The WORST NBA Draft Picks Since 2000
- Joel Piton
- 5 days ago
- 18 min read
by Joel Piton
Sportz Nation - 4/24/2026

It's no secret that when a player steps to the podium early on draft night, lofty expectations are guaranteed. Teams are investing millions of dollar into a kid that just might take their franchise to the promised land, putting hope, pressure, and expectation that one name can change everything. Over the years, the draft has produced stars, superstars and Hall of Famers that reshaped the league. But for every franchise-altering home run, there have also been some painful swings and misses that set organizations back for years. Whether it was because of injuries, poor fit, lack of development, or simply being taken ahead of far better talent, some players careers have been defined by disappointment. So let's take a look who's graced the podium over the last quarter century and look back at the worst NBA Draft picks since 2000, and fair warning, most of these what-ifs haunt fanbases to this day.
Side Note: This list is focused more on players who disappointed because of underperformance rather than injuries or major health issues. That's why names like Greg Oden and Markelle Fultz are being treated separately.
Anthony Bennett
Pick: 1 (2013)

NBA Career Length: 2013-2017
Career Stats: 4.4 PPG · 3.1 RPG · 0.5 APG · 39.2% FG
The most recognizable name on this list, Anthony Bennett gained notoriety for being the headliner for a draft class that lacked all hype…by being abundantly worse than just about every other prospect. Coming out of UNLV, he looked like a matchup nightmare: intimidating and bulky with a soft shooting touch, sneaky defensive chops and seemingly the perfect tweener. What went wrong? A series both physical and mental health ailments. Bennett tore his rotator cuff right before the draft and was later diagnosed with both asthma and sleep apnea. The pressure of being number one was on, and it was visible. Bennett didn't score a point throughout his first three games, and finished his rookie season averaging just 4 points per game. He settled for poor jumpers, lacked rhythm, and ultimately saw his way out of the league after just three and a half years.
Darko Milicic
Pick: 2 (2003)

NBA Career Length: 2003-2012
Career Stats: 6.0 PPG · 4.2 RPG · 1.3 BPG · 46.0% FG
Drafted 2nd overall in the legendary 2003 class—ahead of Carmelo Anthony, Chris Bosh, and Dwyane Wade—Darko’s career became the ultimate cautionary tale for the "high-upside" European prospect. But context matters. Before the draft, scouts were mesmerized by the 7-footer that could move like a guard, send shots to the cheap seats, and dominated Serbian basketball at the age of sixteen. Joe Dumars saw him as the missing link off the bench that could fuel Detroit's title hopes. Suffice to say, Darko did end up winning a title in his rookie year with the Pistons, making him the youngest player to accomplish this ever. But Darko himself averaged just 0.1 points per game and one minute per game throughout the playoffs, contributing…nothing. This raised red flags as you can imagine, but Darko was just 18 during his rookie season. Unfortunately, Darko himself admits that his arrogance and lack of cohesion with the NBA prevented him from developing any real talents throughout his 10 year career.
Derrick Williams
Pick: 2 (2011)

NBA Career Length: 2011-2018
Career Stats: 8.9 PPG · 4.0 RPG · 0.7 APG · 43.4% FG
Williams was a monster at Arizona—an elite athlete with a 7'1" wingspan who could jump out the gym. Somehow the guy shot 56% from three. Unfortunately for Derrick, the Timberwolves already had a mobile, sharpshooting forward in Kevin Love, which left Williams log-jammed. Williams dominated as a driver in college but shifted his game at the NBA level in favor of perimeter jumpers. He drifted away from the basket, became jump-shot reliant and his efficiency plummeted. As for his 56% from three in college? Williams shot just 30% from three throughout his NBA career. Without the elite shooting or the willingness to drive like he used to, Williams was no longer a mismatch, rather, just an undersized forward who couldn't stretch the floor or protect the rim.
Dragan Bender
Pick: 4 (2016)

