The Detroit Pistons are running out of obvious ways to give Cade Cunningham the help they were supposed to land this offseason, and that’s what makes Jonathan Kuminga such a fascinating name to watch.
Detroit already missed on Kawhi Leonard, even if that may have turned out to be a blessing in disguise. The New Orleans Pelicans are still asking for a massive return for Trey Murphy III, and the Milwaukee Bucks appear set on keeping Tyler Herro for the moment. Trajan Langdon still hasn’t landed the kind of move Cunningham was hoping for, and the uncertainty around All-NBA center Jalen Duren only adds another layer to the problem as he takes his time searching for the contract he wants on the open market.
With the top free agents still available, the most realistic path to a meaningful addition may be through the trade market. And among the names out there, Kuminga stands out as the kind of high-upside swing Detroit could actually afford to take.
There will be plenty of debate around the idea. Kuminga still has the shine of a former top 10 pick, and at 23, the talent is obvious enough to keep people intrigued. But plenty of others will point to the same question: if Steve Kerr and the Golden State Warriors couldn’t carve out a real role for him, why should the Pistons bet on making it work now, especially with the retooling Atlanta Hawks deciding it made more sense to let him walk than bring him back?
Still, the bigger picture matters here. Kuminga is a talented player whose career has been shaped by awkward situations more than a lack of ability.
In Golden State, he went from logging extended minutes early in his career because of injuries to being pushed into a smaller role for a coach he clearly didn’t see eye to eye with. In Atlanta, he appeared in just 16 regular-season games before being tossed into the playoffs and asked to figure things out with a group he had never played with.
Even with all that instability, he still flashed the tools that made him the No. 7 pick in the 2021 NBA Draft. Kuminga brings real scoring punch as an athletic wing who can attack the rim, and he’s shown he can stretch the floor as a three-point shooter while also being dangerous from mid-range.
Detroit hasn’t been mentioned as a suitor yet, but the fit is easy to see. He would ease some of the offensive load Cunningham has been carrying, and if the market keeps moving the way it has, Kuminga may end up needing to consider a prove-it deal somewhere. The Los Angeles Lakers are the biggest team tied to him, with a reported two-year, $20 million offer, a number that would have sounded unlikely after he turned down his $24.3 million option in Atlanta.
If that situation drags on, a sign-and-trade can’t be ruled out, especially since the Hawks have reportedly been willing to help the Lakers land the playmaker. And if Detroit were to get involved, there’s an argument that a bigger role next to Cunningham would serve Kuminga better than being the third option behind Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves.
It wouldn’t be the cleanest or most obvious move for the Pistons. But as the summer goes on, it’s starting to look like the kind of gamble that makes more and more sense.
In Other News...
Pistons May Already Have Their Second Unit Answer In House
With Caris LeVert gone, the Pistons are left sorting out who handles the extra playmaking work for the second unit, and Kevin Huerter has quickly become the name to watch. He arrived at the trade deadline last season and, even in a limited sample, showed enough offensive and defensive value to make the bench look more functional when he was on the floor.
Huerters case is tied to health as much as role, since his first stretch in Detroit came while he was battling hip and adductor issues. Daniss Jenkins also gives the Pistons another backup point guard option, but the bigger question now is how much of the second-unit offense Huerter can shoulder once he is fully available. [Read more 🡒]
Pistons Still Left Cade Cunningham With The Same Huge Question
Detroit added depth and draft capital in the six-team deal, bringing in John Collins, Isaiah Joe, Taurean Prince and Gary Harris, but the move still left the same basic problem hanging over the roster. None of those additions is the kind of second star or primary creator Cade Cunningham needs, and the front office also used the 17th pick on Ebuka Okorie without really solving the immediate playmaking issue.
For a team trying to move from promising to dangerous, that leaves the Cunningham-Jalen Duren-Ausar Thompson core with the same awkward questions about shooting, shot creation and overall offensive punch. Trajan Langdon has bought himself some flexibility, but another playoff stumble would only sharpen the scrutiny on whether he is the right person to find Cunningham a true No. 2. [Read more 🡒]
