The Detroit Pistons have already shown this summer that roster upgrades matter more than sentiment, and Marcus Sasser may be the next piece to feel that reality.
After moving Isaiah Stewart, the team’s longest-tenured player and a fan favorite, Detroit made clear that Trajan Langdon is willing to make tough calls to improve the roster. That logic could easily apply to Sasser, who is now being shopped by the Pistons, according to Mike Scotto of HoopsHype.
The move would not come as a surprise. Detroit added Ebuka Okorie in the draft, then brought in Isaiah Joe in a trade, and that only added to an already crowded guard room. Sasser and Daniss Jenkins were already in the mix as smaller guards, and it is hard to imagine all four remaining on the roster when next season begins.
Sasser’s run in Detroit has been uneven, but he has handled his opportunities well enough to make the limited usage frustrating. He never quite locked down a full-time spot in the rotation, yet every time he did get on the floor, he usually delivered. That was true last season, and it was also the kind of player he looked like in the playoffs once JB Bickerstaff finally turned to him.
What Sasser brings is pretty clear: he can shoot it efficiently and he competes on defense. The problem is just as obvious. He is undersized, and he is not the type of guard who consistently creates offense for everyone else.
With Okorie and Isaiah Joe now in the picture, Sasser has been pushed even farther down the depth chart. At that point, Detroit’s best play may be to get something for him now, or fold him into a larger deal as a sweetener.
That’s where his value really lies. On his own, Sasser probably won’t bring back much, even though he’s been productive and is set to make just over $5 million next season.
Recent trades for Aaron Wiggins and Isaiah Joe, both of whom are better than Sasser, brought back a couple of second-round picks each. That suggests Sasser’s standalone market might only reach a future second-rounder.
But in a bigger transaction, his salary becomes useful. Paired with someone like Caris LeVert, Sasser could help Detroit get close to the $20 million mark for matching purposes. A team like New Orleans could also see him as a change-of-scenery option, especially given that he has produced when given a chance.
There is also a real chance Sasser gets moved more than once this summer if he is treated mostly as salary ballast. The team that acquires him may not necessarily want him for long.
Still, it feels like he will land somewhere. The hope is that wherever he ends up, he gets a real shot at rotation minutes, because he has already shown he can put the ball in the hoop.
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