Heat trade up, land Louisville's Ryan Conwell in second round of NBA draft
Published in Basketball
MIAMI — With just one bite at the apple in the 2026 NBA draft, the Miami Heat used their lone pick in the process by emerging with Louisville guard Ryan Conwell in the second round of Wednesday night’s draft.
Scheduled to select at No. 41 entering the night, the Heat instead traded with the Oklahoma City Thunder to land Conwell at No. 37, trading the No. 41 pick and cash.
A solid 3-point shooter with an NBA body, Conwell, listed by the NBA at 6 feet 2, 215 pounds, ended his college career with several plaudits, including being a 2025-26 All-ACC second-team selection, while leading Louisville and ranking sixth in the ACC in scoring, pacing the ACC and ranked 16th nationally in 3-pointers made per game (3.29), and posting eight games of five or more 3-pointers in 2025-26.
Earlier, he was named to the 2024-25 All-Big East third team as a junior at Xavier and 2023-24 Missouri Valley Conference Newcomer of the Year and All-MVC second team at Indiana State.
In addition to the time at Louisville, Xavier and Indiana State, Conwell began his collegiate career at South Florida.
In the immediate wake of the selection, Yahoo draft expert Kevin O’Connor posted. “I love the Ryan Conwell pick for the Heat. After getting Giannis, Miami badly needs shot creation in the backcourt. Conwell’s combo style reminds me so much of Norm Powell, so it’s pretty funny he could end up being the guy that replaces him if Powell leaves.”
Of trading up for Conwell, ESPN analyst and former NBA executive Bobby Marks posted, “Smart move considering Miami is likely facing financial restrictions filling out their bench.”
For his part, ESPN draft insider Jeremy Woo, when asked ahead of Wednesday night’s second round for a remaining under-the-radar prospect said, “Ryan Conwell. Although he’s effectively a small two-guard, I liked his physicality, shooting and toughness and think he’ll defend enough to find an NBA home long term.” After the selection, Woo posted, “Conwell’s shooting and toughness make him a strong fit for a team with one of the best second-round and undrafted track records in the league.”
The Heat were without a first-round selection, having dealt Tuesday night’s No. 13 selection to the Milwaukee Bucks in the blockbuster deal for Giannis Antetokounmpo. The Bucks selected Tennessee forward Nate Ament at the slot.
The Heat’s own selection in Wednesday night’s draft had been sent out in a previous trade, with that No. 44 pick held by the San Antonio Spurs at the start of Wednesday night’s process. Taken at that No. 44 slot was Duke forward Maliq Brown.
The No. 41 selection, which originally belonged to the Golden State Warriors, was acquired by the Heat from the Charlotte Hornets for not being made fully aware of the gambling investigation into Terry Rozier, before the guard was obtained in January 2024. Then came Wednesday night’s move up.
Selected Wednesday night in the second round ahead of Conwell were Ohio State guard Bruce Thornton, BYU guard Richie Saunders, Duke guard Isaiah Evans, Arkansas guard Meleek Thomas, Arkansas forward Trevon Brazile and Cincinnati forward Baba Miller.
Still on the board after the Heat landed Conwell were North Carolina center Henri Veesaar, German guard Jack Kayil, Houston guard Emanuel Sharp, Purdue guard Braden Smith, St. John’s forward Dillon Mitchell, Tennessee forward Felix Okpara, UCLA forward Tyler Bilodeau, Virginia center Ugonna Onyenso, Arizona guard Jaden Bradley, Filou Oostende (Belgium) guard Noam Yaacov, Vanderbilt wing/forward Tyler Nickel, South Florida big man Izaiyah Nelson and St. John’s forward Bryce Hopkins, among others.
Selected at what was the Heat’s No. 41 slot at the start of the night was Kentucky guard Otega Oweh.
Next up will be rounding out the summer-league roster with undrafted prospects, with the Heat next month to compete in summer leagues in San Francisco and Las Vegas. Assistant coach Wayne Ellington will guide that roster.
The Heat over the years have thrived with second-round selections, including No. 44 pick Pelle Larsson two years ago and No. 40 Josh Richardson a decade earlier.
But it is when the drafts have ended that the Heat also have swooped in for undrafted success stories, most notably Duncan Robinson in 2018, Larsson’s Arizona teammate Keshad Johnson in 2024 and then undrafted center Vlad Goldin last year.
Based on the Heat’s position against the first-apron hard cap created by the Antetokounmpo trade, the Heat are left with $18 million to round out their standard roster. That could create opportunity not only for Conwell, but other low-cost undrafted options, with the Heat typically identifying such NBA-quality prospects ahead of time and then coming in with offers of two-way spots, small guarantees or summer league roster spots shortly after the draft.
Going forward, because of surrendering a 2033 second-round pick to the Bucks in the Antetokounmpo trade, the Heat have only one remaining tradeable second-round pick – a highly protected 2031 selection that likely will fall to the end of that second round.
©2026 South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Visit sun-sentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.







Comments