NBA Career Length: 2016-2020
Career Stats: 5.4 PPG · 3.9 RPG · 1.3 APG · 39.9% FG
Dragan Bender was the example of the NBA’s Kristaps Porzingis obsession backfiring. Drafted fourth overall by the Phoenix Suns in 2016, Bender became a victim of a brutal reality. That same year, every team was looking for the next Dirk, or some sort of European unicorn. Bender, a 7'1" teenager with guard-like mobility, fit the mold perfectly. He could pass, had a shooting stroke that looked deadly, was meant to be the versatile defensive anchor who could space the floor for Devin Booker. The Phoenix Suns of the mid-to-late 2010s were a graveyard for player development. In Bender’s three seasons there, he played for four different head coaches.
Without a stable system, he spent crucial years fluctuating roles from spot up corner shooter to bench-warmer. Bender also became notoriously "allergic" to the basket, rarely attacking the rim and settling for jumpers despite his size. He was super young and the Suns were patient, but by the time he could buy his first drink, Phoenix decided he wasn't an NBA player. Following an ACL tear in 2022, Bender's career is seemingly over.
Ekpe Udoh
Pick: 6 (2010)

NBA Career Length: 2010-2019
Career Stats: 3.5 PPG · 2.9 RPG · 1.1 BPG · 45.3% FG
Ekpe Udoh is a EuroLeague legend, but the NBA he was an example of a player whose floor was higher than his ceiling. Coming out of Baylor, Udoh was one of the most feared defensive players in college basketball. He had a massive 7'4" wingspan and the Warriors (who were a struggling lottery team in 2010) saw him as a defensive anchor who could protect the paint while letting their young guards, like Stephen Curry, handle the scoring. Ekpe shook off injuries early and became a defensive threat as a rookie, averaging 1.5 swats a night. But while his defense was as advertised his offense never developed. In an era where power forwards were starting to move to the perimeter, Udoh had no jumper whatsoever and wasn't a strong enough post scorer to demand double teams or threaten anyone. He became a below average big who was easy to guard, making it hard to keep him on the floor for heavy minutes. However, he's still one of the smartest defensive minds in basketball and is currently putting that towards coaching.
Hasheem Thabeet
Pick: 2 (2009)

NBA Career Length: 2009-2014
Career Stats: 2.2 PPG · 2.7 RPG · 0.8 BPG · 56.7% FG
Taken ahead of future MVPs James Harden and Stephen Curry, Hasheem Thabeet is often hailed the ultimate draft bust. What got him drafted so high? At UConn, Thabeet was a literal game-changer. He was a back-to-back Big East Defensive Player of the Year who averaged over 4 blocks per game while changing the geometry of the floor. Scouts saw a mobile giant who could run the floor and be the next Dikembe, but even Dikembe had a larger offensive bag than Hasheem. To make matters worse, the Grizzlies already had an emerging star at the center in Marc Gasol—a future DPOY.
Thabeet was buried on the bench and became the highest-drafted player ever to be sent down to the D-League. In the NBA, being tall isn't enough. Thabeet had cinder blocks for feet when it came to lateral movement, had no post moves, couldn't catch the ball in traffic and was a liability at the free-throw line. When things got tough, he didn't have the offensive foundation to play his way out of the slump, and he was out of the league after just five seasons. Fans question his love for. thegame, but remains active playing for his hometown team in Tanzania.
Jahlil Okafor
Pick: 3 (2015)

NBA Career Length: 2015-2025
Career Stats: 10.3 PPG · 4.7 RPG · 0.8 BPG · 54.2% FG
You've got to sympathize with Jahlil Okafor because didn't fail due to a lack of skill or effort—he simply arrived at the party 15 minutes after it ended. Drafted third overall in 2015 by the Philadelphia 76ers, he was a massive throwback in a league that was suddenly looking forward. Coming out of Whitney Young in Chicago and a National Championship run at Duke, Okafor was considered the most polished low-post prospect since Tim Duncan. He had pillowy hands, incredible footwork, and seemingly Hall of Fame upside. But the concerns were fair. He didn't block shots, couldn't shoot from beyond 10 feet, and didn't seem superb athletically. Ultimately, Okafor's career was a victim of Warriors basketball, where Steph and Golden State killed the slow, back-to-the-basket center archetype overnight.
Okafor was also drafted into the peak of Philadelphia’s "Process," joining a roster that was waiting on Nerlens Noel and Joel Embiid to deliver. He averaged 17.5 PPG as a rookie, but the team was a disaster, and his style of play—holding the ball for 10 seconds to work a post move—clashed with the high-paced offense the NBA was moving toward. He was also a reluctant passer and his defensive upside never came around, making him below average. He saw a recent stint with the Pacers last season but a promising rookie year is pretty much all he has to show for his NBA career.
Jan Vesely
Pick: 6 (2011)

