2026 NBA Offseason Preview: Philadelphia 76ers
After Denver and Phoenix broke up their respective maximum-salary trios during the 2025 offseason, the Sixers entered the 2025/26 season as just one of two teams carrying three players on max deals.
The other one of those two clubs, the Cavaliers, had the NBA’s highest payroll and entered the fall with championship expectations after winning 64 games in ’24/25. But the expectations for the 76ers, who were coming off a miserable 24-58 campaign, were far more modest.
Two of Philadelphia’s veteran stars, Joel Embiid and Paul Georgecombined to make 60 total appearances in 2024/25 and then underwent knee surgeries last April and July, respectively. With that duo projected to earn well over half of the Sixers’ payroll in ’25/26 ($107MM of roughly $195MM) and no guarantee they’d be 100% healthy – or available at all – for a significant chunk of the season, there was a predictable lack of enthusiasm for the Sixers, who were widely forecast to be no better than a .500 team.
With that context in mind, it’s fair to call the 2025/26 season a success for Philadelphia. Although those two vets were frequently inactive again, Embiid doubled his games played total from 19 to 38 and was far more effective when he suited up than he was in ’24/25. George, meanwhile, appeared in just 37 games, but his longest absence (25 games) was due to a suspension, not an injury. And upon returning from that suspension for violating the league’s anti-drug policy, he looked as healthy and productive as he had at any time since arriving in Philadelphia.
Even more encouraging was the play of the Sixers’ backcourt, led by Tyrese Maxey. Philadelphia’s third star emerged as easily the most valuable player of the trio, setting new career highs in several statistical categories, including points per game (28.3), while leading the NBA in minutes per game (38.0). He earned his second All-Star berth and first All-NBA nod, establishing himself as the 76ers’ clear franchise centerpiece going forward.
Joining Maxey as a long-term building block was his new backcourt partner VJ Edgecombethe third overall pick in the 2025 draft. Philadelphia was fortunate to get the opportunity to draft Edgecombe at all, as the team entered last year’s lottery with only a 64% chance of keeping its top-six protected pick. The Sixers ended up not just retaining their first-rounder, but moving up into the top three.
The club made the most of its good fortune by nailing that pick. Edgecombe was overlooked to some extent while former Duke teammates Cooper Flagg and Could Knueppel battled for Rookie of the Year, but he would have had a strong case for the award in many other seasons after averaging 16.0 PPG, 5.6 RPG, and 4.2 APG over the course of 75 starts.
With Maxey and Edgecombe leading the way and Embiid and George providing stop-and-start contributions, the Sixers won 45 regular season games, claimed the No. 7 seed with a play-in win, and upset the No. 2 Celtics in the first round of the playoffs before running into a buzzsaw of a Knicks team in round two.
While it was a pretty positive outcome given the preseason expectations, it wasn’t enough to save Daryl Morey‘s president of basketball operations job. The long-term contracts he gave Embiid and George during the 2024 offseason haven’t aged well, and he seemingly made another misstep at this year’s deadline by trading Jared McCain to Oklahoma City for this year’s No. 22 pick and a handful of future second-rounders.
McCain had battled health issues during his first year-and-a-half in the league, and his path to a starting role in Philadelphia was blocked by Maxey and Edgecombe. Still, it wasn’t a great look for the Sixers when the 2024 first-rounder immediately began to thrive for the defending champion Thunder. The trade on its own could still be justified, particularly if ownership wanted to get out of luxury tax territory, but Morey exacerbated the issue by speaking after the trade deadline about “selling high” on McCain. That’s the kind of quote that could be thrown back in his face for the next 10 years, depending on how the guard’s career plays out.
After scouring the market for Morey’s replacement, the Sixers landed on veteran Cavaliers executive Mike Ganseyhiring him as their new president of basketball operations. Gansey is well-respected around the league and had long been viewed as a candidate to run his own front office. He’ll get a helping hand from former Warriors general manager Bob Myerswho works for the Sixers’ ownership group as its “president of sports” and is expected to be involved in major personnel decisions.
The 76ers have a pair of valuable foundational pieces and believe they have the right basketball operations team in place to build a winner around Maxey and Edgecombe. Still, it remains to be seen just how much the new decision-makers will be able to do with the roster in the short term.
The Sixers’ Offseason Plans
Under the NBA’s current tax apron system, it has become increasingly untenable for teams to carry three players on maximum-salary contracts, which is one reason why the aforementioned Nuggets and Suns broke up their “big threes” last offseason. The Sixers probably wouldn’t mind following suit this summer, but Maxey certainly isn’t going anywhere and Embiid and George didn’t do enough in 2025/26 to fully restore their diminished appeal on the trade market.
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