The Numbers
The vertical jump is dimmed for a reason. At Wembanyama's dimensions, vertical jump is almost irrelevant — and understanding why reveals something important about how athletic measurements interact with each other, and why raw numbers without context tell the wrong story.
His 10-foot standing reach is the number that matters. The NBA rim is exactly 10 feet off the ground. Wembanyama can touch the rim while standing completely flat-footed. That is his starting point — before he jumps a single inch.
Why His 32-Inch Vertical Is Almost Meaningless
To understand why, you need to think about what a vertical jump test actually measures and what it is used for. The vertical jump measures how high an athlete can get their hand above their standing reach. It is used to evaluate players because most players need to jump significantly to contest shots, dunk, or win jump balls.
For Wembanyama, the calculation looks completely different from any other player in NBA history:
- Standing reach: ~10'0" (at the rim without jumping)
- Add 32-inch vertical: peak fingertip height ≈ 12'8"
- Rim height: 10'0"
- Clearance above rim at peak jump: approximately 32 inches — nearly 3 full feet
He has nearly three feet of clearance above the rim at the peak of his jump. Compare that to the average NBA small forward with a 36-inch vertical and a standard 8'6" standing reach, who peaks at about 11'6" — giving them 18 inches of clearance. Wembanyama has almost double that clearance despite a lower vertical jump.
How Wembanyama Compares to Other NBA Players
Placing his 32-inch vertical in context against other NBA positions shows just how much the standing reach changes everything.
| Player / Group | Vertical Jump | Standing Reach | Peak Fingertip Height | Clearance Above Rim |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average NBA Guard | 34–36" | ~8'5" | ~11'3" | ~15" |
| Average NBA Wing (SF) | 36" | ~8'6" | ~11'6" | ~18" |
| Average NBA Center | 27–29" | ~8'9" | ~11'3" | ~15" |
| AJ Dybantsa (2026) | 42" | 8'10" | ~12'4" | ~28" |
| Victor Wembanyama | 32" | ~10'0" | ~12'8" | ~32" |
| Zion Williamson | 45" | ~8'7" | ~12'4" | ~28" |
The table tells the whole story. Zion Williamson and AJ Dybantsa — two of the most explosively gifted athletes ever tested at the NBA combine — peak at approximately 12'4". Wembanyama, with his "below average" 32-inch vertical, peaks at approximately 12'8". His ceiling is higher than Zion's despite jumping 13 inches less.
How Does Your Vertical Compare to Wembanyama?
See your exact percentile ranking compared to NBA combine averages — and how much clearance above the rim your vertical gives you.
Calculate My Vertical →What His Wingspan Actually Does
Wembanyama's wingspan — approximately 8 feet, or about 8 to 9 inches longer than his already extraordinary height — creates advantages that a vertical jump measurement cannot capture at all.
Shot Blocking
When Wembanyama jumps to block a shot, he is not just getting his hand high — he is extending an 8-foot wingspan at the peak of a 12'8" reach. He can block shots that have already cleared a normal defender's vertical jump, coming from a completely different angle. This is why his block totals look superhuman — he is not just jumping higher, he is covering a physical volume of space around the basket that no other player in history has been able to cover.
Shooting Over Defenders
His release point on his jump hook is reportedly the highest ever recorded. When Wembanyama rises on his jump hook or fadeaway, the ball is being released from a height that essentially no defender on the planet can reach. This is why his mid-range and post numbers are extraordinary — it is not about the sophistication of the move, it is about the geometrically unanswerable release point.
Passing Lanes
Standing at 7'3.5" with a near-10-foot standing reach, Wembanyama sees and reaches passing lanes that other players cannot. His steal totals for a player his size are remarkable — not because of quickness but because of his ability to deflect passes at heights where other players have already cleared their arm out of the way.
The Tom Brady Parallel
This situation has a near-perfect parallel in another sport. Tom Brady's Relative Athletic Score is approximately 1.0 out of 10 — one of the worst ever recorded for an NFL quarterback. He ran a 5.28 forty, had poor explosion scores, and was drafted 199th overall. He went on to win seven Super Bowls.
In Brady's case, the combine measured the wrong things relative to what made him great — arm talent, decision-making speed, and mental processing under pressure. The tests were real, the results were accurate, but they were measuring attributes that had low predictive value for his specific skill set.
Wembanyama's situation is the opposite and even more interesting. His vertical jump test result is accurate — 32 inches is genuinely what he jumps. But the test was designed to measure how high players can get above their standing reach, on the assumption that standing reach is roughly similar across players. When standing reach is nearly 10 feet, the test simply ceases to be relevant in the way it was intended.
Standing Reach — The Most Underrated Measurement in Basketball
Wembanyama is the most extreme example of why standing reach should be weighted more heavily than vertical jump in basketball evaluation. The two measurements together — standing reach plus vertical — give you peak fingertip height, which is the number that actually determines what a player can do on the court.
For most players the difference in standing reach is relatively small — a few inches between a typical guard and a typical center. Vertical jump variation is larger across players, so it dominates the story. But for players with extreme size or wingspan, standing reach swamps vertical jump as the primary predictor of rim-level impact.
This is why NBA teams measure standing reach at every combine and why it appears alongside vertical jump in every serious athletic profile. A player with a 9-inch standing reach advantage over their peers needs to jump 9 fewer inches to accomplish the same task. At Wembanyama's scale, that logic reaches its logical extreme.
Can I Jump as High as Wembanyama's Peak Reach?
Wembanyama's peak fingertip height is approximately 12'8". To match that peak height:
| Your Height | Typical Standing Reach | Vertical Needed to Match Wemby's Peak |
|---|---|---|
| 5'10" | ~7'7" | ~61" — physically impossible |
| 6'0" | ~7'10" | ~58" — physically impossible |
| 6'4" | ~8'3" | ~53" — impossible |
| 6'8" | ~8'9" | ~47" — only ever recorded once in history |
| 7'3.5" (Wembanyama) | ~10'0" | 32" — what he actually jumps |
No athlete of normal human height could match Wembanyama's peak reach regardless of their vertical jump. The world record for vertical jump is approximately 60 inches — a number so rare it has essentially never been replicated. Even at that impossible standard, a 6-foot person still would not reach Wembanyama's peak height at the top of his 32-inch jump.
This is what makes him genuinely unlike any player basketball has ever seen. It is not about the vertical jump. It is about the geometry.
Could You Dunk at Wembanyama's Height?
At 7'3" you would need almost no vertical at all to dunk. See exactly how height and vertical interact — and how close you are to dunking at your own height.
Can I Dunk? →Frequently Asked Questions
See How NBA Verticals Compare by Position
Full breakdown of average, good, and elite vertical jumps at every NBA position — with historical context and how combine numbers translate to on-court impact.
NBA Vertical Jump Guide →