The Pistons and wing Malik Beasley have mutual interest in working out a new contract agreement this summer, league sources tell Michael Scotto of HoopsHype.
The news comes as no surprise, as Beasley has repeatedly indicated that he’d like to extend his stay with the Pistons on the heels of a career year that saw him rank second in the NBA in made three-pointers (319) and finish as the runner-up in Sixth Man of the Year voting. After the team’s season came to an end last week, he said he had “never had this much fun coming to the gym,” adding that Detroit is “definitely a place I want to be.”
The Pistons, meanwhile, won’t have as much cap flexibility as they have in recent seasons, with Cade Cunningham‘s maximum-salary rookie scale extension set to take effect, so they’ll be hard-pressed to do better in free agency if they let Beasley walk.
According to Scotto, Beasley is expected to draw interest from teams who have the non-taxpayer mid-level exception at their disposal. That exception is projected to be worth up to $14.1MM in 2025/26.
The Pistons got a bargain when they signed Beasley to a one-year, $6MM deal a year ago, but that will limit their ability to make him a competitive offer using his Non-Bird rights — they’ll only be able to go up to a starting salary of $7.2MM using the Non-Bird exception.
As Scotto writes, that means Detroit may have to use cap room or (if the team operates over the cap) its own mid-level exception in order to retain Beasley. The Pistons have an estimated $138MM in guaranteed money committed to 10 players, with a projected cap of $154.6MM, so they could theoretically create cap space. However, unless they plan to let both Tim Hardaway Jr. and/or Dennis Schröder walk for nothing, they’re likely to be an over-the-cap team.
On that note, the Pistons also have interest in re-signing Schröder, according to Scotto, who says multiple members of the team spoke highly of the point guard’s impact as a “veteran leader and floor general.” Detroit has Schröder’s Early Bird rights and he’s coming off a $13MM salary, so there likely wouldn’t be any cap-related roadblocks in the way of bringing him back.