Tobias Harris Just Put The Pistons In A Tough Spot

With Tobias Harris' future uncertain, the Pistons face crucial decisions that could redefine their strategy as free agency looms.

Tobias Harris is suddenly sitting at the center of a decision the Pistons can’t ignore.

With the start of free agency getting closer, Detroit still hasn’t locked in any of its upcoming free agents on new contracts, Harris included. Around the league, plenty of players have already agreed to return to their old teams. Harris hasn’t, and the buzz about him possibly leaving Detroit keeps getting louder.

That puts the Pistons in a tricky spot. On one hand, they should be chasing an upgrade at power forward for the starting five.

On the other, the roster doesn’t exactly have a clean backup plan waiting in the wings. If Harris walks, Detroit arguably doesn’t have another player on the roster who can handle the 4 spot right now.

And while Harris may not be the long-term answer, he mattered a lot when it counted most. In the playoffs, with most of Detroit’s young players struggling on offense outside of Cade Cunningham, Harris became the guy who had to create something. He responded with seven straight 20-point games against solid defenses, even with cramped spacing and limited shooting around him.

That stretch showed exactly why the Pistons value him. Without Harris, they don’t get past the Magic in the first round.

His mid-post scoring, the kind of shot-making that can manufacture points when the offense stalls, was a rare and necessary weapon. At the same time, his struggles from three-point range were part of the broader offensive issues Detroit dealt with.

The best version of Harris in this rotation might actually be as a bench scorer, someone who can take over with the second unit and keep the offense afloat when Cade Cunningham sits. If he can keep that floor high without Cade on the court, Detroit would have a real edge over the course of the regular season. Ideally, though, the Pistons would be able to replace him in the starting lineup as he gets older.

If Harris does move on, Detroit won’t be stuck. The free-agent market at power forward isn’t loaded, but the Pistons can find alternatives through free agency or trade. There are options out there who offer more 3-and-D value, and at this point in their climb toward contention, that kind of fit may be more important than what Harris brings.

Still, the Pistons would clearly prefer to keep him. Harris gives them a veteran presence, a locker room leader, and a reliable piece while they sort out the next step at power forward.

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The real intrigue is what kind of return the Pistons would chase if they decided to act. Role players such as Naji Marshall, Max Christie and even PJ Washington have been mentioned in the broader trade conversation, which tells you this is not just about clearing a spot, but about whether Detroit can turn a movable piece into something that better fits its next step. [Read more 🡒]