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Detroit Pistons trade with Wizards 'first step' in charting franchise back on track

The Detroit Pistons, 3-36 overall and on pace for the worst record in NBA history, are in need of a reset. Sunday officially kicked off the latest phase of their languishing rebuild — a phase the team hopes will not only save the team from notoriety this season, but put it on pace to be competitive beyond this season.

The Pistons on Sunday morning traded Marvin Bagley III, Isaiah Livers and 2025 and 2026 second-round picks to the Washington Wizards in exchange for Danilo Gallinari and Mike Muscala, multiple sources confirmed to the Free Press.

A high-ranking team official described the trade as a “first step,” as it clears additional cap space that will better position Detroit to absorb salary in a more substantial signing or trade down the road.

The organization is setting the table for a bigger move, or moves, for veterans that will lift the team’s floor. Bagley is owed $12.5 million this season and next, and Livers, Gallinari and Muscala are all on expiring contracts. Clearing Bagley’s salary off of the books adds to Detroit’s already large amount of cap space, and the team will now have up to $60 million available this summer depending on where the final cap number and first-round draft pick falls.

With that money — along with several expiring veterans already on the roster who can be flipped ahead of the Feb. 8 trade deadline — the Pistons are aiming to add two “significant” pieces to the rebuild, according to sources.

The Pistons have a 63-212 record under general manager Troy Weaver.
The Pistons have a 63-212 record under general manager Troy Weaver.

Whether those additions happen this season or over the offseason remains to be seen, but the franchise is working the phones and has its eyes set firmly on turning the page on the worst chapters it has ever had to endure. The Pistons are just 5-59 overall since Feb. 10 last year, and are approaching a full year of unprecedented futility.

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The big question now is whether or not they will make the right moves and successfully chart a brighter course forward. Until this season, their in-season trades have largely been focused on sacrificing assets to take swings on unproven young players such as Bagley and James Wiseman. They no longer have that luxury now that the fourth year of the “restoring,” expected to be a leap forward, has instead revealed a severely-flawed team-building process.

Beyond aiding the team’s future flexibility, Sunday’s trade is another direct acknowledgement that the roster, as currently constructed, isn’t functional. The front office is also prioritizing balancing out a roster that has too many bigs and not enough wings that can shoot, and adding experience to a locker room with eight players 23-years-old or younger.

From left: Pistons forwards Bojan Bogdanovic, Kevin Knox II, guard Killian Hayes and forward Joe Harris during the closing minutes of the Pistons' 130-108 loss to the Spurs on Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024, at Little Caesars Arena.
From left: Pistons forwards Bojan Bogdanovic, Kevin Knox II, guard Killian Hayes and forward Joe Harris during the closing minutes of the Pistons' 130-108 loss to the Spurs on Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024, at Little Caesars Arena.

The trade picture around the NBA will evolve over the next few weeks as teams decide whether to double-down on contending for a championship, or sell off assets to save money. With Joe Harris, Alec Burks, Monty Morris and Bojan Bogdanovic ($2 million guaranteed in 2024-25) all on or essentially on expiring contracts, Detroit can trade for an expensive salary while still preserving enough money to make another swing this summer.

More importantly, the Pistons won’t have to match salary in any upcoming deals thanks to their financial cushion. That means they can land an impact player on a contract worth around $40 million this season (as an example, let’s use Philadelphia forward and former Pistons Tobias Harris) without having to give up $40 million in salary. They could include Joe Harris’ expiring $20 million contract and give the opposing team $20 million in financial relief, while still maintaining their flexibility to trade or sign for another player making north of $30 million.

That puts the Pistons in a position of strength over the next few weeks, as teams outside of the contending picture (such as the Atlanta Hawks or Chicago Bulls) evaluate if it’s time to sell off assets and save money, or double-down on competing. Hawks All-Star guard Dejounte Murray is among several stars who are widely expected to be moved ahead of the deadline.

Even with their rosy financial picture, the Pistons are facing an uphill climb back to relevance. Spending money doesn’t guarantee future success, though the franchise currently has nowhere to go but up. Troy Weaver has a short amount of time to figure out how to swing their trajectory back upward in the midst of a disastrous season.

In the short term, the front office is hopeful that forwards Gallinari, 35, and Muscala, 32, will not only provide needed experience, but also some shooting to a roster that lacks it. Neither player has shot the ball well this season — 31.3% and 27.5% from 3, respectively — but Gallinari is a career 38.1% shooter and Muscala, who stands 6-foot-10 and can play either frontcourt position, has hit 37.5% of his treys.

Bagley had been productive for the Pistons, averaging 10.2 points on 59.1% shooting over 26 games this season, including 10 starts. But he had been benched in favor of Wiseman in recent weeks, and had only appeared in two of Detroit’s last 10 games. Livers, a Michigan alumnus who Detroit selected in the second round of the 2021 draft, was viewed as a core piece entering the season but has struggled, hitting just 28.6% of his 3-point attempts.

The Pistons traded two second-round picks, in addition to Josh Jackson and Trey Lyles, to acquire Bagley in 2022. Parting ways with two more second-round picks two years later to part ways with Bagley, who inked a fully-guaranteed three-year, $37.5 million extension that summer, illustrates Detroit’s poor asset management in recent seasons. Both Bagley and Wiseman’s skillsets overlapped with starting center Jalen Duren, and Monty Williams’ rotation could only accommodate two of the three players.

The deal will allow the Pistons to get an even longer look at Wiseman, who will enter restricted free agency this summer.

Ultimately, Sunday’s deal won’t move the needle on Detroit’s longterm success. But it kicked off the most pivotal phase of the Weaver era yet — one that will ultimately determine if the general manager will ultimately achieve his fading goal of delivering glory back to a once-proud and winning franchise.

“I am expecting change,” Tom Gores said in December. “I do expect Troy to come up with change. Because staying exactly the same, I don’t think anyone can be here and say that in any genuine way that change is not required. I expect Troy to find ways to get the makeup of our team and getting us more successful. I do expect him to find ways, and he knows that. And if we did nothing to improve ourselves, I’m going to be disappointed. I’m going to be disappointed. And I think Troy knows. He knows that."

Contact Omari Sankofa II at osankofa@freepress.com. Follow him @omarisankofa.

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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Pistons trade with Wizards 'first step' ahead of big deadline