AJ Dybantsa's Full Combine Measurements
Dybantsa's 42-inch max vertical is an exceptional result for any prospect, and particularly remarkable for a player standing 6'8.5". For context, the average max vertical for a small forward at the NBA combine is approximately 36 inches — Dybantsa tested 6 inches above positional average. His combination of size, length, and explosiveness is what places him firmly at the top of most 2026 draft boards.
His 8'10" standing reach is equally important. That measurement — the height of his fingertips with arm fully extended — means Dybantsa can contest shots at a height most forwards cannot reach, and can finish at the rim from angles that shorter-armed players cannot access. Standing reach is often more predictive of NBA impact than raw vertical jump height alone.
How Does Your Vertical Compare?
See how your vertical jump stacks up against NBA combine averages — and what percentile you sit at for your age and gender.
Calculate My Vertical →2026 NBA Draft Combine — Full Vertical Jump Results
Dybantsa was not the only prospect to post elite numbers at the 2026 combine. Here are the vertical jump results for the top prospects tested this week in Chicago.
* Peat's figure is a no-step vertical. Burries' figure is a standing vertical. All others are max verticals. Data sourced from ESPN, Bleacher Report, and Yahoo Sports combine coverage. Combine runs May 10–17, 2026.
| Prospect | School | Height | Wingspan | Max Vertical | Mock Pick |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AJ Dybantsa | BYU | 6'8.5" | 7'0.5" | 42" | #1 |
| Darryn Peterson | Kansas | 6'4.5" | 6'9.75" | 37.5" | #2 |
| Cameron Boozer | Duke | 6'8.25" | 7'1.5" | 35" | #3 |
| Caleb Wilson | UNC | — | — | 39.5" | #4 |
| Kingston Flemings | — | — | — | 41.5" | #7 |
| Brayden Burries | — | ~6'4" | — | 35" (standing) | #9 |
What Dybantsa's 42-Inch Vertical Actually Means
Numbers without context are just numbers. Here is what a 42-inch max vertical means in practical basketball terms — and why it matters for Dybantsa's game at the next level.
Finishing at the Rim
Dybantsa's standing reach is 8'10". With a 42-inch max vertical, his fingertips reach approximately 12'4" at the peak of his jump. The NBA rim sits at 10 feet. That means Dybantsa has 2 feet 4 inches of clearance above the rim at the top of his jump — enough to catch lobs well above the backboard, to dunk through contact without concern, and to finish over virtually any defender who contests. This is rare even at the NBA level, where the average wing peaks well below 12 feet.
Defensive Impact
Defensive versatility gets heavily discussed for Dybantsa but the vertical adds a concrete dimension that statistics do not capture. At 12'4" peak reach, Dybantsa can alter shots that most wings simply cannot get to. A perimeter player attempting a mid-range jumper over a standard 6'6" defender with a 40-inch vertical faces a contest point of around 11'0". Against Dybantsa, that same shot must clear 12'4" — a full 16 inches higher. That difference changes which shots are available in the first place.
How It Compares to NBA History
For historical context, see our complete guide on average NBA vertical jump by position. The short version: the average NBA small forward tests around 36 inches at the combine. Players who have tested at 40 inches or above represent roughly the top 7 percent of all prospects tested over the past 25 years. Dybantsa's 42-inch result sits comfortably in that elite tier.
Dybantsa vs the Other Top Prospects
The vertical jump comparison between the three projected top picks tells an interesting story about what kind of players each prospect is.
Dybantsa at 42 inches is a physically freakish combination of size and explosiveness. At 6'8.5" jumping 42 inches, he profiles as a dominant finisher and defender — someone who can make plays above the rim that his height alone would not suggest.
Peterson at 37.5 inches is excellent for a point guard and shows the explosive athleticism scouts want in a lead guard. His lateral quickness and agility scores alongside the vertical paint the picture of a dynamic playmaker.
Boozer at 35 inches is at the NBA combine average for his position — solid, not exceptional. Boozer's case for the top three rests on skill, size, and basketball IQ rather than standout athleticism, which analysts have noted entering the combine.
Can I Jump as High as Dybantsa?
Dybantsa's 42-inch max vertical is genuinely elite. For context:
| Level / Group | Average Max Vertical | Gap to Dybantsa |
|---|---|---|
| Average adult male | 16–20" | 22–26 inches |
| High school varsity athlete | 22–26" | 16–20 inches |
| College D1 basketball player | 28–32" | 10–14 inches |
| NBA combine average (SF) | 36" | 6 inches |
| AJ Dybantsa | 42" | — |
The gap between a good recreational athlete and Dybantsa is about two feet of vertical jump. That gap represents years of elite training, exceptional genetics, and a lifetime of athletic development. It also makes the number genuinely impressive rather than just a statistic.
If you want to see where your own vertical jump ranks — against the general population, high school athletes, college players, and NBA combine averages — use our free calculator below.
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