Pistons May Be Running Out Of Time For A Real Upgrade

Despite a frenzy of trade activity, the Detroit Pistons face a dwindling array of realistic paths to reshape their roster.

The Detroit Pistons have wrapped up a busy stretch, and the finish line looks a lot closer than the next big splash.

Over the past two days, Detroit completed a six-team trade that brought in two journeymen and made Kevin Huerter’s signing official. That last step mattered more than it might have seemed at first, because once the paperwork was done, the idea of folding Huerter into a sign-and-trade was off the table.

That matters because the Pistons have already missed on, or moved away from, the biggest names they were connected to this offseason. And from the way things have unfolded, it never really sounded like there was a true runway for one of those major swings anyway.

Trey Murphy III was the one name that made the most sense for Detroit, but the Pelicans have all but made it clear they are not trading him. That leaves the Pistons with very few realistic paths, and Michael Porter Jr. falls into that same category.

The issue isn’t just interest. It’s the math.

Detroit simply does not have the kind of contracts it needs to pull off a major deal right now. Porter could make sense as a player, but his contract creates a problem. Matching salary would be difficult without a sign-and-trade involving Jalen Duren, and that’s not a serious route for the Pistons.

Another theoretical path would be sending Duncan Robinson, Ron Holland II and draft capital to Brooklyn for Porter. But that would be a hefty price for a player who is under contract for only one more season and might not even be someone Detroit wants to extend.

That’s really the larger point here: Porter is just one example of the roster-building problem Detroit is staring at. Murphy was so appealing because his deal is much easier to work with. Right now, the Pistons don’t have enough movable salary to chase players in that tier without reaching into the rotation.

Once the recently signed and traded players become eligible to move, Detroit will have more pieces to stack together in a deal. For now, though, that flexibility isn’t there.

It’s not impossible for the Pistons to make a big trade. It’s just a lot harder than fans probably want it to be. On top of the salary issues, Detroit would still need to add four more players to meet the minimum roster requirements.

So the biggest item left on the agenda is re-signing Jalen Duren. Until that gets sorted out, that’s where the focus sits. The door for a major move is still open, but it’s closing fast.

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