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Philadelphia 76ers

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ThePhiladelphia 76ers, also known colloquially as theSixers, are an American professionalbasketball team based in thePhiladelphia metropolitan area.[b] The 76ers compete in theNational Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of theAtlantic Division of theEastern Conference. The team plays its home games atWells Fargo Center located in theSouth Philadelphia Sports Complex.

Philadelphia 76ers
2024–25 Philadelphia 76ers season
Philadelphia 76ers logo
ConferenceEastern
DivisionAtlantic
Founded1946
HistorySyracuse Nationals
1946–1949 (NBL)
1949–1963 (NBA)
Philadelphia 76ers
1963–present[1][2][3]
ArenaWells Fargo Center
LocationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Team colorsBlue, red, silver, navy, white[4][5][6]
     
Main sponsorCrypto.com[7]
CEOTad Brown
PresidentDaryl Morey
General managerElton Brand
Head coachNick Nurse
OwnershipHarris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment (Josh Harris andDavid Blitzer)[a]
Affiliation(s)Delaware Blue Coats
Championships3 (1955,1967,1983)
Conference titles5 (1977,1980,1982,1983,2001)
Division titles12 (1950,1952,1955,1966,1967,1968,1977,1978,1983,1990,2001,2021)
Retired numbers10 (2,3,4,6,10,13,15,24,32,34)
Websitenba.com/sixers
Association jersey
Team colours
Association
Icon jersey
Team colours
Icon
Statement jersey
Team colours
Statement

Founded in 1946 and originally known as theSyracuse Nationals, they are one of the oldest franchises in the NBA and one of only 8 out of 23 to survive the league's first decade. The team is owned and managed byHarris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment (HBSE), with foundersJosh Harris andDavid Blitzer acquiring the team in 2011.

The 76ers have had a prominent history, with manyHall of Fame players having played for the organization, includingDolph Schayes,Hal Greer,Wilt Chamberlain,Chet Walker,Billy Cunningham,George McGinnis,Julius Erving,Maurice Cheeks,Bobby Jones,Moses Malone,Charles Barkley, andAllen Iverson.

The 76ers have won three NBA championships. Their first came as the Syracuse Nationals, in1955, before the franchise moved to Philadelphia. The second title came in1967, a team which was led by Chamberlain. The third title came in1983, won by a team led by Erving and Malone. The 76ers have only been back to theNBA Finals once since, in2001, when they were led by Iverson and lost to theLos Angeles Lakers in five games. Chamberlain, Erving, Malone, Iverson, andJoel Embiid have been named the NBA'sMost Valuable Player while playing for the 76ers, for a total of seven MVP awards.

Contents

History

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1946–1963: Syracuse Nationals

Billy Gabor joined the Syracuse Nationals in 1948.Dolph Schayes joined the team in 1949. Both men spent their entire careers with the team, and won a championship together in 1955.
 
The 1958–59 Syracuse Nationals
 
Hal Greer joined the Nationals in 1958 and spent his entire 15-season career with the franchise; he won a championship with the team in 1967.

In 1946, Italian immigrantDanny Biasone established the Syracuse Nationals of theNational Basketball League (NBL) inSyracuse, New York, for $5,000.[8] While in the NBL with teams largely consisting of small Midwestern towns, the Nationals put together a 21–23 record, finishing in fourth place. In the playoffs, the Nationals were beaten by theRochester Royals in four games. In their second season,1947–48, the Nationals struggled, finishing in fifth place with a 24–36 record. Despite their record, they made the playoffs, and were swept by theAnderson Duffey Packers in three straight games.

Prior to the 1948–49 season, four teams left the NBL for the BAA as the foundation for a merger was laid.[9] The Nationals "recipe for success" began by recruitingLeo Ferris.[10] Staying in the NBL, Ferris signedAl Cervi to be player-coach and outbid the New York Knicks for the services ofDolph Schayes who made his professional debut,[11] leading the Nationals to a winning record for the first time with a record of 40–23. In the playoffs the Nationals defeated theHammond Calumet Buccaneers, winning the series in two straight games. In the semifinals, the Nationals lost to the Anderson Duffey Packers for the second straight season in four games. In 1949, when the NBL and the BAA merged into theNBA, the Nationals were one of seven NBL teams that were brought into the NBA.

The Nationals were an instant success in the NBA, winning the Eastern Division in the1949–50 season, with a league-best record of51–13. In the playoffs the Nationals continued to play solid basketball, beating thePhiladelphia Warriors in two games. Moving on to the Eastern Finals, the Nationals battled theNew York Knickerbockers, beating their big-city rivals in a three-game series. In the NBA Finals, the Nationals faced a fellow NBL alum in theMinneapolis Lakers. In Game 1 of the Finals the Nationals lost just their second home game of the season, 68–66. The Nationals did not recover, as they fell behind 3–1 before falling in six games.

Despite several teams leaving the NBA for theNational Professional Basketball League before the 1950–51 season, the Nationals decided to stay put. In their second NBA season,1950–51, the Nationals played mediocre basketball all season, finishing in fourth place with a record of 32–34. In the playoffs the Nationals played their best basketball of the season as they stunned the first-place Warriors in two straight, taking Game 1 on the road in overtime 91–89. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals were beaten by the New York Knickerbockers in a hard-fought five-game series, losing the finale by just two points.

Cervi, playing less and coaching more, emphasized a patient offense and a scrappy defense, which led the league in the1951–52 season by yielding a stingy 79.5 points per game as the Nationals won the Eastern Division with a solid 40–26 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals knocked off the Warriors again in a three-game series. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals fell to the Knickerbockers again, dropping the series in four games.

The Nationals finished in second place in a hard-fought 3-way battle for first place in the Eastern Division for the1952–53 season, with a record of 47–24. In the playoffs, the Nationals faced theBoston Celtics, dropping Game 1 at home 87–81. Needing a win in Boston to keep their hopes alive, the Nationals took the Celtics deep into overtime before losing in quadruple OT 111–105, in what remains the longest playoff game in NBA history.[12]

The Nationals acquiredAlex Groza, andRalph Beard as theIndianapolis Olympians folded leaving the NBA with just 9 teams for the1953–54 season. Once again the Nationals battled for the Division title, falling two games short with a 42–30 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals won all four games of a round-robin tournament involving the three playoff teams from the East. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals beat the Celtics in two straight games. In the NBA Finals, the Nationals lost to the Lakers in a hard-fought seven-game series where the two teams alternated wins throughout.

With the NBA struggling financially and down to just 8 teams during the1954–55 season, Nationals owner Biasone suggested the league limit the amount of time that could be taken for a shot, thus speeding up a game that often ended with long periods of teams just holding the ball and playing keep away. Biasone and Nationals' general manager Ferris calculated a 24-secondshot clock would allow at least 30 shots per quarter, speeding up the game and increasing scoring. The shot clock was an instant success as scoring was up 14 points per game league-wide. In the first season of the shot clock, the Nationals would take first place in the East with a 43–29 record. After a first-round bye the Nationals would beat the Celtics in four games to reach the NBA Finals for the second straight season. In the finals the Nationals would get off to a fast start, led by forward Schayes, taking the first two games at home against theFort Wayne Pistons.[13] As the series moved to Fort Wayne the Pistons would spark back to life taking all three games to take a 3–2 series lead. Back in Syracuse for Game 6 on, the Nationals kept their championship hopes alive by beating the Pistons 109–104 to force a seventh game at home. Game 7 would be as tight as the series asGeorge King sank a free throw to give the Nationals a 92–91 lead in the final seconds. King then stole the inbound pass to clinch the NBA Championship for the Nationals.

Coming off their NBA Championship the Nationals struggled during the1955–56 season, needing a tiebreaker over the Knickerbockers to avoid finishing in last place and make the playoffs with a 35–37 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals stunned the Celtics by winning the first-round series in three games, taking the final two. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals played solid basketball again as they pushed the Warriors to a decisive fifth game. The Nationals' reign as defending champions ended with a 109–104 loss inPhiladelphia.

The Nationals got off to a slow start as coach Cervi was fired and replaced byPaul Seymour. Under Seymour, the Nationals rebounded and finished the1956–57 season in second place with a record of 38–34. In the playoffs, the Nationals had trouble knocking off the defending champion Warriors but advanced to the Eastern Finals with two straight wins. The Nationals were swept in three games by the eventual champions, the Celtics.

Fort Wayne and Rochester had moved on to Detroit and Cincinnati for the1957–58 season, leaving the Syracuse Nationals as the last small-town team in the big city NBA. Regardless, they still finished in second place with a 41–31 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals fell in the first round as they lost a three-game series to the Philadelphia Warriors.

Despite a mediocre 35–37 record for the1958–59 season the Nationals made the playoffs again by finishing in third place. In the playoffs, the Nationals swept the Knickerbockers in two straight to reach the Eastern Finals, where they lost to the eventual champion Celtics, alternating wins before losing by 5 points in Game 7.

Playing in a league now dominated by superstars likeBill Russell of the Celtics,Wilt Chamberlain of the Warriors,Bob Pettit of theSt. Louis Hawks andElgin Baylor of the Lakers, the Nationals held their own, posting a solid 45–30 record, while finishing in third place after the 1959–60 regular season. In the playoffs, the Nationals lost a three-game series to Chamberlain and the Warriors.

With the Lakers relocating fromMinneapolis to Los Angeles before the1960–61 season, the Syracuse Nationals became the last old NBL team to still be playing in their original city in the NBA. The Nationals went on to make the playoffs again by finishing in third place with a 38–41 record. The Nationals were dangerous in the playoffs as they stunned the Warriors in three straight games. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals lost once again to the eventual champion Celtics in five games.

Schayes missed 24 games during the1961–62 season and failed to lead the team in scoring for the first time in 14 years, as Hal Greer led the way with 22.8 points per game. The Nationals finished in third place again with a 41–39 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals lost their first two games to the Warriors on the road. Facing elimination, the Nationals won the next two games to force a fifth game in Philadelphia. In Game 5 the Warriors ended the Nationals' season with a 121–104 victory.