NBA Career Length: 2011-2014
Career Stats: 3.6 PPG · 3.5 RPG · 0.5 BPG · 52.1% FG
Drafted before Kawhi Leonard, Klay Thompson and Jimmy Butler, this pick remains one of the worst in Wizards history. Jan Vesely drew comparisons to Blake Griffin coming into the league, and while his NBA career was short lived, it was about a lack of fit more than anything. In 2011, Vesely was one of the most hyped international prospects in years. At 6'11" with elite speed and a massive vertical, he looked like the perfect running mate for John Wall. Violent dunks, defensive versatility, it seemed like a no-brainer. Unfortunately, the biggest barrier for Vesely was his shooting. It wasn't just the three-pointer; his free-throw shooting became legendary for the wrong reasons.
In his second season, he shot a staggering 30.8% from the free-throw line, which made him an offensive liability. The Washington Wizards drafted him to be a high-flying wing, but quickly realized he didn't have the perimeter skills to play the 3. They then tried to force him to play the 4 or 5 and put on some muscle, which took away his speed advantage. He ended up getting cut from the Denver Nuggets just three years into his career, and finished with some of the worst statistics for a 6th overall pick ever.
Jarrett Culver
Pick: 6 (2019)

NBA Career Length: 2019-2023
Career Stats: 6.5 PPG · 2.8 RPG · 1.2 APG · 40.1% FG
Culver was a jack of all trades at Texas Tech, but his lack of a single elite NBA skill was his downfall. Drafted sixth in 2019 over Tyler Herro, Coby White, Jordan Poole and more, Culver was supposed to be the versatile wing who would anchor the Minnesota Timberwolves' perimeter for a decade. He was a 6'6" wing who could score from all three levels, but his jumper had a noticeable hitch in it. Minnesota cut their losses and drafted him anyway, to their dismay. But in the NBA, if you are a wing who can't shoot, you are effectively a liability and rather than improving his jumper, Culver's mechanics regressed. He shot 50% from the free throw line as a guard and lost all confidence as a scorer. By his second season, the Timberwolves drafted Anthony Edwards and had pretty much given up the Jarrett Culver experiment. However, Culver is currently dominating overseas, putting up 26 points per game as Japan's leading scorer. At just 27 years old, will he get the call back?
Joe Alexander
Pick: 8 (2008)

NBA Career Length: 2008-2010
Career Stats: 4.2 PPG · 1.8 RPG · 0.7 APG · 41.0% FG
Joe Alexander is the quintessential "Workout Warrior" cautionary tale. He famously dominated the NBA draft combine as well as all pre-draft workouts and shot his draft stock up from mid to late first round to lottery pick in the blink of an eye. Drafted ahead of the likes of Brook Lopez, DeAndre Jordan and Serge Ibaka, his career lasted just 67 games, shorter than every player on this list. At West Virginia he was an explosive, high-flying forward with a 38-inch vertical and a massive wingspan. At the combine, he benched more than centers and ran faster than guards. Milwaukee saw a point-forward who was overlooked in college and was certain to dominate the NBA.
Instead, Alexander's athleticism didn't immediately translate and he had no plan B. In the NBA, everyone is an elite athlete. Alexander found out quickly that being able to hit your head on the rim in an empty gym didn't matter if your basketball IQ didn't exist. The Bucks also traded for Richard Jefferson the same day they drafted Joe, which meant he'd be buried on the bench in favor of RJ and Charlie Villanueva. It didn't help that head coach Scott Skiles was notoriously tough on rookies. His time in the NBA was over before it even really started. By his second season, he was traded to the Bulls, played 8 games, and was out of the league.
Josh Jackson
Pick: 4 (2017)

