft saw another foreign player picked first overall,
Nigerian
Michael Olowokandi, but like Duncan he had played college basketball, in his case at
Pacific. The foreign player drafted highest in 2001 was
Pau Gasol, selected third overall by the Atlanta Hawks. In 2002,
Yao Ming became the first foreign player without U.S. college experience to be selected number 1 overall. Not only was the first overall pick an international player that year, but five more picks in the first round alone were also from overseas. In total, the 2002 draft produced 17 international players, with only three of them (all second-round picks) having U.S. college experience.
International players selected number 1 overall Four international players had gone first overall before 2002, although all had played college basketball in the U.S., and one of them was in fact a U.S. citizen by birth. It was not until
2002 that an international player without college experience went first overall—Yao Ming. His selection was not only a watershed moment for the NBA, but it also had a large impact in Yao's homeland of China.
Hannah Beech (2003) wrote "Yao has single-handedly transformed his countrymen from nameless, faceless millions into mighty men who can jam with the very best". Yao has helped the NBA grow into a worldwide product. Beech (2003) goes on to write "Ratings for NBA games broadcast on Chinese TV have never been higher than this year as the nation keeps track of its new favorite team, Yao's Houston Rockets". For his career Yao averaged a solid 19.0 points per game, 9.2 rebounds per game, 1.89 blocks per game, and shot 82.6 percent from the free throw line. It had later gotten to a point where the last four drafts from 2013 to 2016 all held international prospects as No. 1 selections in their respective drafts before ending the run in 2017. The
2002,
2005,
2006,
2011,
2013,
2014,
2015,
2016,
2018,
2023, and
2024 NBA drafts saw international players picked first overall. In 2005, the
Milwaukee Bucks picked
Andrew Bogut, from Australia by way of the
University of Utah, No. 1. The next year, the
Toronto Raptors drafted
Andrea Bargnani from Italy, making him the second foreign player without U.S. college experience and the first European to be selected number 1 overall. In 2011, Australian born
Kyrie Irving was selected by the
Cleveland Cavaliers after having played one year at
Duke. In 2013, the
Cleveland Cavaliers selected
Anthony Bennett, who played at
UNLV, first overall and making Bennett the first Canadian to be drafted at No. 1. In the
2014 NBA draft, the Cleveland Cavaliers, again picking No. 1, selected Canadian
shooting guard/
small forward Andrew Wiggins. During the
2015 NBA draft, the
Minnesota Timberwolves selected U.S.-born center
Karl-Anthony Towns, also born with
Dominican Republic citizenship by way of his mother, as the first player from the latter country and therefore the first
Latin American to become the No. 1 selection, teaming up with
Andrew Wiggins in the process. During the
2016 NBA draft, the
Philadelphia 76ers selected Australian forward
Ben Simmons to be the No. 1 selection. In the
2018 NBA draft, the
Phoenix Suns selected Bahamian center
Deandre Ayton as their first ever No. 1 selection, with Ayton being the second Bahamian taken at No. 1 behind
Mychal Thompson, and the third Caribbean-born player after Patrick Ewing and Thompson. In the
2023 NBA draft, the
San Antonio Spurs selected Frenchman
Victor Wembanyama with the No. 1 selection, making him the first French player to be drafted at No.1. It also made him the third foreign player without U.S. college experience and the second European to be selected number 1 overall. In the
2024 NBA draft, the
Atlanta Hawks selected Frenchman
Zaccharie Risacher with the No. 1 selection. ==Notable past NBA drafts==