With an aging team, the Nationals were expected to fade; however, with the scrappy play ofJohnny Kerr, the Nationals remained a strong contender, finishing in second place for the1962–63 season, with a record of 48–32. In the playoffs the Nationals faced theCincinnati Royals, getting off to a 2–1 series lead. Needing one win to advance to the Eastern Finals again the Nationals lost two straight, dropping the decisive fifth game at home in overtime 131–127.

Relocation to Philadelphia

 
Philadelphia Convention Hall, previous home of thePhiladelphia Warriors from 1952 to 1962 and home of the 76ers from 1963 to 1967

The playoff overtime loss on March 26, 1963 would prove to be the last game for the Syracuse Nationals, as investorsIrv Kosloff andIke Richman purchased the team fromDanny Biasone and moved the team to Philadelphia, filling the void left by theWarriors, who had moved to San Francisco. Syracuse was the last of the medium-sized cities housing an NBA team, but by then it was apparent that central New York was no longer large enough to support it. The NBA thus returned to Philadelphia one year after the Warriors had left it. A contest was held to decide on a new name for the team. The winning name, chosen by Walter Stalberg, was the "76ers".[14][1] The name comes from the signing of theUnited States Declaration of Independence in Philadelphia in 1776. "Sixers" was also utilized for shorter referencing,[15] particularly in headlines. The shorter name was quickly accepted by the team for marketing purposes, and for most of the last six decades "76ers" and "Sixers" have been officially interchangeable.

For their first four years in Philadelphia, the 76ers played mostly at thePhiladelphia Arena andCivic Center-Convention Hall, and occasionally atThe Palestra at theUniversity of Pennsylvania. Schayes was named head coach, a post he held for four years (the first as player-coach).

1964–1968: Wilt Chamberlain era

Further information:Wilt Chamberlain
 
Wilt Chamberlain joined the 76ers in 1965 and led the team to the NBA title in 1967.

In the1964–65 season, the 76ers acquired the legendaryWilt Chamberlain from the Warriors; Chamberlain had been a high school legend at Overbrook High School in Philadelphia and began his career with the Warriors while they still played in Philadelphia. The 76ers would push the Celtics to seven games in the semifinals, with the 76ers trailing 110–109 in Game 7. AfterHal Greer's pass was stolen byJohn Havlicek, the Celtics went on to beat theLos Angeles Lakers and win the NBA Championship. On December 3, 1965, in the midst of a game at the Boston Garden, co-owner Richman suffered a heart attack and died courtside.[16]

1966–67: First title in Philadelphia

Led by head coachAlex Hannum, the 76ers had a dream season as they started 46–4,[17] en route to a record of 68–13, the best record in league history at the time.[18] Chamberlain,Billy Cunningham, and Greer, along with all-starsChet Walker,Lucious Jackson andWali Jones led the team to the semifinals. This time the 76ers beat the Celtics in five games. In Game Five of that series, as the 76ers went to victory and the NBA Finals, Philadelphia fans chanted "Boston is dead!"—a symbol that the Celts' eight-year reign as NBA champion had ended.The Finals were almost anticlimactic, with the Sixers ousting the Warriors in six games to give them their second NBA Championship. The1966–67 76ers were voted the best team in league history during theNBA's 35th anniversary celebration in October 1980.

1967–68: First year at the Spectrum

In the1967–68 season, with a new home court in the form ofThe Spectrum to defend their championship, once again the 76ers made it back to the NBA Playoffs and in the rematch of the previous year's semifinals, the 76ers held a 3–1 series lead over the Celtics, before the Celtics staged a dramatic comeback to beat the 76ers in seven games.

1968–1976: Fall of the 76ers

 
Billy Cunningham played nine seasons with the 76ers from 1965 to 1972, and later coached the team for eight seasons from 1977 to 1985.

At the end of the season, the 76ers dealt Chamberlain to theLos Angeles Lakers for Archie Clark, Darrall Imhoff and Jerry Chambers. At the time, the trade appeared to make some sense from the 76ers' perspective. Chamberlain was making noises about jumping to theAmerican Basketball Association, and general managerJack Ramsay did not want to risk letting Chamberlain walk away for nothing. However Chamberlain's replacement at center, Lucious Jackson, suffered a severe injury in 1969 and was never the same player after that. The Chamberlain trade was followed by a freefall in the 76ers' performance, which Ramsay accelerated by subsequent divestiture of All Star forward Chet Walker to theChicago Bulls.

While the rapidly declining 76ers continued to contend for the next three seasons, they never got past the second round. In 1971–72, only five years after winning the title, the 76ers finished 30–52 and missed postseason play for the first time in franchise history.

The bottom fell out in the1972–73 season. Ramsay left for the expansionBuffalo Braves, but the 76ers had trouble finding a replacement;Al McGuire andAdolph Rupp turned them down. Kosloff was so desperate for a replacement that he took out an ad inThe Philadelphia Inquirer. It was answered byRoy Rubin, longtime head coach atLong Island University.[19][20] For all intents and purposes, the season ended when Cunningham bolted to the ABA on the same day Rubin was introduced as head coach. This left the 76ers with a roster of Greer and little else. The 76ers lost their first 15 games of the season, and a few months later set a then-record20-game losing streak in a single season. Their record following the 20-game losing streak was 4–58, and the team at that point had just lost 34 of 35 games. The 76ers finished the season with a 9–73 record, leading the skeptical Philadelphia press to call them the "Nine and 73-ers". Rubin was fired after 51 games and a 4–47 record; as it turned out, it would be his only NBA coaching job. He was succeeded by player-coachKevin Loughery, who went 5–26 the rest of the way. The 76ers finished an NBA-record 59 games behind the Atlantic Division champion Boston Celtics. Only six years after tallying the most wins in NBA history, the1972–73 squad notched the fourth-fewest wins in NBA history, and still the fewest for a full 82-game season. The 73 losses, although threatened several times, remains the all-time low-water mark for any NBA franchise. The 76ers' 0.110 winning percentage was a record worst at the time, and would remain the lowest until the2011–12 Charlotte Bobcats finished 7–59 for a .106 winning percentage in a season shortened due toa lockout. The 76ers of 1972–73 are generally considered to be the worst team ever to take the court in NBA history. In 2007, NBA historian Kyle Wright argued that the1992–93 Dallas Mavericks and1997–98 Denver Nuggets, both of whom won eleven games, plusthe inaugural Cleveland Cavaliers, who won 15 games, were actually poorer teams due to much weaker schedules.[21]

The next year, the 76ers would hireGene Shue as their head coach and they slowly came back. In the1975–76 season, the 76ers acquiredGeorge McGinnis from theIndiana Pacers of the ABA (after the Knicks tried to sign him, not knowing that the 76ers owned his rights). With him, the 76ers were back in the playoffs after a five-year absence, and even though they lost to theBuffalo Braves in three games, a doctor would come along and get the team healthy enough to stay in perennial contention. During this period, one last personnel misjudgment had effects when the team used the fifth pick overall in the 1975 draft to selectDarryl Dawkins directly from high school. The immensely talented and physically imposing Dawkins seldom, if ever, lived up to his great potential in part because of a perpetual adolescence.

1976–1987: Julius Erving era

Further information:Julius Erving
 
Julius Erving played 11 seasons with the 76ers from 1976 to 1987, leading the 76ers to four NBA Finals and ultimately winning an NBA championship in 1983.

The 76ers finally came all the way back in 1976–77, in large part due to theABA–NBA merger. The ABA's last champions, theNew York Nets, were facing a burden of $5 million to the Knicks for entering theNew York metropolitan area on top of the $3.2 million expansion fee for joining the NBA. So, when the 76ers offered to buy the contract of the Nets' franchise player,Julius Erving, for $3 million—roughly the cost of NBA membership—the Nets had little choice but to accept. A few months before that trade, Kosloff had sold the 76ers toFitz Eugene Dixon Jr. on May 28, 1976.[22]

Led by Erving, the 76ers began an exciting ride, beating their long-timerival from Boston in a seven-game playoff series to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals. There, they defeated theHouston Rockets, led by future 76erMoses Malone, in six games to advance to the NBA Finals. In the Finals, they sprinted to a 2–0 series lead over theBill Walton-ledPortland Trail Blazers—who were coached by former 76ers' coach/general manager Jack Ramsay—only to drop the next four games in a row to give the Blazers the title.

That led to the 1977–78 motto of "We owe you one", which would ultimately backfire when they lost in the conference finals that season to theWashington Bullets, who went on to win the NBA championship. In the next four seasons, the 76ers would fall short of the NBA Championship, even after Shue handed the coaching reins to former great Billy Cunningham. In the1980 NBA Finals against theLos Angeles Lakers, they lost 4–2. In Game Six, rookieMagic Johnson played center for the Lakers in place ofKareem Abdul-Jabbar (who was out because of a sprained ankle sustained in Game Five) and scored 42 points. In the 1981 Eastern Conference Finals, the 76ers opened a 3–1 series lead over the Celtics only to see Boston come back and win the series in seven games. The following season, the 76ers again faced the Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals, and again jumped to a 3–1 series lead only to see Boston forge a 3–3 series tie. The 76ers were given little chance of winning as they faced the Celtics in Game Seven atBoston Garden. This time, they played angry but inspired basketball, pulling away to a 120–106 victory and becoming the third NBA road team to winGame 7 after leading the series 3–1. In the game's closing moments, the Boston Garden fans began chanting "Beat L.A., Beat L.A.", as they realized their team would lose the playoff series to a hated opponent (Philadelphia 76ers), but nonetheless openly wished that opponent good luck in the next round against a more hated opponent (the Los Angeles Lakers).[23] The team lost the1982 Finals in six games against the Los Angeles Lakers.

1982–83: Third NBA championship

 
Moses Malone won MVP honors in 1983, the same year he led the 76ers to their first title in 16 years.

