Some won. Some lost. Some even won and lost.

Yep, another NBA Draft night has come, gone and left many enraged — and others completely satisfied.

“The bottom line to all of it,” said one general manager, “is we really won’t know how things pan out for three years.”

But some things were known immediately. Like the feelings of Knicks fans over the choice of Kristaps Porzingis at No. 4. Commissioner Adam Silver could easily have said, “With the fourth pick in the 2015 NBA Draft, the New York Knicks select Frederic Weis again” for the way fans reacted, though NBA types are hailing the choice as a sound selection.

“I liked what Phil Jackson did,” said P.J. Carlesimo, former NBA coach of four teams, including the Nets. “It was a pick that predictably would not be well received, yet that was the guy they believed in and they went ahead and did it, which was great.”

But the biggest draft night winners might have been the Heat and Pat Riley, which just puts another thorn in the side of Knicks fans. So here are some winners and losers of the 2015 draft:

Winner: Miami Heat

To get Duke’s Justise Winslow at 10 is staggering. “Miami won huge,” is how one GM put it. And former Nets assistant GM Bobby Marks also labeled the pick a “huge” get, noting: “He’s one of the few guys that can come in and play immediately.”

Loser: Jahlil Okafor

He starts the season as the consensus No. 1 pick. He wins a national title with Duke. He gets passed on the draft boards by two-way stud Karl-Anthony Towns. And he ends up going third – to Philadelphia.

“He has to go to Philadelphia and they have three centers there now,” one Western conference executive said. “The kid is good, but he can’t be happy. He thought he was going to the Lakers and now he’s in Philadelphia.”

Winner: D’Angelo Russell and the Lakers

He’s in Los Angeles, not in Philly. He’ll gain from playing with Kobe Bryant. And in a point guard-driven league, the Lakers grabbed the best point guard in the draft, one with the star power Los Angeles craves.

Winner: New York Knicks

Again, the real answer comes in three years or so, but some love Porzingis – and they like the addition of Jerian Grant plus the under-the-radar acquisition of 6-foot-11 Spanish forward Guillermo Hernangomez in the second round. Porzingis has great size, a beautiful shot and as one scout said, “He’s got a pulse, a heart.” He needs time to develop and that’s the four-letter word Knicks fans hate: time. Grant brings good pedigree and size. He might not be a big-time star, but he projects to be a highly serviceable rotation type. Hernangomez can be stashed — he has a Euro deal buyout.

“Their picks are for the future — that’s how you have to do it. You can’t be reactionary to what fans want. You must look at the future,” Marks said.

One opposing exec, though, said Porzingis would work “anywhere but New York. I don’t know if the kid will have a chance [with the fans].”

Loser: Knicks fans

They wanted Towns or Okafor or Russell or Emmanuel Mudiay or Winslow. They heard “Porzingis.” It resonated through their souls like “anthrax.”

Winner: Brooklyn Nets

Yes, they lost Mason Plumlee and they did not get immediate help. But they landed Chris McCullough, recovering from a blown-out knee, and traded for Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, viewed as a steal when originally snagged by the Blazers at No. 23. The Arizona product has a “broken shot,” according to one exec, but if it gets fixed, with his defense, the Nets have something.

“I really like what the Nets did,” Marks said of his old team. “I liked McCullough at 29. When picking that late, you’re looking for something that might pan out [later]. What he’ll be is your first-round pick next year. And Hollis-Jefferson is a big-time defender, a good athlete.”

Loser: Ty Lawson

For so long, point guard Emmanuel Mudiay was projected as a top-four pick. But he slipped to Denver at No. 7, which by all accounts makes the Nuggets winners. Now Lawson, the incumbent Denver point guard who recently had a DUI rap, was on a video proclaiming: “I’m going to Sacramento.” And hasn’t life been swell in Sacramento lately?

Winner: Minnesota Timberwolves

What’s not to like? They got the No. 1 pick in Karl-Anthony Towns, a superb 6-foot-11, two-way performer. And they later acquired Tyus Jones, a driven point guard who is not going to overwhelm with his body or explosiveness, but knows how to play and is a winner.

Loser: Atlanta Hawks

Tim Hardaway Jr. Really? Unless there is something else on the war room table, there is not much need for another guard with Kyle Korver and Kent Bazemore in the fold. The Hawks could have landed a good player in Grant, for example, at No. 15 (original pick) or No. 19 (after trade down with Wizards).

Winner: Toronto Raptors

Getting Delon Wright at No. 20 to back up Kyle Lowry was a sound move. Toronto moved defensively challenged point guard Greivis Vasquez and brought in Wright, a good-sized point guard (6-foot-6) known for good decisions. And he played for a former pro, Larry Krystkowiak, at Utah.

Loser: The undrafted

Forwards Cliff Alexander of Kansas and Christian Wood of UNLV plus center Robert Upshaw of Washington head the group of guys who were left without an NBA cap. Alexander had injuries, inconsistent play and a family member taking money from an agent. Wood underwhelmed with his work ethic at workouts. Upshaw has all sorts of off-the-court issues. But as one exec said, maybe those players are better off and can pick a team where they’ll fit.