If the Pistons are going to get anything useful out of Chaz Lanier, Summer League is where it has to start. Right now, though, the second-year guard looks like a player whose spot is already slipping away.
Detroit took Lanier in the early part of the second round of the 2025 Draft, so nobody was expecting an instant impact. But he’s already 24, which changes the math. He’s less than two months younger than Cade Cunningham, who is heading into his 6th NBA season, while Lanier may be entering his 2nd.
That “may” matters. There’s a real chance he isn’t on the Pistons’ roster when the season opens.
Lanier barely saw the floor last season, showing up mostly in mop-up minutes, and he didn’t do much with those chances. He’s the kind of player who has to shoot his way into a rotation, but he hit just 28 percent from long range in his limited action.
That would be a problem on almost any roster. It’s even tougher now in Detroit, where the Pistons have added more shooting and made the path to minutes even narrower.
Last season, they had exactly one elite 3-point threat, and Lanier still couldn’t crack the rotation. If he couldn’t get on the court then, it’s hard to see the opening getting wider now.
His Summer League start didn’t help. Lanier went 1-of-6 from deep, and while nobody should overreact to exhibition games, a 24-year-old guard needs to stand out more than that against a mix of teenagers and players trying to hang on.
That’s the other issue: Lanier doesn’t bring much else. Shooting is his calling card, and if the shots aren’t falling, there isn’t much reason for Detroit to keep him around.
The depth chart tells the same story. Lanier doesn’t even show up on it, with Duncan Robinson, Isaiah Joe, Kevin Huerter and Gary Harris all ahead of him. On top of that, Daniss Jenkins and Ebuka Okorie will likely get some time off the ball with Cade Cunningham.
So unless something goes badly wrong, Lanier is buried. And he’s not going to climb out of that hole by bricking shots in Summer League.
Detroit is on the hook for $2.1 million for him next season, so the Pistons will likely look for trade possibilities first. If that doesn’t work out, don’t be shocked if they cut him before the season begins.
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Roddy Gayle Jr. offered another encouraging note with 10 points and two made 3-pointers, a useful sign for a player trying to build confidence from the perimeter. Summer League can be noisy and uneven by design, but Detroit at least left its first game with a couple of performances worth circling as the roster evaluation continues. [Read more 🡒]
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Las Vegas Summer League got rolling on July 9, and the early rookie action has already started to sort out who looks ready to matter right away. Across the first wave of games, a mix of top picks and undrafted free agents put together eye-catching showings in wins over teams like Orlando, Utah, Detroit, Dallas and the Clippers, giving scouts and fans plenty to track as the 2026 class settles in.
For Pistons fans, one result stood out because it came in a 101-93 loss to Detroit and featured a rookie who stayed efficient from the floor while knocking down shots from deep without giving the ball away. It was the kind of performance that can sharpen the focus on a player fast in Vegas, even if the full identity of the one who made the biggest impression is still part of the intrigue. [Read more 🡒]