Harold Katz bought the 76ers from Dixon in 1981. On his watch, the final piece of the championship puzzle was completed before the1982–83 season when they acquired centerMoses Malone from theHouston Rockets. Led byHall of FamersJulius Erving,Maurice Cheeks, and All-StarsAndrew Toney andBobby Jones, they dominated the regular season, winning 65 games in what is still the second most winning year in franchise history. Malone was named League MVP, and when reporters asked how the playoffs would run, he answered, "four, four, four"—in other words, saying that the 76ers needed to win four games in each of the three rounds. Malone's accent made his boast sound like "fo', fo', fo'."[24]

The 76ers backed up Malone's boast. They made a mockery of the Eastern Conference playoffs, first sweeping theNew York Knicks and then beating theMilwaukee Bucks in five games. The 76ers went on to win their third NBA championship (and second in Philadelphia) with a four-game sweep of the Los Angeles Lakers, who had defeated them the season before. Malone was named the playoffs' MVP. The 76ers did not quite fulfill Malone's prediction, as their run was actually "fo', fi', fo" ("four, five, four") – a loss to the Bucks in game four of the Eastern finals being the only blemish on their playoff run. Nonetheless, their 12–1 playoff record is tied for the fewest losses in league history with the 2000–01 Lakers, who went 15–1 en route to the NBA title, coincidentally beating the 76ers in the Finals (after suffering their only defeat that postseason in Game 1), and also with the 2016–2017Golden State Warriors, who won the title with a 16–1 playoff record. The Philadelphia-based groupPieces Of A Dream had a minor hit in 1983 with the R&B song "Fo-Fi-Fo", which title was prompted by Malone's quip. This also marked the last major-pro championship in Philadelphia until thePhillies won the2008 World Series.[25]

Arrival of Charles Barkley

Further information:Charles Barkley

After a disappointing1983–84 season, which ended with a five-game loss to the upstartNew Jersey Nets in the first round of theplayoffs,Charles Barkley arrived in Philadelphia for the1984–85 season. For the next eight seasons, Barkley brought delight to the Philadelphia fans thanks to his humorous and sometimes controversial ways.[26] The 76ers returned to the Eastern Conference Finals in Barkley's rookie season, but lost to theBoston Celtics in five games. As it turned out, they would never again advance as far during Barkley's tenure in Philadelphia. Following the 1984–85 season,Matt Guokas replaced Billy Cunningham as head coach. Guokas led the 76ers to a 54–28 record and the second round of the1986 playoffs, where they were defeated by theMilwaukee Bucks in seven games.

On June 16, 1986, Katz made two of the most controversial and highly criticized personnel moves in franchise history, trading Moses Malone toWashington and the first overall pick in the1986 NBA draft, which had been obtained from theSan Diego Clippers in a 1979 trade forJoe Bryant, to theCleveland Cavaliers. In return, the 76ers receivedRoy Hinson,Jeff Ruland, andCliff Robinson, none of whom played more than three seasons with the team. Cleveland, meanwhile, turned their acquired pick into future All-StarBrad Daugherty.

On the night of the1986–87 season opener, Julius Erving announced he would retire after the season, which was subsequently filled with tributes in each arena the 76ers visited. On the court, the team suffered through an injury-plagued campaign, but still managed to make the playoffs with a 45–37 record. Their season would end at the hands of the Bucks again, this time in a best-of-five first-round series that went the distance.

1987–1992: Charles Barkley era

 
Charles Barkley played eight seasons with the 76ers from 1984 to 1992

In1987–88, with the team's record at 20–23, Guokas was fired and replaced by assistant coachJim Lynam. Lynam finished the season 16–23, to bring Philadelphia's overall mark to 36–46. For the first time since the1974–75 season, the 76ers failed to reach the playoffs. Philadelphia selectedCharles Smith with its first pick (third overall) in the1988 NBA draft, then traded his rights to the Los Angeles Clippers for their first pick (sixth overall), andHersey Hawkins. In five seasons with the 76ers, Hawkins would average 19 points per game, and was the team's all-time leader in three-point field goals attempted and made when he was traded to theCharlotte Hornets forDana Barros,Sidney Green and draft picks in 1993.

In 1988–89, Philadelphia returned to the playoffs after a one-year absence, but was swept in the first round by theNew York Knicks. In 1989–90, Barkley finished second in the league's MVP voting, as the 76ers won the Atlantic Division title with a 53–29 record. After defeating Cleveland in the first round of the playoffs, Philadelphia facedMichael Jordan and theChicago Bulls in the second round. The 76ers fell to the Chicago Bulls in five games, and would do the same in1991 after sweeping the Bucks in the first round. In the1991–92 season, the 76ers went 35–47 and missed the playoffs for just the second time during Barkley's eight seasons in Philadelphia. On June 17, 1992, Barkley was traded to thePhoenix Suns forJeff Hornacek,Tim Perry, andAndrew Lang, a deal that was met with harsh criticism.[27]

1992–1996: Dark ages

 
Ed Snider purchased the 76ers in 1996.

Lynam relinquished his head coaching position to become general manager following the 1991–92 season, and hiredDoug Moe to fill the vacancy. Moe's tenure lasted just 56 games, with the 76ers posting a 19–37 record. Popular former player and longtime assistant coachFred Carter succeeded Moe as head coach in March 1993, but could only manage a 32–76 record at the helm. Following the1993–94 season, the 76ers hiredJohn Lucas in the dual role of head coach and general manager. The enthusiastic Lucas had been successful as a head coach for theSan Antonio Spurs, and Philadelphia hoped he could breathe new life into the 76ers. It proved disastrous, as the team went 42–122 in its two seasons under Lucas. The acquisition of unproductive free agents such asScott Williams andCharles Shackleford, players at the end of their careers such asLaSalle Thompson,Orlando Woolridge, andScott Skiles along with stunningly unwise high draft picks such asShawn Bradley andSharone Wright were also factors in the team's decline. In fact, Wright would only play four seasons in the NBA while Temple productEddie Jones—drafted 4 slots below Wright in 1994 by the L.A. Lakers—had 16 productive seasons as an NBA player.

Starting with the1990–91 season, and ending with the1995–96 season, the 76ers had the dubious distinction of seeing their win total decrease each year. The nadir was the 1995–96 season, when they finished with an 18–64 record, the second-worst in franchise history at the time. It was also the second-worst record in the league that year, ahead of only the expansionVancouver Grizzlies but behind theToronto Raptors, who were also in their inaugural season. That season would turn out to be their last inThe Spectrum. Katz, unpopular among fans since the 1986 trades, sold the team toComcast Spectacor, a consortium ofPhiladelphia Flyers ownerEd Snider andComcast Corporation, at the end of the 1995–96 season. Snider had been the 76ers' landlord since gaining control of the Spectrum in 1971.Pat Croce, a former trainer for the Flyers and 76ers, took over as president.

Many 76ers fans call these years "The Dark Ages". After many years of misfortune, there was a bright spot. The team won the lottery for the top pick in the1996 NBA draft. Questions remained, but with the first pick, the 76ers selectedAllen Iverson, who was nicknamed "the Answer".

1996–2006: Allen Iverson era

With new ownership, Iverson in place, and the 76ers moving into theCoreStates Center, things seemed to finally be heading in a positive direction. Croce fired Lucas as both coach and general manager.Johnny Davis was named head coach, while Brad Greenberg took over as general manager. Iverson was named Rookie of the Year, but Philadelphia's overall improvement was minimal, as they finished with a 22–60 record. Changes had to be made, and after the1996–97 season, Davis and Greenberg were both fired and the unveiling of a new 76ers team logo and jerseys marked a new era. To replace Davis,Larry Brown was hired as head coach. Known for a defense-first approach and transforming unsuccessful teams into winners by "playing the right way", Brown faced perhaps his toughest coaching challenge. He often clashed with Iverson, but the 76ers improved to 31 wins in 1997–98. Early in the1997–98 season, the 76ers tradedJerry Stackhouse, who had been the third overall pick in the1995 NBA draft, to theDetroit Pistons. In exchange, Philadelphia receivedAaron McKie andTheo Ratliff, defensive standouts who would have an impact in the team's resurgence. Another key figure in the team's rise,Eric Snow, was added in a trade with theSeattle SuperSonics in January 1998.

Prior to the1998–99 season, the 76ers signedGeorge Lynch andMatt Geiger, but a lockout delayed the start of the season, which was shortened to 50 games. During the season, Philadelphia acquiredTyrone Hill in a trade with Milwaukee. The team began its resurgence during this lockout-shortened season, finishing with a 28–22 record and the sixth seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs, marking the first time since 1991 the team reached the postseason. In the first round, Philadelphia upset theOrlando Magic 3–1, before being swept by theIndiana Pacers. The following season, the 76ers improved to 49–33, fifth in the Eastern Conference. Again, the 76ers won their first-round series in four games, this time defeating theCharlotte Hornets. For the second straight year, they were defeated by Indiana in the second round, this time in six games. Though the team was moving in a positive direction, Iverson and Brown continued to clash, and their relationship deteriorated to the point where it seemed certain Iverson would be traded. A rumored trade to theLos Angeles Clippers fell through, but a complicated four-team deal that would've seen Iverson sent to Detroit was agreed upon, only to see it dissolve due to salary cap problems. When it became clear Iverson was staying in Philadelphia, he and Brown worked to patch things up, and the team would reap the benefits in 2000–01.

2000–01 season: NBA Finals loss to the Lakers

 
Allen Iverson won Most Valuable Player honors in 2001 while leading the 76ers to the NBA Finals.
 
Larry Brown coached the 76ers from 1997 to 2003 and was named Coach of the Year in 2001.

During the2000–01 season, the 76ers got off to a hot start by winning their first ten games and were never seriously challenged in the Atlantic Division. Larry Brown coached the Eastern Conference All-Stars, and Allen Iverson was named MVP of the All-Star Game. Shortly before the All-Star break, Theo Ratliff was lost for the season with a wrist injury, one that would later prove to be devastating to his future career. Despite holding a 41–14 record and a comfortable lead atop both the Atlantic Division and Eastern Conference standings at the time of the February 22 trade deadline, management felt the team needed an established center to advance deep into the playoffs. On that day, Philadelphia acquiredDikembe Mutombo from theAtlanta Hawks in a deal that sent the injured Ratliff along withNazr Mohammed,Toni Kukoč, andPepe Sánchez to Atlanta (Sánchez was reacquired later in the season after the Hawks waived him). The 76ers went on to finish 56–26, good enough for their first Atlantic Division title since 1989–90 and top seed in the Eastern Conference Playoffs.

