Wizards' Dybantsa outduels Jazz's Peterson in summer league debut
By Jorge Perez· Founder, V12 DFS

This is context, not an automatic lineup change. It becomes actionable only when it connects to the slate, price, ownership, or confirmed role.
Summer League performances rarely move needle in season-long drafts, but rookie usage patterns in controlled minutes become early ownership signals. AJ Dybantsa's 27-point outburst as the No. 1 pick suggests the Wizards view him as a primary ball handler and scoring option from day one—a read that shapes his salary placement and contest exposure come October. Darryn Peterson's showing as the No. 2 pick across the table signals a different arc: elite talent in a deeper backcourt (Jazz) may carry lower chalk ownership despite pedigree. For DFS purposes, the real takeaway is role clarity, not stat line inflation.
The Wizards' willingness to funnel possessions to Dybantsa in a blowout-risk environment (Summer League rosters are thin and unbalanced) hints at confidence in his NBA floor. In-season, that translates to minutes stability and usage rate comfort—two anchors that protect a rookie's ceiling in GPP stacks and contrarian pivot builds. If preseason extends that pattern and the Wizards land in close games, Dybantsa becomes a credible stack target alongside Washington's guards. Peterson's role, by contrast, may remain share-based in Utah's balanced offense; Summer League dominance doesn't always predict season usage in a tighter rotation.
A v12 user scanning this result would flag Dybantsa's name for preseason confirmation—does he maintain 30+ minutes and 5+ three-point attempts in games that matter?—and cross-reference against the Wizards' implied total and pace on opening night slates. Peterson warrants a similar check but from a leverage angle: if the market prices him as a league-ready scorer and Utah caps his minutes, he becomes a fade or late-swap candidate. The Summer League win matters less than the minutes and shot diet it hints at.
Turn this NBA news into a lineup tonight
V12's NBA engine reads slate context, builds a candidate pool, runs configured simulations, ranks the portfolio with ownership and behavioral pattern signals, and ships a FanDuel-ready CSV. The news above becomes one input among many — not a forced lineup change.