To succeed as the Pistons‘ new head of basketball operations, Trajan Langdon will have to be given total freedom to remake the organization as he sees fit, contends Shawn Windsor of The Detroit Free Press. Windsor notes that Langdon impressed team owner Tom Gores by building one of the league’s best young rosters with the Pelicans. He’ll have a head start on that process with a Detroit team that’s about to pick in the top five for the fourth straight season.
Windsor expects Langdon to part with general manager Troy Weaver, whose roster moves haven’t produced any on-court success during his four years on the job. A decision will also have to be made about head coach Monty Williams, who is still owed $67.5MM in guaranteed money from the record-setting contract last summer. Williams failed to develop the team’s young talent, according to Windsor, and often gave the impression that he only took the job because of the money.
Langdon’s greatest challenge will be trying to forge a competent roster from a group that only had 14 wins this season. Windsor observes that the Pistons won’t really know how good Cade Cunningham can be until they surround him with teammates who complement his skills. He adds that Langdon built a reputation as an effective talent evaluator in New Orleans, so management should trust his judgment as a new rebuilding process begins.
There’s more from Detroit:
- Finding or developing a rim protector should be an offseason priority, Omari Sankofa II of The Detroit Free Press writes in a mailbag column. Sankofa says Jalen Duren is physically able to handle the job, but he needs to improve in terms of timing and consistent effort. Isaiah Stewart is undersized for a center, which makes him less of a deterrent under the basket. Sankofa lists ball control and shooting as other areas of concern, as the Pistons were 28th in turnovers per game and assist-to-turnover ratio and 26th in three-point shooting percentage.
- Trading out of the draft may help spark the rebuild quicker than adding another young player, Sankofa adds in part two of his mailbag. He notes that the Pistons’ roster already includes six first-round picks made by Weaver. Stewart has signed an extension and Cunningham is expected to this summer, while Ivey and Duren become extension-eligible in 2025. Sankofa points out that decisions are already being made about which young players are going to form the team’s foundation, and another lottery pick might complicate the process.
- Simone Fontecchio, who recently underwent left foot surgery, won’t be able to play for Italy this summer in an Olympic qualifying tournament, according to a Sportando report.
Williams only took the job for the $$$…U DON’T SAY
Shocking…
Why would this surprise anyone? My recollection is that he wanted to take some time away from basketball and the Pistons kept increasing their offer until he couldn’t say no. Not only did he give people the impression he only took the job for the money, but the team gave the impression that they thought anyone could be bought if enough money was put on the table…
Outstanding
The Pistons are just another Eastern team with terrible ownership…
So many of them are simply happy to rake in the profits from the cash cow that is the NBA… Just keep the wheels of mediocrity turning just enough to give the fanbase a glimmer of hope…
And with the numbers growing as they have in the past decade the profit percentage of being a title contender is not the same as it used to be… Not every team is in California where a title can lead them to be the money printer that is the Warriors…
Exactly.
If you are not developing young talent on your team. Then you’re not doing your job. If you’re not developing young talent on a rebuilding franchise with multiple lottery picks. Then you should never have been hired in the first place. One of worst signings ever ……. Total incompetence.
Monte took the Pelicans to the playoffs – fired, took the Suns back to the playoffs while developing young talent – fired for losing in the playoffs and then yes – took a job coaching a dumpster fire. Organizations rot from the top not from the sidelines…
Whilst it is very true that the owners are largely responsible for the rot in many of these forever mediocre franchises…
Monty was never able to maximise a roster… Were some of his teams results better than expected? Yes… Were they obviously better simply from his coaching? No…
Monty is the 1 nba coach doing it for the money?
So, the other 29 settled for housing, a car, and per diem?
The rest aren’t obviously just taking paychecks and doing nothing in terms of developing the talent on it…
There was no noise about the Pistons like there was about what Pop was trying with the Spurs… Thinking outside of the box to see what young kids can do that they haven’t is a big part of developing talent…
At least the Detroit players know. Now they can eat what they want and they don’t have to watch your weight or stay in shape.