The Detroit Pistons may have dodged a major offseason headache by staying away from the Kawhi Leonard sweepstakes.
Toronto’s reported trade for Leonard has been temporarily put on ice after the NBA told the Raptors they could face potential penalties depending on how the league’s investigation into the LA Clippers ends. According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, Toronto will not finalize the deal until that process is complete.
Charania reported that the Raptors were told they would “assume the risk” if the investigation leads to punishment for Leonard. Toronto responded by making clear it expects the trade to go through once the league finishes its review, but for now the move is stalled.
That matters for Detroit because Brian Windhorst of ESPN reported in June that the Pistons would be “in line” to acquire Leonard if the Clippers had chosen to move him. Instead, LA agreed to a deal with Toronto. If the Pistons had been the team waiting on Leonard, they could now be stuck in the same limbo Toronto is dealing with - or worse, left scrambling if the trade were eventually scrapped.
There’s still a path where everything works out for the Raptors. If the NBA’s investigation clears Leonard, the trade goes through, Toronto lands a two-time NBA champion and Finals MVP, and the issue disappears.
But the other side of that coin is ugly: the deal gets wiped out, and Toronto is forced back into the market long after many of the biggest names are gone. That’s the kind of uncertainty Detroit avoided.
And for a Pistons team still trying to sort out what comes next with All-NBA center Jalen Duren, that uncertainty would have been a real problem. Coming off a 60-win season and after already sending Isaiah Stewart to the Memphis Grizzlies, Detroit couldn’t really afford to have its offseason tied up in a deal that might never happen.
Instead, the Pistons have been able to add efficient shooting to the rotation with John Collins, Isaiah Joe, and Taurean Prince. Duren’s future is still a question, but Detroit at least has some clarity now.
A Cade Cunningham-Jalen Duren-Kawhi Leonard trio would have been a serious swing. But with Leonard’s situation now hanging over Toronto, the Pistons look smart for not betting their offseason on it.
In Other News...
Pistons Lose To 76ers But Ebuka Okorie Still Gave Fans Hope
Detroits 2026 Summer League opener ended in a 101-93 loss to the 76ers, but the result was not the only thing to take from the night. Rookie Ebuka Okorie looked comfortable right away, scoring 20 points while also adding four assists and two steals, giving the Pistons a glimpse of the two-way activity that can make a young guard stand out in July.
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 🡒]
Pistons Have One Roster Decision Fans Can Already Feel Coming
Chaz Lanier entered his second season in Detroit with a clear path to prove he belonged, but that window has narrowed fast. After a limited role last year and inconsistent shooting in the chances he did get, the Pistons have only made his climb tougher by adding more perimeter help, leaving him fighting for relevance on a crowded roster.
Lanier is already 24, so the clock on his development is not exactly generous, and the pressure is even greater for a player whose value is tied so closely to making shots. He has also had to work through a shaky Summer League start from deep, and with so many guards and wings ahead of him, every practice and exhibition minute now feels like it matters for far more than just reps. [Read more 🡒]
One Rookie Just Put Pistons Fans On Notice In Vegas
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 🡒]
