The Detroit Pistons have put a $287 million contract extension offer in front of center Jalen Duren ahead of his restricted free agency window, according to league sources with knowledge of the negotiation. The figure represents a full five-year maximum extension available to a player on his rookie deal, locking Duren through his age-26 season at an average annual value near $57.4 million.
Duren, 21, finished his third season averaging 13.8 points and 11.6 rebounds across 77 games, posting the league's seventh-best field goal percentage at 65.7%. The Pistons won 14 games. The team has not appeared in the playoffs since 2019, and Duren's tenure has overlapped entirely with the franchise's rebuild phase under general manager Troy Weaver, who drafted him 13th overall in 2022 after acquiring the pick from Charlotte in a draft-night trade involving Jaden Ivey.
The offer's timing matters for Detroit's broader salary architecture. Cade Cunningham signed a five-year, $224 million max extension last summer. Jaden Ivey becomes extension-eligible in October. If the Pistons commit $287 million to Duren now, they lock nearly $140 million in annual payroll to three players by 2026—before addressing wing depth, veteran shot creation, or the coaching staff that turned over in May when Monty Williams was dismissed after one season. The remaining three years on Williams' contract cost ownership $65 million in dead money, a figure that narrows Detroit's flexibility in the luxury tax era.
The number also signals how the center market has recalibrated. Domantas Sabonis extended with Sacramento for $217 million over five years in 2023. Alperen Sengun signed a five-year, $185 million deal with Houston last summer. Duren's offer surpasses both on a per-year basis, despite fewer playoff appearances, fewer All-Star case statistics, and a narrower offensive skill set. The gap reflects cap inflation and restricted free agency leverage: another team can offer Duren a max sheet, and Detroit must either match or lose him for nothing. The Pistons are betting no rival front office will force their hand, and that committing early avoids a hostile negotiation in July.
Two items complicate the math. First, Duren's foul rate—4.1 per 36 minutes—places him in the league's 78th percentile among centers, limiting his floor time in close games. Second, his assist rate and three-point attempts remain near zero, a constraint in an era where Boston just won a title starting two centers who space the floor and pass out of short rolls. Duren's value derives from verticality, screen-setting, and offensive rebounding, skills that pair cleanly with a ball-dominant lead guard but lack positional flexibility if Cunningham or Ivey miss time.
The structure of the offer has not leaked, though max extensions for players on rookie deals typically include a fifth-year player option, giving Duren an out at age 25 if he outperforms the deal or seeks a larger market. Detroit's front office, under new leadership following Weaver's reported reassignment of decision-making authority to Trajan Langdon in May, appears willing to absorb that risk in exchange for cost certainty. Langdon previously built New Orleans' young core around Zion Williamson and Brandon Ingram, prioritizing star retention over roster balance.
What to watch: Duren's camp has until October 21 to finalize an extension before entering restricted free agency next summer. Ivey's extension talks will begin immediately after, with a projected starting point near $150 million over four years. Detroit's head coaching search, currently focused on assistants with developmental track records, will close by late June. The new coach inherits a payroll structure that limits external veteran additions unless the Pistons move draft capital or young contracts to clear space. Langdon's first trade as lead executive will clarify whether Detroit is building around positional redundancy or seeking perimeter balance.
The Pistons finished 29th in the league in three-point attempts per game last season, a statistic that cannot improve with $511 million committed to three players who operate inside the arc.