Harris, an unrestricted free agent, has several meetings scheduled with other teams as free agency begins. Gregory Shamus / Getty ImagesJune 30, 2026 Updated 7:16 pm EDTThe Detroit Pistons, in the wake of a 60-win regular season and second-round loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the playoffs, might be the most interesting team in the NBA at the moment. As free agency officially begins, they find themselves waiting for clarity from two of their most important players last season: Frontcourt mates Jalen Duren and Tobias Harris.Duren, as The Athletic has reported, is a restricted free agent who is taking meetings with the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento Kings on Tuesday with the hopes of finding a sign-and-trade pathway out of town. The gap in negotiations between Duren and the Pistons sparked this strategy, but it remains possible the two sides eventually strike a deal — especially considering the signals sent by the Pistons. Detroit does not have interest in the Kings’ scenario, which would send three-time All-Star Domantas Sabonis their way as a replacement for Duren, according to league sources who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe ongoing deliberations.

The Lakers could either give Duren an offer sheet (that the Pistons could match) or try to compel Detroit to cooperate in a sign-and-trade structure in which the third-team All-NBA center would go into their salary cap space. It will be challenging for Los Angeles to land him, given the Pistons’ ability to control the situation by either matching the offer sheet or refusing to engage on the sign-and-trade.Why Jalen Duren is now a pillar of this Piston's teamDave DuFour and Esfandiar BaraheniWhich brings us back to Harris.The 33-year-old unrestricted free agent was the Pistons’ second-most productive player in the playoffs (behind Cade Cunningham), averaging 18.1 points and 7.2 rebounds. Yet Harris will be visiting with five teams at the start of free agency, according to a league source who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe ongoing negotiations. (It’s not clear whether the meetings are virtual, phone or in person, or which teams are in play). At minimum, that means the prospect of Detroit losing Harris is somewhat real.In turn, the Pistons suddenly find themselves somewhat in danger of taking a step backward this summer.There is still a long way to go this offseason, of course, but this is not ideal for a Pistons team that is widely known to be on the lookout for significant upgrades. The focus at the start of free agency, it seems, is on not losing the pivotal players it already had in-house.