NBA Career Length: 2017-2022
Career Stats: 11.3 PPG · 4.0 RPG · 1.8 APG · 41.6% FG
Josh Jackson was a high-motor prospect whose lack of a consistent jumper and off-court issues completely derailed what should have been an All-Star trajectory. Drafted fourth overall in 2017 by the Phoenix Suns, he was expected to be the versatile, lockdown defender who would perfectly complement Devin Booker. At Kansas, he was named the next Iguodala for his defensive, passing, and ability to score in short bursts. Even though he had no jumper (56% from the free-throw line), he looked like he could impact every facet of the game without needing to score.
If you look at his 11.3 PPG career average, it doesn't look like a total disaster. However, these were just inflated stats on a team that couldn't sniff the playoffs. When the games actually mattered, his inefficiency crippled his team's floor spacing. The kid's maturity also raised red-flags, even from Kansas, where reports of a scandal with a female Jayhawk raised concerns. There were then several bizarre incidents: he was fined $20K for making a menacing gesture at a fan, was arrested at Rolling Loud, and ultimately the Suns cut their losses with him in favor of Cameron Johnson and Mikal Bridges.
Killian Hayes
Pick: 7 (2020)

NBA Career Length: 2020-present
Career Stats: 7.9 PPG · 2.9 RPG · 5.0 APG · 37.7% FG
French guard Killian Hayes was touted as a jumbo combo guard and a superstar playmaker in the making. . At 6'5" with a smooth left hand, he looked like a modern, oversized lead guard. He was an elite pick-and-roll navigator and a promising scorer who drew comparisons to Ricky Rubio and D'Angelo Russell. The biggest concern however, was his right hand. He was almost exclusively left-dominant, leading to high turnover rates when forced right. At the NBA level, while his assists totals hint at a serviceable guard, the context of his efficiency makes him one of the least productive payers of his generation. Hayes shoots 37.7% FG% for his career. To put that in perspective, that is one of the lowest marks for any player with over 200 games played in the modern era.
In an NBA where guards are expected to be scoring threats, Hayes’ inability to finish at the rim or hit a consistent jumper allows defenses to ignore him. The right hand still hasn't translated, so defenders sit on his left hip and force him to drive right, where his handle is loose and his finishing is non-existent. The Pistons gave him multiple opportunities to succeed, pre and post Cade Cunningham, but he just hasn't lived up to his potential, even now in Sacramento.
Kwame Brown
Pick: 1 (2001)

NBA Career Length: 2001-2013
Career Stats: 6.6 PPG · 5.5 RPG · 0.9 APG · 49.2% FG
Kwame Brown is the ultimate case study in how a toxic environment and the weight of historic expectations can crush a young prospect. While he had a solid 12-year career and made over $60 million, he was selected over Tony Parker, Pau Gasol, Joe Johnson and more. In 2001, the league was obsessed with finding the next hyper-athletic, mobile big man and Kwame looked like he was built in a lab for that specific role. He averaged 20 points, 13 rebounds, and 6 blocks per game in high school, was 6'11" with a massive 7'4" wingspan and had elite running ability for a big. Scouts were mesmerized by his fluidity too—he could handle the ball and run the floor like a wing. He famously told Wizards coach Doug Collins, "If you draft me, you'll never regret it."
The truth is, you don't last a decade in the NBA if you can't play. Brown played over 600 games with the likes of Jordan (who notably pressured him) and Kobe Bryant. But with career averages of just 6 points per game, he severely underwhelmed expectations. he had "small hands" for a 7-footer. He struggled to catch "bullets" or interior passes, leading to turnovers and missed layups. He was a decent rebounder and defender, but he never developed a signature offensive move. In an era where No. 1 picks were expected to be great, Brown was an easy target for criticism.
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
Pick: 2 (2012)

NBA Career Length: 2012-2020
Career Stats: 8.4 PPG · 5.4 RPG · 1.2 APG · 47.4% FG
MKG is a unique case: he had arguably the highest motor in the 2012 Draft, but his career was undone by a broken jumper and a series of devastating injuries that hit at the worst possible moments. He was the No. 1 high school prospect for much of his life and was famously Kyrie Irving’s co-star at St. Patrick High School in New Jersey. He was an elite 6'6" athlete with a 7'0" wingspan and a "limitless" gas tank. At Kentucky, he didn't need to score to dominate; he could guard four positions, dive for every loose ball, and ignite fast breaks. Unfortunately, the shooting was so bad that the Hornets reached a breaking point.
MKG’s shooting mechanics are still discussed in coaching clinics as a warning. Charlotte hired legendary shooter Mark Price specifically to rebuild MKG’s shot from scratch. It worked from mid-range, but MKG never adapted a three point jumper, playing multiple seasons without draining a single one. He also tore the labrum in his shooting shoulder twice in two years which further affected his shot. The 3-and-D revolution was just beginning so in 2012, you could still survive as a non-shooting wing. By 2017, it was impossible. Despite being a highly effective defender when healthy, Kidd-Gilchrist was dropped by the league at just 27 years old after a brief stint with Dallas.
Nikoloz Tskitishvili
Pick: 5 (2002)

