The Oklahoma City Thunder are trading guard Isaiah Joe to the Detroit Pistons for two future second-round picks, the second roster move in a week designed to trim the championship team’s payroll and reduce a projected luxury tax bill that had reached an unsustainable level.
Detroit will receive Joe, one of the most accurate three-point shooters in the league over the past four seasons, alongside a meaningful solution to a perimeter shooting problem that ranked among the worst in the Eastern Conference last year. Oklahoma City gets back second-round selections in 2030 and 2031 while clearing Joe’s $11.3 million salary from its books.
The financial calculation
The two trades Oklahoma City executed this week, sending Joe to Detroit and wing Aaron Wiggins to Atlanta the previous Sunday in a similar deal, reduced the team’s projected salary for next season from approximately $261 million to $234 million. When the luxury tax implications are factored in, the combined savings from both moves reach an estimated $216 million based on current projections.
The restructuring assumes the Thunder will exercise team options on two rotation players at a combined cost of nearly $47 million while declining a third option. That approach preserves the core components of a championship roster while removing the perimeter contributors who had become expensive relative to the playing time they were receiving in a deep rotation.
Joe is due $11.3 million next season with a team option of the same amount in 2027-28. His contract was not prohibitively large on its own, but in an era of punishing second-apron penalties and a franchise already operating well above the luxury tax threshold, moving it alongside a comparable deal creates meaningful flexibility.
What Joe brings to Detroit
The Pistons were a poor three-point shooting team last season, ranking among the league’s worst on that measure and last in the Eastern Conference. Joe addresses that need directly. He shot above 41 percent from three-point range across four seasons in Oklahoma City after arriving on a waiver claim from Philadelphia, a rate that ranks among the highest in the league over that span among players with substantial attempts.
His most recent season was his best, setting career marks in both scoring and three-point percentage while playing primarily off the bench in Oklahoma City’s rotation. The Thunder’s acquisition of a backcourt addition at the trade deadline effectively pushed Joe down the depth chart in the playoffs despite his regular-season performance.
In Detroit, Joe will have the opportunity to play alongside one of the league’s most dynamic young point guards, creating the kind of shooting gravity around an elite ball-handler that should allow him to thrive in the open opportunities a skilled playmaker can create.
Oklahoma City’s championship core adjusts
The Thunder won their first championship in the 2024-25 season and are now managing the financial reality of keeping a championship roster together in an era of stringent luxury tax rules. The moves they have made this week are not a sign of pessimism about their competitive prospects but rather a practical response to the mathematics of building a team near or above the league’s most punitive financial thresholds.
The core of the championship team remains intact. The players being moved were valued contributors whose departures create cap flexibility without fundamentally altering the team’s competitive identity heading into next season.

