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Is this the moment the Nets’ rebuild started to fall apart? Their draft says yes

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images
Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images
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Sean Marks is focused on taking the best player available in the 2024 NBA Draft

What stands out most about Brooklyn’s approach to the draft isn’t who they’re looking at, but that Sean Marks doesn’t seem too concerned about filling a specific position.

As reported by Eric Slater, Marks has made it clear that Brooklyn’s priority is to select the best player available, not necessarily someone who fills an immediate need. That’s notable because the Nets have already committed a lot of resources to young guards, yet they still seem open to adding another one if he projects as their top talent on the board. For a team without a clear focal point, that strategy makes plenty of sense.

Brooklyn has been linked with multiple guard prospects near No. 6, including Darius Acuff and Mikel Brown Jr.. Other recent reports have also mentioned Nate Ament and Karim Lopez, giving the Nets several potential paths to consider.

The range is exactly what matters here. If Brooklyn thinks Acuff has the highest ceiling, they can’t pass just because there are already young guards on the roster. Rebuilding teams run into issues when they prioritise fit over talent too early in the process, and Brooklyn simply isn’t at that point yet.

Kevin Durant #7 and Kyrie Irving #11 of the Brooklyn Nets react during a game against the New Orleans Pelicans at the Smoothie King Center.
Photo by Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images

Where the Sabonis conversation helped clear things up

The talk about Domantas Sabonis during the interview wasn’t just a throwaway topic – it actually highlighted an important distinction between making short-term improvements and committing to long-term change. Adding Sabonis would give Brooklyn an immediate boost, bringing structure to the offence, supporting Michael Porter Jr., and offering a steady veteran presence. Still, Slater made it clear that any move for him shouldn’t come at the cost of valuable future draft picks.

That stance makes sense. Most recent reports have linked Sabonis more with other teams than with Brooklyn, so any connection between him and the Nets remains speculative at this stage. Even if those links grow stronger, Brooklyn should be careful not to mistake a solid addition for a true game-changer when shaping their plans.

Brooklyn have kept themselves in a position to remain one of the more flexible teams. The Nets are expected to have one of the bigger cap-space numbers this offseason, giving Marks options whether that means taking on contracts, making trades or just waiting. But even with all that room to operate, what really matters is how it’s used.

Eventually, asset collecting has to turn into roster building. Draft picks need to become players, cap space has to be used as leverage and young prospects must find their place in a real hierarchy. Brooklyn is starting to reach that point now.

The No. 6 pick is really about star power

This is why pick number six feels so important for Brooklyn. They are in greater need of a swing that can reshape their direction than just a clean fit on paper. The players most commonly mentioned—ranging from guards with creative upside to versatile wings—all reflect different attempts at finding that foundational talent.

Some might see Brooklyn’s broad approach as uncertainty, but it’s more about staying open until the right player makes it obvious what path they should commit to next. They have pieces in place; now they’re looking for the one worth building everything around.

If the Nets select another guard, it would not necessarily mean they are overlooking the current roster. It might simply reflect where they believe the team actually stands. Fit only becomes a priority once there is a clear foundation in place, and Brooklyn is still searching for that.

That is why Mark’s best-player-available strategy makes sense, despite how unconventional it might sound for a team that just loaded up on guards a year earlier. The real question facing Brooklyn is not about positional overlap, but whether one of these prospects can emerge as the player who changes everything else.