In the first round of the playoffs, Philadelphia faced Indiana yet again. In Game One, the 76ers wasted an 18-point lead and lost, 79–78, whenReggie Miller hit a three-pointer in the closing seconds. Philadelphia fought back and won the next three games to win the series. In the Eastern Conference Semifinals, the 76ers squared off against the Toronto Raptors and their superstar,Vince Carter. The teams alternated wins in the first four games, with Iverson scoring 54 points in Philadelphia's Game Two victory. A Game Five win with Iverson scoring 52 in a 121–88 rout, and a Game Six loss set up a decisive Game Seven, which the 76ers survived as Carter missed a long jump shot at the buzzer for an 88–87 victory that sent the 76ers to the Eastern Conference Finals against the Milwaukee Bucks. After the teams split the first two games of the series in Philadelphia, it was learned Iverson would miss Game Three due to various nagging injuries that had plagued him late in the season. Though most predicted a Milwaukee cakewalk, the 76ers kept the game close before falling, 80–74. Philadelphia seemed to gain momentum despite the loss, and they would win Games Four and Five. Milwaukee put any Sixer celebration plans on hold by building up a 33-point lead in the third quarter of Game Six, but the 76ers would make a furious fourth-quarter rally before falling 110–100. Struggling in the series up to that point, Iverson scored 26 points in the final quarter to finish with 46 on the night and appeared to have gotten a second wind. In Game Seven, the Bucks jumped out to a 34–25 second-quarter advantage before seldom-used reserveRaja Bell scored 10 points to spark a 23–4 run that gave Philadelphia the lead for good. Iverson scored 44 points and the 76ers pulled away in the second half, winning by a 108–91 score to put them in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1983. As had been the case in their three previous Finals appearances, their opponent would be the Los Angeles Lakers, who had run up an 11–0 record in the first three rounds of the playoffs and were expected by many to make quick work of a worn-down 76ers squad. Because of a seemingly meaningless loss to the lowly Chicago Bulls in the regular season finale with both the 76ers and the Lakers finishing with identical 56–26 records, though Los Angeles was awarded a higher seed based on tiebreakers, the NBA Finals marked the first time in the 2001 playoffs in which the 76ers had to start a series on the road.

In Game 1, the Lakers jumped out to an 18–5 lead, but the 76ers stormed back to take a 15-point lead in the second half. Los Angeles rallied to force a 94–94 tie at the end of regulation before scoring the first five points of the overtime period, but the 76ers closed the game on a 13–2 run for a 107–101 triumph. Iverson hit a go-ahead three-pointer with 1:19 to go in the extra period, and followed that with a jump shot after which he infamously stepped overTyronn Lue after making the basket.Eric Snow hit a running jump shot in the waning seconds with the shot clock expiring to clinch the stunning victory. The series would come back to Philadelphia even as Los Angeles took Game Two, 98–89. In Game Three,Shaquille O'Neal fouled out late in the fourth quarter, and the 76ers pulled to within a point with less than a minute to play after trailing by 12 earlier in the second half.Robert Horry hit a clutch three-pointer in that final minute, and the Lakers prevailed, 96–91. Los Angeles wrapped up the second of what would be three consecutive NBA titles with a 100–86 win in Game Four and a 108–96 victory in Game Five.

In addition to their Atlantic Division and Eastern Conference titles, the2000–01 76ers featured the NBA's MVP (Iverson), Coach of the Year (Brown), Defensive Player of the Year (Mutombo), and Sixth Man of the Year (Aaron McKie).

Departure of Larry Brown

The 76ers went into the2001–02 season with high expectations, but were able to produce only a 43–39 record, sixth in the Eastern Conference. In the first round of the playoffs, Philadelphia was defeated 3–2 by the Boston Celtics. In the2002–03 season, the 76ers sprinted to a 15–4 start, but a 10–20 swoon left them 25–24 at the All-Star break. After the break, the 76ers caught fire, winning nine in a row at one point, and 23 of their last 33 to finish at 48–34, earning the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Iverson scored 55 points in the playoff opener against the New Orleans Hornets[28] and the 76ers went on to win the series in six games. In the second round, the Detroit Pistons ended Philadelphia's playoff run in a frustrating six-game series that saw the 76ers lose twice in overtime, and once on a last-second shot in regulation. It would be nine years before the 76ers won another playoff series.

On Memorial Day, 2003, Brown abruptly resigned as head coach, taking over the reins in Detroit a few days later. Brown's Pistons would win the2004 NBA Championship over theLos Angeles Lakers, in some ways avenging his loss to them in 2001. After being turned down byJeff Van Gundy andEddie Jordan, the 76ers hiredRandy Ayers, an assistant coach under Brown, as their new head coach. Ayers lasted only 52 games and was fired with the team's record at 21–31.Chris Ford took over, but the 76ers finished the2003–04 season at 33–49, missing the playoffs for the first time in six years. Iverson, who was at odds with Ford throughout the interim coach's tenure, played only 48 games in a stormy, injury-plagued season.

Arrival of Andre Iguodala

 
Andre Iguodala played with the 76ers from 2004 to 2012

For the2004–05 season, Philadelphia nativeJim O'Brien was named head coach. Iverson was moved back to point guard and flourished, having arguably his finest season. He also impressed many with his willingness to get other players involved in the offense. During this season, Philadelphia acquiredChris Webber in a trade with theSacramento Kings, with the hopes that the team had at long last found a consistent second scoring option to complement Iverson.Andre Iguodala, Philadelphia's first-round pick in the2004 NBA draft, was named to the All-Rookie First Team, and the 76ers returned to thepostseason with a 43–39 record. In the first round, they were defeated in five games by the defending NBA Champion Pistons, coached by Larry Brown.

Though in the 2004–05 season the 76ers exceeded many on-court expectations, there was a great deal of behind-the-scenes tension between O'Brien, his players, and the front office. Shortly after the season ended, O'Brien was fired and replaced by the popularMaurice Cheeks, who played for the team from 1978 to 1989, and was the starting point guard for the 1983 NBA Champions. The coaching change did not help the team's fortunes for the2005–06 season. A 2–10 stretch in March doomed them to missing the playoffs for the second time in three years with a 38–44 record.

With the opening of the2006–07 season, the 76ers started out hot, going 3–0 for the first time since making it to the Finals five years previously. They stumbled through the first half of the season and did not recover, finishing 35–47, good for third in the Atlantic Division, and ninth in the Eastern Conference (tied with Indiana).

On December 5, 2006, disappointed with the direction the team was headed, Allen Iverson gave the 76ers management an ultimatum:find players who will help support me or trade me. This was confirmed via an in-game interview with team owner,Ed Snider.[29]

2006–2016: Post-Iverson era

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On December 19, 2006,Allen Iverson, along withIvan McFarlin, were sent to theDenver Nuggets in exchange for guardAndre Miller, forwardJoe Smith, and two first-round draft picks. Then, on January 11, the 76ers' general managerBilly King announced that the 76ers and aging forwardChris Webber had agreed to a buyout of the remainder of his contract. The 76ers paid Webber $36 million over the next 1½ seasons, which is $7 million less than he would have been paid to play. After the buyout, the 76ers waived Webber, making him a free agent. Webber signed with theDetroit Pistons shortly thereafter. The moves allowed the 76ers to make Iguodala the unquestioned leader of the team, and evaluate whether they saw him as a franchise player. They finished the year 35–47.

Thaddeus Young, the 76ers' first draft pick in the post-Allen Iverson era
Elton Brand, who signed for five years with the 76ers in 2008
 
Allen Iverson in 2009, during his second stint inPhiladelphia

In 2007, the 76ers drafted small forwardThaddeus Young with the 12th pick. On December 4, 2007, the 76ers fired King and replaced him with Nets' general managerEd Stefanski.[30]

With Iguodala, the 76ers clinched a playoff berth with a win over theAtlanta Hawks on April 4, 2008. It was their first postseason appearance since 2005, as well as the first in the post-Iverson era. They were eliminated by the Pistons in six games, with Detroit winning the series 4–2. Even with this elimination, many fans considered this to be a successful season, considering that the 76ers were 12 games under .500 in early February and went on make the playoffs and a 40–42 record.

On July 9, 2008, the 76ers signedpower forwardElton Brand to a five-year, $79.795 million contract,[31] after trading Rodney Carney[32] and renouncing their rights to all their unrestricted free agents.[33] Brand had originally opted out of his contract with theLos Angeles Clippers, looking to re-sign with them.[34] But the 76ers offered him more money (he regarded their offer as the "Philly-Max") and a better chance at winning an NBA championship by playing in theEastern Conference. This move has been the subject of controversy since there were rumors that he andBaron Davis had made a friendly agreement to play together for the Clippers.[35] The team later signed free agent point guardRoyal Ivey of theMilwaukee Bucks,[36]Kareem Rush from theIndiana Pacers,[37] and then signed former SixerTheo Ratliff after Jason Smith's injury.Donyell Marshall was signed on September 2, 2008, after he stated to his agent that he wanted to go back home and end his career in Philadelphia.[38] Rush, Ivey, Ratliff and Marshall were all paid the veteran's minimum salary, but they were to be contributors to a team on the rise. During the off-season, they also re-signedrestricted free agentsLou Williams and Andre Iguodala for five years/$25 million[39] and six years/$80 million, respectively.[40]

The 76ers started the year with a 9–14 record before firing head coachMaurice Cheeks on December 13. Assistant general managerTony DiLeo took over, and the 76ers gradually improved. They finished the season with a 41–41 record, with a 32–27 record under DiLeo. Brand's first season with the 76ers ended early with a right shoulder injury that required surgery. Despite the loss of Brand, the 76ers still managed to fight their way into the playoffs. However, they did not find much success, as they were knocked out of the first round by theOrlando Magic; the 76ers had led 2–1 after three games, but the Magic won three straight to eliminate the 76ers from the playoffs. It was also during this season that the 76ers played one home game at their old home, theWachovia Spectrum. The 76ers won 104–101 over theChicago Bulls on March 13, 2009. The game was played to provide the final curtain call on the Spectrum, which was scheduled to be imploded on New Year's Eve 2009.

