ClutchPoints urges Pistons to overhaul roster, recommends trading Harris and Stewart

- ClutchPoints on May 23 said the Detroit Pistons should consider trading Tobias Harris and Isaiah Stewart after Detroit’s 60-win season ended in Game 7. - The article by Enzo Flojo said Detroit “can no longer afford to ignore” roster flaws, naming Harris and Stewart as trade pieces. - Detroit’s next formal pivot is the offseason roster build around Cade Cunningham after Cleveland’s May 17 Game 7 win.

ClutchPoints added to Detroit’s offseason debate on May 23 with a direct recommendation: the Pistons should explore trades involving Tobias Harris and Isaiah Stewart after their playoff exit. The article, written by Enzo Flojo, was published six days after Cleveland beat Detroit 125-94 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on May 17, according to NBA.com and Yahoo Sports. The timing matters because Detroit’s season had otherwise been a breakthrough. ClutchPoints framed the discussion around a 60-win Pistons team whose postseason finish exposed roster issues, and it named Harris and Stewart as the two players it said Detroit should consider moving. ### Why did Harris and Stewart become the names in this debate? (clutchpoints.com) Enzo Flojo’s May 23 piece singled out Harris and Stewart as the players most tied to a possible summer reshaping of the roster. ClutchPoints argued Detroit’s playoff loss showed weaknesses the team “can no longer afford to ignore,” and presented those two veterans as the clearest trade candidates. (clutchpoints.com) Cade Cunningham sits at the center of that discussion. Broader coverage cited in the source briefings has focused on Detroit needing more help around Cunningham, and ClutchPoints’ argument fits that wider post-elimination theme rather than reporting a transaction already under discussion by the team. (clutchpoints.com) ### What is the case against keeping Tobias Harris? Tobias Harris is 33 and signed a two-year, $52 million contract with Detroit, according to Spotrac. Spotrac lists his average annual salary at $26 million and shows a 2026-27 cap hit of $39.95 million. That contract structure is part of why Harris surfaces in trade speculation. A veteran forward on a sizable deal can become a matching salary piece in offseason trade construction, though ClutchPoints’ article was an opinion column, not a report that Detroit is shopping him. (clutchpoints.com) ### Why is Isaiah Stewart included too? (spotrac.com) Isaiah Stewart remains a rotation big on Detroit’s current roster, where NBA.com lists him as a forward-center. Stewart appeared in 58 games in the 2025-26 season and averaged 10.0 points and 5.0 rebounds, according to the Pistons’ roster page. ClutchPoints’ inclusion of Stewart points to fit as much as production. The article presented him as part of a larger roster-balance question after the playoff loss, again as analysis rather than sourced reporting from the Pistons’ front office. (clutchpoints.com) ### How much of this is reaction to the playoff exit itself? (nba.com) May 17 is the hinge date for the entire discussion. Cleveland’s 125-94 win over Detroit in Game 7 ended the Pistons’ season and sent the Cavaliers to the Eastern Conference finals. The result gave added force to arguments for change because Detroit had been the No. 1 seed in the East, according to the source briefing and contemporaneous playoff coverage. (clutchpoints.com) ClutchPoints then used that gap between regular-season success and playoff finish to argue for a more aggressive offseason approach. (nba.com) ### Is this a report of an actual trade plan? ClutchPoints published an argument, not a confirmed Pistons plan. The article recommends that Detroit consider moving Harris and Stewart; it does not say the Pistons have put either player on the market. Detroit’s next concrete steps will come through the NBA offseason calendar, front-office comments and any transactions involving president of basketball operations Trajan Langdon’s roster. (clutchpoints.com) For now, the verified fact is narrower: on May 23, ClutchPoints publicly urged the Pistons to think bigger about trades after their season ended.

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