Detroit Pistons president of basketball operations Trajan Langdon addressed local media members Tuesday afternoon, less than 48 hours removed from a Game 7 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the second round of the NBA playoffs.Ahead of a pivotal Pistons offseason, Langdon discussed several topics ranging from rookie-scale extensions for Jalen Duren and Ausar Thompson to potentially making an “all-in” trade this summer. Langdon, in his second season at the helm in Detroit, began his postseason availability by expressing how the team’s youth will continue to inform his decision-making.“We’ll take a holistic view of the roster,” Langdon said when asked if the Pistons needed to acquire a second high-level scorer alongside Cade Cunningham. “We’re still super young. All of our guys are going to iterate better. They’re all going to be better players next year than they were this year, just like we saw from last year to this season. We’ll take a deep dive, (and) we’ll figure out what we need to add.“We won’t look at us as a No. 1 seed. We’ll look at it as, ‘How do we get better?'”Langdon didn’t directly divulge Detroit’s intentions on adding someone in the offseason who might be considered a “big-swing trade” no matter how many times the question was rephrased. He did, however, explain which types of attributes he’d be looking for in players to possibly bring in over the summer.“The more ballhandling you can have on the floor the better,” Langdon said. “I think you see these teams that are successful have a lot of people that can (handle the ball). Whether it’s initiate — bringing the ball up — or actually execute in the half-court in terms of getting paint touches and making decisions. I think the more guys like that you have, the more difficult it is to guard. So, we’ll look at some of those things.“Just spreading the floor and shooting helps. Everybody knew that that was something we might struggle with a little bit. So, I think addressing some of those things can help. But again, those things are hard to find, and they’re expensive sometimes. And sometimes, other teams don’t want to part ways with it.”