Following the playoff loss, Tony DiLeo returned to his front office job, creating a head coaching vacancy. Former Washington Wizards coachEddie Jordan was introduced as the 76ers' new coach on June 1, 2009.[41] In the 2009 off-season, the 76ers drafted UCLA point guardJrue Holiday with the 17th pick. The 76ers also traded power forward Reggie Evans to the Toronto Raptors for a three-point specialist, small forwardJason Kapono, who had won back-to-back three-point shootouts in 2007 and 2008.[42] The off-season also marked the return of the 1977–97 76ers logo, along with a redesigned court and new uniforms updating the 1980s ones.[43]

Iverson's brief return

 
Doug Collins, who played for the team from 1973 to 1981, was hired as the 76ers' head coach in 2010.
 
In 2011,Apollo Global Management co-founderJosh Harris led an investment group that purchased the team for $280 million.

On December 2, 2009, the Philadelphia 76ers announced that they had signed Iverson to a one-year prorated $1.3 million non-guaranteed contract.[44] The 76ers were 5–13 at the time and had lost Williams for at least 30 games to injury.[45] Iverson made his "re-debut" for the 76ers against the team he was traded to, the Denver Nuggets, to a thunderous ovation from the sell-out crowd, scoring 11 points, with six assists and five rebounds.[46] The euphoria that greeted Iverson's return to the 76ers faded quickly. On February 22, Iverson announced he was leaving the 76ers indefinitely to attend to his daughter's illness, and a few weeks later the 76ers announced that Iverson would not return for the rest of the season. The 76ers finished the season with a record of 27–55, their first 50-loss season since 1998. Most cited the reason behind this as the players' inability to play within Eddie Jordan'sPrinceton offense, with several players unhappy with his system. Hours after the 76ers' last game at Orlando on April 14, the team fired Jordan after one season. He was the fourth coach to be fired after one season or less since Larry Brown left the team in 2003.[47]

On May 20, 2010, TNT analystDoug Collins was named head coach of the 76ers.[48] Collins played for the 76ers for his entire NBA career after being the first overall pick in the1973 draft, and had previously coached the Chicago Bulls, Detroit Pistons, and the Washington Wizards. The 76ers had the sixth-best odds at receiving the top pick in the2010 draft, and they managed to land the second overall pick, beating out the Warriors, Kings, Timberwolves, and Nets, who all had better odds. They used that draft pick to select Ohio State University'sEvan Turner.

The 76ers started the season with an uninspiring 3–13 mark, but started turning things around, to finish with a 41–41 record. They clinched a playoff berth on April 1, 2011, their third in the last four years. The 76ers faced the heavily favored Heat in the first round, and ultimately fell to them in five games. Although they lost the series, Collins was praised for turning around a lottery team in his first season, as well as winning a playoff game when many pundits predicted that the 76ers would be swept. Collins also finished second in Coach of the Year voting.

On July 13, 2011, Comcast-Spectacor reached an agreement to sell the 76ers to an investment group led byApollo Global Management co-founderJosh Harris for $280 million.[49][50] Other members of the group includedDavid Blitzer,Art Wrubel,Jason Levien,Adam Aron,Martin Geller,David Heller,James Lassiter,Marc Leder,Michael Rubin,Will Smith,Jada Pinkett Smith, andErick Thohir.[51][52] Harris decided to retain head coach Doug Collins and president of basketball operations Rod Thorn but fired Ed Stefanski, who served as general manager since 2007.

For the season, the 76ers had their best start since 2000–01 with a 20–9 record, battling for the Eastern Conference's best record and taking a firm division lead. They finished the rest of the season 15–22, giving them a 35–31 record. Attributed to their lack of offense, the 76ers lost hold of the top-three seed and division championship that they held for most of the season, by going on the losing streak. Nevertheless, they clinched their fourth playoff berth in the last five years on the penultimate play date of the season.

Philadelphia earned the eighth seed in the2012 NBA playoffs, facing the first-seeded Bulls. Philadelphia improved from their struggles in the second half of the regular season, beating Chicago 4–2 to win their first series since 2003. This was the fifth time in NBA history that an eight seed has beaten a one seed. They then faced their rival, theBoston Celtics, in the second round, and were eliminated 4–3. The 76ers again faced criticism for their lack of a true scorer, as they were not able to keep pace with the Celtics' scoring.

In an effort to re-tool for the upcoming season, The 76ers selectedMaurice Harkless, andArnett Moultrie (via trade with Miami) in the2012 NBA draft. The 76ers then used their amnesty clause on Brand, traded forDorell Wright, signedNick Young,Kwame Brown, and Ivey, and re-signedSpencer Hawes, whileLavoy Allen, Williams, andJodie Meeks left through free agency. On August 9, 2012, the 76ers agreed to a four-team trade with theLos Angeles Lakers, the Magic, and the Nuggets. In the trade that sent six-time All-StarDwight Howard to the Lakers, Philadelphia agreed to send 2011 first-round pickNikola Vučević, 2012 first-round draft pick Harkless, and a future first-round draft pick to Orlando, as well as All-Starswingman Iguodala to Denver. In exchange, they receivedJason Richardson from the Magic and All-Star centerAndrew Bynum from the Los Angeles Lakers.[53]

The 76ers started the2012–13 season with high expectations with the help of Bynum and the growth of the young 76ers. Bynum's debut with the 76ers took a hit when he was sidelined for precautionary reasons, in relation to theOrthokine knee procedure he received during the off-season. At first it looked like Bynum would be out only shortly, but little success in healing and setbacks pushed Bynum's return date further and further. As a result of many setbacks, on March 19, the 76ers announced that Bynum would have season-ending surgery on both knees.[54] Bynum was not the only Sixer to suffer through injuries. On February 8, Richardson also went through a season-ending knee surgery.[55] Holiday, Thaddeus Young, Nick Young, and Ivey also had injuries that sidelined them for weeks. By the end of the season, Turner and Hawes were the only 76ers to play in every game during the season. The 76ers started the season 12–9 but stumbled through a tough stretch and could not recover. The 76ers finished the season 34–48, missing the playoffs for the first time since Collins had taken over as head coach.

On April 18, Collins resigned as 76ers coach, citing his declining health and need to spend time with his grandchildren. He stayed with the team as an adviser.[56] Soon after, general manager DiLeo had "cut ties" with the team. On May 11, it was announced thatSam Hinkie, who had previously worked for theHouston Rockets, would replace DiLeo as general manager.[57] On July 8, it was announced that Adam Aron had stepped down as CEO and was being replaced by Scott O'Neil.

2013–2016: "The Process"

 
Brett Brown, who coached the team from 2013 to 2020, in 2015
 
Jerry Colangelo joined the team's front office in 2015.
 
Joel Embiid andBen Simmons were considered to be centerpieces of the 76ers' future.
 
Michael Carter-Williams won Rookie Of The Year in 2014 after being drafted 11th overall by the Sixers.

Following the 2012–13 season, the 76ers, led by Hinkie, chose to shift in the direction of rebuilding the franchise.Tony Wroten, guard for the 76ers, referred to the majorrebuilding culture surrounding Philadelphia as "The Process".[58][59] The first move of this new plan was executed during the2013 draft, when the 76ers agreed in principle to trade All-StarJrue Holiday and the 42nd pick in the draft,Pierre Jackson, to theNew Orleans Pelicans forNerlens Noel and the Pelicans' 2014 first-round pick. The trade was later made official on July 12.[60] The trade was seen by some[who?] as somewhat surprising, as Holiday had been the team's marquee player and was coming off a season that saw him make his firstNBA All-Star Game. Additionally, Noel was recovering from ananterior cruciate ligament injury suffered while in college, strongly indicating that he would not be able to make an immediate impact for the 76ers as he would be inactive to start the season. The 76ers used the 11th pick in the draft to selectMichael Carter-Williams as Holiday's replacement as the starting point guard. The 76ers choseArsalan Kazemi with the 54th overall pick, making Kazemi the firstIranian chosen in the NBA draft.[61]

Following the Holiday trade, many of the team's returning players were either waived or left the team in free agency, most notablyAndrew Bynum; of the 15 players on the team's roster during their final game of the 2012–13 season, only six remained with the team by January 1, 2014. In their place were a number of young prospects, many coming from theNBA Development League or signing with the 76ers after playing limited roles on other teams. Further moves at the trade deadline on February 20, 2014, saw the exits of veteransSpencer Hawes,Evan Turner, andLavoy Allen, all of whom were key rotational players.

The 76ers had a 3–0 start that included wins over the two-time defending championMiami Heat and aChicago Bulls team with high expectations. The 76ers struggled heavily after that, at one point posting a26-game losing streak which set a franchise record,[62] and tied the all-time NBA record for most consecutive losses in a single-season.[63] During the middle of the season, formerOrlando Magic head coachStan Van Gundy would call the Sixers' actions "embarrassing" and say "if you're putting that roster on the floor, you're doing everything you can possibly do to try to lose."[64] The 76ers finished the season with a 19–63 record, the third-worst in franchise history. Despite that, the 76ers did not have the worst win–loss record in the overall NBA standings: theMilwaukee Bucks finished worse with a 15–67 record.