NBA Career Length: 2002-2006
Career Stats: 2.9 PPG · 1.8 RPG · 0.7 APG · 30.4% FG
Nikoloz Tskitishvili was drafted on a hypothetical scale that didn't even exist yet. Good size, budding range, mobile and able to hit jumpers—he looked like the perfect candidate to be Dirk Nowitzki 2.0 in a league where everyone wanted one. Legend has it that Nuggets GM Kiki Vandeweghe was so impressed with his workout that he decided Nikoloz was the future on the spot. In reality, he averaged just 6 points in Euroleague and had very few meaningful minutes overseas. As you can imagine, his youth and lack of experience and were his downfall. A 30.4% career FG% for a 7-footer is almost mathematically impossible in the modern era.
The guy was terrified of the paint. Despite being 7'0" tall he refused to drive, settled from jumpers he didn't make, and among all lottery picks in the 21st century with at least 150 games played, shot one of the lowest marks in NBA history. Nikoloz faded out after three and half seasons played, but serves as the Vice President of the Georgian Basketball Federation to this day. Still, the Nuggets could have had Amar'e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony on the same team if they had drafted correctly.
Rafael Araujo
Pick: 8 (2004)

NBA Career Length: 2004-2007
Career Stats: 2.8 PPG · 2.8 RPG · 0.3 APG · 40.5% FG
Nicknamed "Hoffa," Araujo is widely considered the biggest draft blunder in Toronto Raptors history. Drafted 8th overall over stars like Andre Iguodala and Jameer Nelson, Araujo's collegiate dominance was a product of being older and stronger than his peers rather than having superior NBA talent. Before AJ Dybantsa and Jimmer Fredette, there was Hoffa. In his senior year, he averaged 18 points and 10 rebounds, and scouts saw a tough interior presence with a soft touch at the rim. The Raptors wanted a physical center to protect Chris Bosh and they believed Araujo had the tools. Araujo's game however, fell off a cliff shortly after he was drafted.
Within months, it was clear that Toronto had passed on a star in Iguodala for a backup center who couldn't keep up with the pace of the NBA. In the NBA, size was no longer an advantage, everyone was his size. He lacked a vertical leap, had soft hands when it came to catching passes in traffic, and shot a dismal 40.5%. He became a foul machine, often racking up 4 or 5 fouls in under 15 minutes of play because he was too slow to stay in front of NBA bigs. Araujo's career lasted just three poor years, and he's mentioned an interest in writing a book about the unpleasantness of his NBA experience.
Shelden Williams
Pick: 5 (2006)

NBA Career Length: 2006-2012
Career Stats: 4.5 PPG · 4.3 RPG · 0.5 APG · 46.2% FG
Nicknamed "The Landlord" at Duke, Williams is often pointed to as one of the ultimate "low-ceiling" lottery picks. While he wasn't a total failure, he was drafted over Rajon Rondo, Rudy Gay and Brandon Roy. Why? At Duke, Williams was a monster. He was a two-time National Defensive Player of the Year and left as the school’s all-time leader in blocks and rebounds. He looked NBA ready, 7'4" wingspan, chiseled frame and great in the locker room. Unfortunately, his floor turned out to be much lower than expected in the pros. In college, Shelden overwhelmed opponents with sheer strength. In the NBA, he was suddenly facing athletes who were just as strong but much faster and more explosive. Shelden's offense became a non-factor.
As the NBA began to shift toward more pick-and-roll-heavy offenses, Shelden’s lack of lateral quickness became a glaring liability. The Hawks gave up on him in favor of Marvin Williams after just a season and some change and from there, he became a professional journeyman, playing for seven teams in six years, never averaging more than 5.5 points per game in any single season. For many fans, Shelden is arguably more famous for his marriage to Candace Parker rather than his play.
Stromile Swift
Pick: 2 (2000)

