Trading up unlikely: There are opportunities to trade into the first round of the draft, Van Gundy said, but the probability that the Pistons pursue one is not great. He said one team in the bottom five of the first round has no desire to keep the pick and has turned it into something of an open-bidding process, but declined to disclose the team. He said the only scenario whereby the Pistons might consider trading up is if a player they believed to be worthy of a much higher pick slipped into the bottom of the first round, at which point a second-round pick and cash might be a viable offer. Otherwise, making a trade to move up a few spots isn't desirable. "I can't imagine us throwing somebody a player for pick 27, 28, 29, 30," Van Gundy said.
I almost wonder if he is too open on his GM strategies.