Carter-Williams led all rookies in points, rebounds, assists, and steals, joiningMagic Johnson andOscar Robertson as the only rookies to accomplish this feat.[65] He also won the player of the week award in his first week, being the second rookie afterShaquille O'Neal to accomplish that.[66] He went on to win the Rookie of the Year award, becoming the first rookie drafted 10th or later to win the award sinceMark Jackson in 1987 for theNew York Knicks.[65]

In the2014 NBA draft, the Sixers selectedJoel Embiid with the third overall pick and traded with theOrlando Magic forCroatian prospectDario Šarić, the twelfth pick of the draft. Neither prospect was expected to make an immediate impact for the Sixers, as Embiid was recovering from astress fracture in thenavicular bone, while Šarić would likely spend one or more years playing in theTurkish Basketball League.[67] In the second round, the Sixers selectedK. J. McDaniels,Jerami Grant,Jordan McRae, andSerbian prospectVasilije Micić. The Sixers also traded a second-round pick to re-acquire Jackson from the Pelicans.[68]

In the 2014 off-season, the Sixers traded Thaddeus Young to Minnesota in the Kevin Love to Cleveland trade, and received the Heat's 2015 first-round draft pick,Luc Mbah a Moute andAlexey Shved, leaving only two players with three years of experience on the Sixers remaining.

On November 29, 2014, the 76ers lost to the Dallas Mavericks 103–110 and set a franchise record for losses to start the season, as they fell to a record of 0–16.[69] After losing their next game against the San Antonio Spurs to make it 0–17, the 76ers were on the verge of tying the NBA record of 18 straight losses to start a season if they lost to the Minnesota Timberwolves on December 3, but they broke their losing streak and won their first game of the2014–15 season with an 85–77 victory at Minnesota.[70]

A newtraining complex was opened inCamden, New Jersey, in September 2016. In three deals at the 2015 NBA trade deadline, the 76ers traded Carter-Williams and McDaniels forJaVale McGee,Isaiah Canaan, and three draft picks, including a protected 2015 first-round pick originally owned by theLos Angeles Lakers. The Sixers finished the season with an 18–64 record, tied with the second-worst in franchise history since 1995–96. Despite that, the Sixers did not have the worst win–loss record in the overall NBA standings: the Timberwolves fared worse with a 16–66 record and Knicks fared second with 17–65 record.

On May 19, the 76ers were awarded the third overall pick in the2015 NBA draft, where they selectedDuke centerJahlil Okafor with the third overall pick. The 76ers also signedJP Tokoto with the 58th overall pick. On November 27, the 76ers lost to theHouston Rockets 116–114, giving them a 27-game losing streak dating back to the previous season, which became the longest losing streak in professional sports. During the same game, the Sixers set a franchise record of 16three pointers made during the losing effort. On December 1, the 76ers beat the Lakers at home by a score of 103–91, but not before setting a league record 28 consecutive losses dating to the 2014–15 season. In doing so, the 76ers also managed to avoid setting a new NBA record of most losses to begin a season. They instead tied the old record of 18 losses set by the then-New Jersey Nets in the2009–10 season.[71]

On December 8, the 76ers announced that they would hireJerry Colangelo, chairman of the board of directors forUSA Basketball, as the Special Advisor to the Managing General Partner and Chairman of Basketball Operations.[72] In the first move the team made after hiring Colangelo, they traded two second-round draft picks to the Pelicans in return for point guardIsh Smith.[73] On March 1, 2016, the 76ers, at the time with a record of 8–51, missed the playoffs for the fourth straight season. The 76ers finished the season 10–72.

2016–present: The Joel Embiid era

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2016–2017: First year

 
Ben Simmons, the 76ers' first overall draft selection in the2016 NBA draft

On April 6, 2016, Sam Hinkie resigned by way of a 7,000 word letter of resignation.[74] On April 10, 2016,Bryan Colangelo, the son of Jerry Colangelo, was named president of basketball operations.[75] In the NBA Draft Lottery, the Philadelphia 76ers earned the first pick in the draft, after they had a 25% chance of earning the spot.

On June 23, 2016, following the2015–16 season, and after the 76ers were awarded the first overall pick in the 2016 draft, the team selected LSU Point ForwardBen Simmons first overall. The Sixers also selected French basketball playerTimothé Luwawu-Cabarrot and Turkish basketball playerFurkan Korkmaz with the 24th and 26th picks in the2016 NBA draft respectively.[76] Many consider the 2016 NBA Draft a turning point for the 76ers after their three seasons of not being competitive resulted in the franchise garnering the first overall pick, the first time the team owned the first since 1996 when the 76ers selected point guardAllen Iverson first overall.[77] The Sixers subsequently traded for another number one pick in the2017 NBA draft, choosingMarkelle Fultz.[78]

2017–2018: Return to playoffs

The2017–18 season was the most successful season since the 2011–12 season as the team finished the regular season in third place in the Eastern Conference with a 52–30 winning record and clinched a playoff spot.[79] The season also saw the 76ers reaching a franchise-record 16-game winning streak.[80] In the First Round of theplayoffs, the Sixers defeated the Heat in five games, to win their first playoff series since the2011–12 season.

2018–2019: Jimmy Butler year
 
Jimmy Butler with the 76ers in 2019

Following a controversy involving fakeTwitter accounts, the 76ers parted ways with general managerBryan Colangelo on June 7, 2018.[81] The team promotedElton Brand from executive vice president of basketball operations to fill the vacant general manager role on September 18, 2018.[82]

On November 12, 2018, the 76ers traded Šarić,Robert Covington,Jerryd Bayless and a 2022 second-round draft pick to theMinnesota Timberwolves in exchange forJimmy Butler andJustin Patton.[83]

On February 6, 2019, the 76ers acquired forwardTobias Harris, as well asBoban Marjanović andMike Scott, in a trade with theLos Angeles Clippers, sendingWilson Chandler,Mike Muscala,Landry Shamet, a protected 2020 first-round pick, Miami's unprotected 2021 first-round pick and Detroit's 2021 and 2023 second-round picks to the Clippers.[84] The 76ers completed the season as the third seed. In the playoffs, they beat the Brooklyn Nets in five games in the first round and faced the second-seeded Toronto Raptors in the second round. The series went to seven games, which the 76ers lost 4–3, when Kawhi Leonard made a game-winning buzzer-beater in game 7 in Toronto.[85]

In the off-season, Jimmy Butler left to sign with the Miami Heat in a sign and trade that brought Josh Richardson to Philadelphia.[86] The team also signed Al Horford.[87]

On November 25, 2019, the 76ers made history by signing a sports betting partnership with Fox Bet, the joint venture of online gambling operatorThe Stars Group and broadcasterFox Sports. While the NBA has struck a number of partnerships with betting operators following the2018 US Supreme Court ruling that struck down the federal betting ban, the Fox Bet deal marked the first partnership between a betting operator and an individual NBA team.[88]

2020–2022

Before the season, the Sixers were expected to be another championship contender, as they were in the past two seasons, especially with Kawhi Leonard having left the conference.[89] The Sixers had one of the worst away records in the NBA, but their league-best home record, with only 2 losses, kept the team afloat in the playoff race.

Following thesuspension of the 2019–20 NBA season, the 76ers were one of the 22 teams invited to theNBA Bubble to participate in the final eight games of the regular season.[90] The Sixers started the bubble in the sixth seed, tied with the Pacers, who had the tiebreaker.[91] The regular season finished with the 76ers in the sixth seed, a notable decrease in position from the previous two seasons. In the first round of the playoffs, the 76ers were eliminated by the Celtics in a 4–0 sweep. Head coach Brett Brown was fired on August 24, 2020.[92]

On October 3, 2020, the 76ers hiredDoc Rivers as their new head coach.[93] On November 2, the 76ers hiredDaryl Morey to be their president of basketball operations.[94] The 76ers went 49–23 and clinched the first seed in the Eastern Conference, capturing the division title for the first time in 20 years. In the opening round, they defeated theWashington Wizards in five games but lost to theAtlanta Hawks in the Conference Semifinals in seven games.[95] Franchise playerJoel Embiid, placed second in the voting for theNBA Most Valuable Player Award for the 2020–21 regular season behind first-placed winnerNikola Jokić.[96]

After the Game 7 loss to the Hawks in whichBen Simmons controversially passed on an open dunk to tie the game, Simmons demanded a trade andheld out from participating in training camp.[97][98] The 76ers fined Simmons for conduct detrimental to the team, reportedly in excess of $19 million.[99]

2022–2024

 
Joel Embiid dunking the ball during a 2018 76ers game. He was named the team's fifthNBA Most Valuable Player in 2023

On February 10, 2022, the 76ers acquiredJames Harden andPaul Millsap from theBrooklyn Nets in exchange for Simmons,Andre Drummond,Seth Curry, and two first-round picks.[100] The2021–22 season finished with a 51–31 record, led by Embiid, Harden, and second-year shooting guardTyrese Maxey. Embiid won thescoring title averaging 30.6 points per game.[101] In a repeat of the previous season's MVP race, Embiid finished second in the 2021–22NBA Most Valuable Player Award contest behindNikola Jokić.[102]

On June 24, the Sixers tradedDanny Green and the 23rd pick of the draft who would turn out to beDavid Roddy forDe'Anthony Melton.[103] In a four team trade, the 76ers acquiredJalen McDaniels but had to give up perimeter defenderMatisse Thybulle who got traded to thePortland Trail Blazers.[104] The2022–23 season was successful for the Sixers. They clinched aPlayoff Spot on March 21.[105] They finished the season 54–28 as the third seed. After sweeping theBrooklyn Nets, theBoston Celtics prevailed in 7 Games and gave the Sixers another second-round exit. Despite this, Joel Embiid was named league MVP.[106]

On May 16, 2023, head coachDoc Rivers was fired and replaced byNick Nurse on June 1. The Sixers tradedJames Harden,P. J. Tucker andFilip Petrušev to theLos Angeles Clippers forMarcus Morris,Robert Covington, andNicolas Batum. The Sixers started the season 29–13 as the second seed in the East, but Joel Embiid tore his Lateral Meniscus. Embiid returned on March 5. During Joel's absence, the Sixers fell to the 8th Seed and Tyrese Maxey made his first All-Star game. They finished the season as the 7th seed with a record of 47–35, qualifying for thePlay-in game. The Sixers made it out of the Play-In, beating theMiami Heat to advance to the playoffs but were beaten 4–2 in the first round by the New York Knicks.[107]

2024–present: Arrival of Paul George

 
Tyrese Maxey

That offseason,Paul George signed a four-year max contract deal with the Sixers.[108] They also resignedKyle Lowry and acquiredEric Gordon.[109][110] Tobias Harris also signed with the Pistons.[111]

Team identity

  • Primary logo, 1963 to 1977
  • Primary logo, 1977 to 1996
  • Primary logo, 2009 to 2015
  • Wordmark logo, 2015 to present

1963–1978

The Philadelphia 76ers' original logo featured a stylized red "7" and blue "6" with13 blue stars above the "7" to represent the original 13 American colonies. During this period the franchise employed many uniform changes.

