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Detroit Pistons Grab Arlington's Cade Cunningham at No. 1 in NBA Draft

Cunningham played his first two years of high school basketball at Arlington Bowie before transferring to Florida's Montverde Academy

Cade Cunningham poses for photos on the red carpet during the 2021 NBA Draft at the Barclays Center on July 29, 2021 in New York City.
Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons selected Oklahoma State's Cade Cunningham with the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft Thursday night.

Cunningham had been widely expected to be the first name called in New York, though Pistons general manager Troy Weaver wouldn't reveal plans earlier this week and said the team would look at every scenario, including trades.

In the end, Detroit stuck with the 19-year-old mentioned as a potential top pick before ever stepping foot on the Oklahoma State campus.

The 6-foot-8, 220-pound point guard from Arlington, Texas, lived up to expectations with his size and fluid game to become a first-team Associated Press All-American. He averaged 20.1 points, 6.2 rebounds and 3.5 assists with a game that allowed him to hit from 3-point range, score off the dribble or find teammates out of traps.

He played his first two years of high school basketball at Arlington Bowie before he transferred to Monteverde Academy in Monteverde, Florida -- a college prep school.

Cunningham attended the draft wearing a dark suit, shirt and tie with sparkles on his collars and cuffs. When the pick was announced, Cunningham kissed 2-year-old daughter Riley, sitting on his lap, hugged family members then took the stage alongside NBA Commissioner Adam Silver to don a blue Pistons hat.

""It's still crazy, to be in the moment," Cunningham said in an interview on the ESPN draft broadcast. "Words can't really explain the emotions. You know what I'm saying?"

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Cunningham -- the first player in Oklahoma State history to be picked No. 1 overall -- joins a Pistons franchise that has won 20 games for two straight seasons and hasn't finished better than .500 for five straight years.

Houston followed at No. 2 by grabbing preps-to-pros teenager Jalen Green, who bypassed college basketball to play in the G League. The 6-foot-6 Green averaged 17.9 points on 46% shooting 15 games, showing off high-flying dunks, a willingness to attack the rim and a promising shooting touch.

Next up was Southern California freshman big man Evan Mobley, who went to Cleveland at No. 3. The 7-footer has potential as a mobile big man with length and the versatility to switch on switches. He swept Pac-12 individual honors while ranking as one of the nation's top shot blockers and helped the Trojans reach an NCAA regional final for the first time in 20 years.

Then came the first surprise of the night with Florida State forward Scottie Barnes going to Toronto with the No. 4 pick. Barnes is a mobile and versatile 6-8 forward with the potential to be a strong playmaker and elite defender.

That group headlined a class that included scorers, playmakers and potentially elite defenders at the top, including Gonzaga freshman point guard Jalen Suggs and another G League player in forward Jonathan Kuminga.

The draft is later than its traditional late-June slot for the second straight year due to the COVID-19 pandemic that interrupted the 2019-20 season. The 2021-22 season is scheduled to return to its normal schedule, with next year's draft set for June again.

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