The Detroit Pistons’ summer reset picked up another name Tuesday, with Marcus Sasser headed to the Dallas Mavericks in a six-team deal that keeps reshaping the roster around the edges.
Sasser, 25, is going to Dallas in a move first reported by ESPN. Detroit is also sending a protected 2028 second-round pick to the Clippers as part of the transaction. The trade is one piece of a larger swap that also sends Caris LeVert to the Milwaukee Bucks and includes the previously reported moves of Isaiah Stewart to the Memphis Grizzlies and John Collins coming to Detroit from the Clippers.
For the Pistons, the deal also creates a trade exception worth $15 million, according to a person with first-hand knowledge who spoke to the Free Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. That exception matches Stewart’s outgoing salary for 2026-27, gives Detroit flexibility to absorb up to $15 million in salary without sending anything back, and expires in exactly one year.
Sasser’s exit closes the book on a player Detroit moved up to draft 25th overall out of Houston in 2023 under former general manager Troy Weaver. He’s on an expiring contract worth $5.2 million from his four-year, $13.5 million rookie deal, and he leaves after averaging 5.2 points while shooting 41.5% from 3.
When the Pistons needed him, Sasser showed he could give them a spark. The 6-foot-1, 195-pound guard was one of the team’s better shooters, but injuries and a crowded backcourt limited him to 38 games last season.
He was out of the playoff rotation until Game 5 of the second round, then gave Detroit a lift in Game 6 at Cleveland with nine points on 4-for-5 shooting in 18 minutes during a win-or-go-home game. He followed that with 23 minutes in Game 7, scoring nine points on 3-for-12 shooting in a 125-94 loss to the Cavaliers at home.
The move also fits the direction Trajan Langdon has been steering this offseason. The Pistons president of basketball operations said he wanted more ball-handling and shooting after a 60-22 season ended in Game 7 of the second round.
Detroit’s path for Sasser to minutes was already getting tighter after the team traded up four spots to draft Ebuka Okorie, a 19-year-old from Stanford, at No. 17 overall. Langdon then added another shooter by trading for Isaiah Joe from the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Detroit’s offseason has been busy enough to leave the roster looking almost unrecognizable in spots. The Pistons have now lost Sasser, LeVert, Stewart and Tobias Harris, while adding Okorie, Ugonna Onyenso, Isaiah Joe and John Collins. They also re-signed bench wings Kevin Huerter and Javonte Green.
As of Wednesday morning, Detroit had 16 players on its 15-man roster and two of its three two-way spots filled. Jalen Duren remains unsigned as a restricted free agent.
The current depth chart lists Cade Cunningham, Daniss Jenkins and Okorie at point guard; Duncan Robinson, Isaiah Joe, Javonte Green, Chaz Lanier and Gary Harris at shooting guard; Ausar Thompson, Ron Holland, Huerter and Taurean Prince at small forward; Collins and Isaac Jones at power forward; and Duren, Paul Reed, Tolu Smith and Onyenso at center.
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Jalen Durens restricted free agency is still part of the equation, though, which makes the timing tricky for Detroit as it weighs bigger moves. Even so, the possibility of Ingram being available in a broader deal has created a real opening for the Pistons, and it is the kind of situation that can shift quickly if the right team decides to get aggressive. [Read more 🡒]