The original uniform featured "PHILA" in front and the aforementioned 13 stars encircling the "76" on the shorts and the uniform number at the back. Monochrome red letters were emblazoned on either the blue road or white home uniform, and were written in a similar manner as the logo.[112]

During the 1965–66 season, the Sixers experimented with a two-tone design. The home white uniform now had a thick red band across the abdomen, while the road uniform featured red tops and blue shorts. "PHILA" was positioned below the uniform number. Players disliked the design and was replaced after only one season.[112][113]

The Sixers unveiled a cleaner design for the 1966–67 season, with "PHILA" in red block letters and trimmed in either white or blue. "PHILA" was also moved back above the number. The logo and stars were removed in favor of simple side stripes. Initially, the Sixers wore blue uniforms on the road, but in 1968, they changed back to red uniforms with "PHILA" in white with blue trim.[112][114]

For the 1970–71 season, the Sixers tinkered with their red uniforms, switching the color scheme on the letters to blue with white trim. Meanwhile, the white uniform received a more radical makeover, featuring the full name "Seventy Sixers" in red cursive lettering with blue trim. This set lasted for only one season.[112][114][115]

The 1971–72 season saw the Sixers return to wearing blue uniforms on the road. After sporting "PHILA" on the chest for eight seasons, the uniform now read "Sixers" inArt Deco style lettering, rendered in white on the road and red at home. Numbers were either white or blue with red trim. Contrasting side stripes were added and extended through the uniform, and either red or white stars were placed on each side. Prior to the 1976–77 season, the Sixers tweaked the uniform, now sporting a block "Sixers" wordmark and rounded numbers. The following season, the "Sixers" wordmark was changed toBookman Old Style; on both iterations, "Sixers" became blue with red trim on the white uniform, with an additional outline on the latter.[112][116]

1978–1997

In 1977, the Sixers logo was tweaked to include a white basketball with blue outlines and the suffix "-ers" in blue, completing the team nickname. The following season saw the team go back to basics with their uniforms.

Starting with the 1978–79 season, the Sixers wore a cleaner uniform design reminiscent of their late 1960s outfits. Side stripes were eliminated and the team logo was emblazoned on the right leg. The road uniform color was changed back to red (with the lettering scheme similar to the 1968–70 red uniforms), and the numbers revert to a block letter style.[112][117]

Before the 1991–92 season, the Sixers experimented with a more radical uniform design. The front featured a blue wave with red, white and blue stars, and "Sixers" inHelvetica was affixed above the blue wave. The full city name "Philadelphia" was also added above the team name. The numbers contained drop shadows.[112][118]

After wearing the graphic-laden design for three seasons, the Sixers changed to a more basic look entering the 1994–95 season. The design contained thick blue stripes within either thin red or white stripes, and the letters were changed to a more classic rounded style. Numbers were now rendered in blue on both uniforms with either white or red trim, and the white uniform again featured "Sixers" in red letters with white and blue trim.[112][119]

1997–2009

In the 1997–98 season, the Sixers drastically changed their logo and colors in an effort to appeal to the more youthful hip-hop-oriented culture. Red, white and blue were retained, but only as trim colors. Instead, the Sixers used black, silver and gold as its core colors, with the logo now featuring 76ers in gold, a single silver star within the 7, and a streaking basketball below the logo.

The black road uniforms remained largely unchanged throughout this span, with the letters in white with red trim. The white home uniform, on the other hand, featured some subtle changes. While the letters were in black with red trim, the "Sixers" logo was initially gold, but in 2000, the color was changed as black. Also in 2000, the black background and red outline within the "Sixers" logo were removed. A blue alternate uniform was introduced in the same year, with the letters in white with red trim; the arm piping was removed after only one season. All three designs contained a gold star on the neckline, added the alternate "streaking 76" logo on the shorts, and featured the "Sixers"logo written in the same manner as the logo, with the silver star affixed atop the "I".[112][120]

In 2006, the Sixers replaced the blue alternates with a red one, bringing back the "PHILA" logo for the first time since 1971. As with the other uniforms, the "PHILA" wordmark was shaped similarly to the team logo, with the silver star atop the "I". White numbers with black trim were placed on this uniform, along with a silver star on the neckline and blue and white striping. The next season saw some minor tweaks to the black and white uniforms, which now featured the same striping patterns as the red alternate along with the silver star.[112][120]

2009–2015

During the 2008–09 season, while the previous logo was still in use, the 1977–97 Sixers logo was revived to coincide with the team's 60th anniversary (counting the Syracuse years). After that, the team decided to bring back a modern version of said logo, with the addition of a red square and 'Philadelphia' inside a blue rectangle below it, although the partial logo without the square, city name and rectangles was also used.[121]

The white uniform featured "Sixers" in blue and numbers in red, both returning to a block letter style. The red uniform contained both the "Sixers" and the uniform number in white. In 2011, a blue alternate uniform was introduced, mirroring that of the red uniform. After 2013, the blue uniform became the primary road set. All three designs employed a more subtle striping along the arms and legs.[122][120]

2015–present

A new version of the classic 76ers logo was unveiled for the 2015–16 season, featuring a slight tilt to the white basketball and a roundel featuring the city name and six stars. A secondary "Dribbling Ben Franklin" logo was also introduced.[123]

The home white, away blue and red alternate uniforms featured a mix of classic styles used in previous uniforms. The home white and away blue uniforms featured the 'PHILA' wordmark as homage to the late 1960s uniforms, while the red alternates featured the 'SIXERS' wordmark in tribute to the 1980s uniforms. Side stripes featuring seven stars on one side and six on the other pay homage to the 1970s uniforms, while the shoulder piping was a callback to the 1980s uniforms. The inscription 'PHILA TOUGH' is sewed on the bottom of all uniforms.[124]

The switch toNike in 2017 saw the Sixers make some slight tweaks to their uniform set. The blue "Icon" uniform and the white "Association" uniform now feature a red drop shadow on the lettering, and the inscription 'Brotherly Love' replaced 'PHILA TOUGH' near the manufacturer's tag.[125][126] The Sixers also released their new red "Statement" uniform, featuring a script "Sixers" wordmark, off-centered numbers and blue drop shadows.[127] Prior to the 2019–20 season the red uniforms were tweaked to feature a script "Phila" wordmark.[128]

City and Earned uniforms

The team's first annual "City" uniform features an ornate "Phila" lettering, blue numbers with red drop shadows, and other elements inspired from theUnited States Declaration of Independence in 1776.[129] Their second "City" uniform, inspired by the 1976 filmRocky, shows thirteen stars to represent theThirteen Colonies. It was based on Rocky because it was from "'76".[130]

By virtue of qualifying for the 2018 playoffs, the Sixers were also given an "Earned" uniform in the 2018–19 season. The Sixers' "Earned" uniforms were similar to theRocky "City" uniforms, except that the base was white and the lettering and stars were in blue.[131]

The Sixers' "City" uniform for the 2019–20 season paid homage to theLiberty Bell, featuring an ornate "Philadelphia" wordmark and red serifed numbers. The gold bell silhouette is prominently featured on the beltline.[132] The 2020–21 "City" uniform paid homage to the Allen Iverson era and theBoathouse Row landmark, featuring a black base with red, blue and white accents. The Boathouse Row illustration is drawn in white above "Philadelphia" in white with blue drop shadows. The numbers, also in white with blue drop shadows, are placed on the left chest.[133]

The Sixers' "Earned" uniform for 2021 (after qualifying in the 2020 playoffs) featured a blue silhouette of the Liberty Bell on a white background, with white numbers placed in the middle.[134]

In commemoration of the NBA's 75th anniversary, the 2021–22 "City" uniforms featured elements of previous uniform designs (a.k.a. "Mixtape"). The Sixers' edition featured a navy blue base and red lettering taken from the 1972–77 uniforms. Red, orange, green and blue blocks on each side paid tribute to the team's former home, the Spectrum, and also represented fan support for each of Philadelphia's "Big Four" teams (red representing thePhillies, orange representing theFlyers, green representing theEagles, and blue representing the 76ers). The Spectrum center court logo, featuring the arena silhouette at the center, adorned the shorts, and the "S" from that logo was placed on the waist.[135]

The 2022–23 "City" uniform centered around Philadelphia's Greek translation of the "City of Brotherly Love", which was inscribed in front of the uniform. The mostly minimalist style uniform has a white base, red text and striping, and blue trim, and was inspired by the city's love of basketball in all levels.[136]

For the 2023–24 "City" uniform, the Sixers again went with the "City of Brotherly Love" theme, featuring a letter style inspired by the neon signage of theReading Terminal Market. The navy-based uniform again incorporated the "13 star circle", Liberty Bell silhouette, and the "Bicentennial 76" insignia.[137]

The "City" uniform for the 2024–25 season was based on the 2021–22 "City" uniform, albeit in white with blue numbers.[138]

Mascot

Franklin the Dog

 
Franklin the Dog with a fan at 2015 NBA All-Star Weekend

On February 10, 2015, Franklin the Dog was introduced as the new Philadelphia 76ersmascot to 400 fans and media atThe Franklin Institute. After spending the weekend in New York City for the 2015NBA All-Star Game as the newestNBA mascot, he then was introduced atWells Fargo Center in his first game on February 19, 2015.

