Welcome to thecoli's WNBA Draft thread.
Draft day: 4/13/2026
WNBA Big Board for the 2026 - Tiers 1-5
Tier 1 - Elite Cornerstone Prospect
None
Tier 2 - All-Star Potential
2026 WNBA Big Board Pre-Draft Scouting Edition | LOTTERY / FIRST-ROUND TIER
Awa Fam | C | Valencia | Spain
6'4" | 19.8 yrs
2025-26 Stats: 12.3 pts | 8.3 reb | 2.3 ast | 1.2 blk | 2.0 stl (per 36)
Shooting Splits: ~52-55% FG / limited 3PT attempts / ~65-75% FT
MPG: ~22-28 across Spanish domestic and EuroLeague
NBA Comp: Joel Embiid
WNBA Comp: None
The last time a prospect generated this kind of pre-draft buzz from international play, her name was Lauren Jackson. Fam belongs in that conversation, and she is 19 years old. What separates her from every other big in this class is not just the obvious physical tools but the feel. She passes like a guard, moves without the ball like she has been doing it for a decade, and her footwork in the post is already at a level that most pros spend years chasing. Her body composition for her age is exceptional, and she clearly understands leverage and positioning in ways that cannot be quickly coached.
She is not ready to be a franchise centerpiece on day one, but here is the thing: Malonga was not either when Seattle drafted her, and Fam is already further along. The rim efficiency is elite, she keeps turnovers low for a young big asked to create, and her defensive awareness in drop coverage and on the weak side is legitimately plus-level. The free-throw numbers need work, but the mechanics are clean enough that improvement is real and expected.
This is the one. She is the best prospect in this draft, and it is not particularly close once you watch the film. The translation concerns that come with international bigs simply do not apply the same way here. She has the movement patterns, the instincts, and the size to become the best player in the WNBA within five years. An elite prospect by any measure.
Olivia Miles | PG | TCU
5'10" | 23.2 yrs
2025-26 Stats: 19.9 pts | 7.3 reb | 6.8 ast | 0.3 blk | 1.8 stl (per 36)
Shooting Splits: ~48% FG / ~35% 3P / ~84% FT
MPG: ~35+ across 38 GP
NBA Comp: Jason Kidd without the defensive upside
WNBA Comp: Chelsea Gray
There have been better scorers in this class. There have been better shooters. There is no better point guard. Miles operates the offense with a composure and intentionality that you rarely see at the college level, and the fact that she is doing it at this statistical volume while keeping her turnover rate manageable tells you everything about her feel for the game. She reads the second and third layers of the defense before most guards have finished processing the first.
The Jason Kidd comparison is not casual. Miles is not going to be asked to carry an offense in isolation the way a two-guard would, but she makes every teammate measurably better when she is on the floor. Her pick-and-roll processing is WNBA-ready right now. She gets to spots, she creates advantages, and she has the pull-up efficiency to punish defenders who cheat off her.
The one thing that keeps her out of the one spot is that her defense has lapses. Not wholesale breakdowns, but moments where her engagement wavers, particularly in transition and in pick-and-roll coverage. That will tighten in a professional system with real accountability. Everything else about her game is already there. She is the most pro-ready prospect in the class, and a team that lands her at two or three wins that pick.
Con't
Draft day: 4/13/2026
WNBA Big Board for the 2026 - Tiers 1-5
Tier 1 - Elite Cornerstone Prospect
None
Tier 2 - All-Star Potential
2026 WNBA Big Board Pre-Draft Scouting Edition | LOTTERY / FIRST-ROUND TIER
Awa Fam | C | Valencia | Spain
6'4" | 19.8 yrs
2025-26 Stats: 12.3 pts | 8.3 reb | 2.3 ast | 1.2 blk | 2.0 stl (per 36)
Shooting Splits: ~52-55% FG / limited 3PT attempts / ~65-75% FT
MPG: ~22-28 across Spanish domestic and EuroLeague
NBA Comp: Joel Embiid
WNBA Comp: None
The last time a prospect generated this kind of pre-draft buzz from international play, her name was Lauren Jackson. Fam belongs in that conversation, and she is 19 years old. What separates her from every other big in this class is not just the obvious physical tools but the feel. She passes like a guard, moves without the ball like she has been doing it for a decade, and her footwork in the post is already at a level that most pros spend years chasing. Her body composition for her age is exceptional, and she clearly understands leverage and positioning in ways that cannot be quickly coached.
She is not ready to be a franchise centerpiece on day one, but here is the thing: Malonga was not either when Seattle drafted her, and Fam is already further along. The rim efficiency is elite, she keeps turnovers low for a young big asked to create, and her defensive awareness in drop coverage and on the weak side is legitimately plus-level. The free-throw numbers need work, but the mechanics are clean enough that improvement is real and expected.
This is the one. She is the best prospect in this draft, and it is not particularly close once you watch the film. The translation concerns that come with international bigs simply do not apply the same way here. She has the movement patterns, the instincts, and the size to become the best player in the WNBA within five years. An elite prospect by any measure.
Olivia Miles | PG | TCU
5'10" | 23.2 yrs
2025-26 Stats: 19.9 pts | 7.3 reb | 6.8 ast | 0.3 blk | 1.8 stl (per 36)
Shooting Splits: ~48% FG / ~35% 3P / ~84% FT
MPG: ~35+ across 38 GP
NBA Comp: Jason Kidd without the defensive upside
WNBA Comp: Chelsea Gray
There have been better scorers in this class. There have been better shooters. There is no better point guard. Miles operates the offense with a composure and intentionality that you rarely see at the college level, and the fact that she is doing it at this statistical volume while keeping her turnover rate manageable tells you everything about her feel for the game. She reads the second and third layers of the defense before most guards have finished processing the first.
The Jason Kidd comparison is not casual. Miles is not going to be asked to carry an offense in isolation the way a two-guard would, but she makes every teammate measurably better when she is on the floor. Her pick-and-roll processing is WNBA-ready right now. She gets to spots, she creates advantages, and she has the pull-up efficiency to punish defenders who cheat off her.
The one thing that keeps her out of the one spot is that her defense has lapses. Not wholesale breakdowns, but moments where her engagement wavers, particularly in transition and in pick-and-roll coverage. That will tighten in a professional system with real accountability. Everything else about her game is already there. She is the most pro-ready prospect in the class, and a team that lands her at two or three wins that pick.
Con't