NBA Career Length: 2000-2009
Career Stats: 8.4 PPG · 4.6 RPG · 0.6 APG · 47.3% FG
The "Stro Show" was fun to watch in the early 2000s considering the Grizzlies desperately needed something exciting. He had every physical tool to be an All-Star but lacked the "software" to run the hardware. He played 9 season and made over $40 million, but was still a poor pick drafted ahead of Jamal Crawford, Hedo Turkoglu, and Michael Redd. After a dominant sophomore year at LSU, he looked like the most athletic big man to enter the draft in a decade. He had a 7'2" wingspan and a vertical that allowed him to finish lobs that most players couldn't even reach. Scouts compared him to Shawn Kemp and because he was only 20 years old, the consensus was that his offensive game would catch up.
However, in nine years, his game never evolved. He shot a dismal 21.9% from 3-point range (on very few attempts) and never developed a reliable hook shot or a face-up game. He was a dunk-only specialist, and because he was always hunting for blocks, Swift was constantly in foul trouble. For his career, he averaged a staggering 5.1 fouls per 36 minutes. He ended up being a net negative +/- and more of a liability.
Thomas Robinson
Pick: 5 (2012)

NBA Career Length: 2012-2017
Career Stats: 4.9 PPG · 4.8 RPG · 0.6 APG · 47.0% FG
Drafted fifth overall in 2012 by the Sacramento Kings, he was coming off a legendary junior season at Kansas where he won Big 12 Player of the Year and led the Jayhawks to the National Championship game. He averaged 12 boards a game, was a double-double nightmare and the most intimidating prospect in the NCAA. What went wrong?Robinson was drafted into a chaotic Sacramento frontcourt already rebuilding around DeMarcus Cousins. Cousins was a ball-dominant big who needed a defensive minded, floor-spacing partner. Robinson was neither.
Instead of complementing each other, they occupied the same space in the paint, clogging the offense and leaving the defense vulnerable. Sacramento gave up on him after just 51 games and traded him to Houston. At 6'9" without a jump shot, he was too small to be a traditional center but lacked the shooting range to be a modern power forward. Defenses simply ignored him outside of five feet. Because he couldn't space the floor, he became an offensive liability and was out of the NBA entirely at just 26-years-old.
Yi Jianlian
Pick: 6 (2007)

NBA Career Length: 2007-2012
Career Stats: 7.9 PPG · 4.9 RPG · 0.8 APG · 40.4% FG
Yi Jianlian had world-class physical tools as well as the massive international following to be an NBA star. For context, his first matchup against Yao Ming was viewed by over 100 million people. However, Yi’s failure was a combination of bad politics, a lack of adaptation, and a cloud of mystery regarding his actual age. Yi dominated in China from age 15 and was hailed for his insane bounce and smooth shooting stroke. Scouts were calling him a more athletic Pau Gasol, but even then, scouts were worried about his softness at the interior. What ensued next was chaos. The Bucks picked him sixth, against Yi's camp's will, stating they wanted him to go somewhere with a larger Asian-American following.
This resulted in an unsuccessful, long stand-off where the Chinese government and Yi's representatives wanted him traded before he even played a game to no avail. He touched down in a locker-room where he wasn't even really wanted. There were also reports that he was three years older than what was portrayed by various outlets. As for his game? Despite his 7-foot frame, Yi was allergic to the paint and only took jumpers. When his jumper wasn't falling, he offered almost nothing else on the court. Yi had some flashes, but his lack of consistency and injuries turned him into a below-average journeyman for four years.
_______________________________
Not Busts—Just Unlucky
Dante Exum
Dajuan Wagner
Greg Oden
Adam Morrison
Jonny Flynn
Markelle Fultz
James Wiseman
Jabari Parker
That's why we love the draft, it can't be predicted. For every future superstar whose name gets called, there is another player who never quite reaches the level everyone imagined, whether because of pressure, poor fit, or a game that simply did not translate the way scouts expected. It's one of the harshest parts of professional sports, and a reminder that potential means nothing until it turns into production. Some of these names came into the league with massive hype, and others were trusted to become franchise building blocks and never got there. Looking back at this list, which player are you most surprised unfortunately ended up here?

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Thanks for reading!
-Joel Piton
(@jpiton7)