Previously in the 1980s, the Philadelphia 76ersmascot was Big Shot.[139] He was then replaced withHip Hop, a rabbit that usually, during time-outs or halftime, would do slam dunks. After the2011 lockout, Hip Hop would not return.

Rivalries

Boston Celtics

 
Wilt Chamberlain being defended byBill Russell with theBoston Celtics during the 1966 season

The rivalry between the 76ers and Boston Celtics is the earliest dated rivalry in the NBA. The two teams have the most meetings in theNBA Playoffs, playing each other in nineteen series, of which the Celtics have won twelve.[140] It is considered to be the second-greatest rivalry in the NBA, next to theCeltics–Lakers rivalry.[141] The rivalry first peaked when Wilt Chamberlain andBill Russell of the Celtics played each other from 1965 to 1968. The 1966–67 Sixers, voted the best team in league history during the NBA's 35th anniversary, set a then-record by winning 68 games in the 81-game season (a record since broken by the Lakers, Bulls and Warriors) and ending Boston's eight-year title reign which led to the infamous "Boston's Dead!" chants.

The 76ers went through a rebuilding period through the early 1970s, and came back to relevance during the1976–77 season, in which they defeated the Celtics en route to a Finals appearance. Both teams would peak in the 1980s, with every single Eastern Conference Championship between 1980 and 1987 belonging to either the 76ers or Celtics. The Larry Bird-led Celtics won five of them, while the Julius Erving-led 76ers won the other three. The Charles Barkley-led Sixers of the later 1980s took the fight to the Celtics; neither team experienced much playoff success in the late 1980s, and both took steep nosedives in the Eastern Conference rankings throughout the 1990s.

The rivalry was reborn in the 2000s. The first time, the Allen Iverson-led defending-Eastern Conference champions 76ers were defeated in the first round of the 2002 playoffs by the Paul Pierce-led Celtics 3–2. The second time, exactly ten years later, the Big Three Celtics (Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen) defeated the valiant eight seed 76ers team 4–3. In the ten years in between, the Sixers would experience limited success whereas the Celtics won a championship and contended for most of that span. In a memorable 2006 regular season meeting between the two, the 76ers defeated the Celtics 125–124 in triple overtime, with Iverson leading the way with 33 points and 10 assists.

Season-by-season record

List of the last five seasons completed by the 76ers. For the full season-by-season history, seeList of Philadelphia 76ers seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage

SeasonGPWLW–L%FinishPlayoffs
2019–20734330.5893rd, AtlanticLost in First Round, 0–4 (Celtics)
2020–21724923.6811st, AtlanticLost in Conference Semifinals, 3–4 (Hawks)
2021–22825131.6222nd, AtlanticLost in Conference Semifinals, 2–4 (Heat)
2022–23825428.6592nd, AtlanticLost in Conference Semifinals, 3–4 (Celtics)
2023–24824735.5733rd, AtlanticLost in First Round, 2–4 (Knicks)

Facilities

Home arenas

The Spectrum, shown in 2005, hosted the 76ers from 1967 to 1996.
Wells Fargo Center is the current home arena of the 76ers.

Training facility

 
The 76ers' training complex inCamden, New Jersey

The 76ers' training facility and headquarters for basketball operations are located at thePhiladelphia 76ers Training Complex inCamden, New Jersey. In 2014, the 76ers announced their plans to construct a new training complex,[142][143] which was officially opened on September 23, 2016.[144]

The team previously practiced at the campus of thePhiladelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine.[145]

New arena

In July 2022, the 76ers announced plans to construct a $1.3 billion, privately-funded arena inCenter City, Philadelphia called76 Place. However, in January 2025,Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment (owners of the 76ers) andComcast Spectacor (owners of thePhiladelphia Flyers) agreed to a deal to construct anew arena inside theSouth Philadelphia Sports Complex that the two teams will share. The new arena is planned to open in 2031.[146]

Personnel

Current roster

Philadelphia 76ers roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.PlayerHeightWeightDOBFrom
F35Marcus Bagley6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)217 lb (98 kg)2001-10-23Arizona State
F/C30Adem Bona6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)235 lb (107 kg)2003-03-28UCLA
G12Jared Butler6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)193 lb (88 kg)2000-08-25Baylor
G14Ricky Council IV6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)207 lb (94 kg)2001-08-03Arkansas
G11Jeff Dowtin (TW)6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)177 lb (80 kg)1997-05-10Rhode Island
C1Andre Drummond6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)279 lb (127 kg)1993-08-10Connecticut
G/F19Justin Edwards6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)203 lb (92 kg)2003-12-16Kentucky
F/C21Joel Embiid  7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)280 lb (127 kg)1994-03-16Kansas
F8Paul George  6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)220 lb (100 kg)1990-05-02Fresno State
G/F23Eric Gordon  6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)215 lb (98 kg)1988-12-25Indiana
G5Quentin Grimes6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)210 lb (95 kg)2000-05-08Houston
G17Jalen Hood-Schifino (TW)6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)210 lb (95 kg)2003-06-19Indiana
G7Kyle Lowry  6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)196 lb (89 kg)1986-03-25Villanova
G0Tyrese Maxey  6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)200 lb (91 kg)2000-10-04Kentucky
G20Jared McCain  6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)195 lb (88 kg)2004-02-20Duke
G/F9Kelly Oubre Jr.6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)203 lb (92 kg)1995-12-09Kansas
F65Alex Reese (TW)6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)245 lb (111 kg)1999-05-21Alabama
G16Lonnie Walker IV6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)204 lb (93 kg)1998-12-14Miami (FL)
F36Phillip Wheeler6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)185 lb (84 kg)2002-04-23Ranney School (NJ)
F28Guerschon Yabusele6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)265 lb (120 kg)1995-12-17France
Head coach
Assistant(s)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) Onassignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  •   Injured

Roster
Updated: February 4, 2025

Retained draft rights

The 76ers hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA. A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[147] This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.

DraftRoundPickPlayerPos.NationalityCurrent teamNote(s)Ref

Franchise leaders and records

Retired numbers

 
Dave Zinkoff, the 76ers public address announcer from the 1950s through the 1980s

All of the 76ers'retired numbers are hanging on the rafters in Wells Fargo Center

Philadelphia 76ers retired numbers and honorees
No.PlayerPositionTenureDate of Retirement
2Moses MaloneC1982–1986
1993–1994
February 8, 2019[148]
3Allen IversonG1996–2006
2009–2010
March 1, 2014[149]
4Dolph SchayesF/C1948–196412March 12, 2016[150]
63Julius ErvingF1976–1987April 18, 1988
10Maurice CheeksG1978–19894February 6, 1995
13Wilt ChamberlainC1965–19685March 18, 1991
15Hal GreerG1958–19736November 19, 1976
24Bobby JonesF1978–1986November 7, 1986
32Billy CunninghamF1965–1972
1974–19767
December 17, 1976
34Charles BarkleyF1984–1992March 30, 2001
 Dave ZinkoffPublic-address
announcer
1963–19858March 25, 1986

Notes:

  • 1Also served as player-coach (1963–1966).
  • 2Nerlens Noel wore the number at the time of the announcement (2013–2017)
  • 3Also retired league-wide in honor ofBill Russell on August 11, 2022.[151][152]
  • 4Also served as head coach (2005–2008).
  • 5Also Philadelphia native, and Philadelphia Warriors, 1959–1962.
  • 61958–1963 in Syracuse
  • 7Also served as head coach (1977–1985).
  • 8Also Philadelphia Warriors, (1946–1962).

Basketball Hall of Famers

Philadelphia 76ers Basketball Hall of Famers
Players
No.NamePositionTenureInductedNo.NamePositionTenureInducted
4
8
55
Dolph Schayes1F/C1948–1964197313Wilt ChamberlainC1965–19681979
15Hal GreerG/F1958–1973198215Al Cervi2F/G1948–19531985
32Billy Cunningham3F/C1965–1972
1974–1976
19866Julius ErvingF1976–19871993
12George YardleyF/G1959–1960199616Bailey HowellF/G1970–19711997
11Bob McAdooF/C198620002Moses MaloneC/F1982–1986
1993–1994
2001
32
34
Charles Barkley4F/G1984–1992200625Chet WalkerF1962–19692012
55Dikembe MutomboC2001–200220153Allen IversonG1996–2006
2009–2010
2016
30George McGinnisF1975–19782017[153]10Maurice Cheeks5G1978–19892018
24Bobby JonesF1978–198620197Toni KukočF2000–20012021
4Chris WebberF2005–200720215Dick BarnettG1959–19612024
Coaches
NamePositionTenureInductedNamePositionTenureInducted
Jack RamsayHead coach1968–19721992Chuck DalyAssistant coach1978–19811994
10Alex Hannum6Head coach1960–1963
1966–1968
1998Larry BrownHead coach1997–20032002
John CalipariAssistant coach1999–20002015
Contributors
NamePositionTenureInductedNamePositionTenureInducted
Danny Biasone7Founder
Owner
1946–196320008
11
Earl Lloyd8F1952–19582003
Jerry ColangeloExecutive2015–20162004Rod ThornPresident2010–20132018
6
15
21
Larry Costello9G1957–1965
1966–68
202220Doug Collins10Head coach2010–20132024

Notes:

  • 1 He also coached the team in 1963–1966.
  • 2 He also coached the team in 1948–1958.
  • 3 He also coached the team in 1977–1985.
  • 4 In total, Barkley was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice – as player and as a member of the1992 Olympic team.
  • 5 Also served as assistant coach (1994–2001) and head coach (2005–2008).
  • 6 He also played for the team in 1949–1951.
  • 7 Inducted posthumously.
  • 8 Lloyd was inducted as a contributor as the first African American player and bench coach in the NBA.[154]
  • 9 Costello was inducted as a contributor.
  • 10 Collins also played for the team in 1973–1981.

FIBA Hall of Famers

Philadelphia 76ers Hall of Famers
Players
No.NamePositionTenureInducted
7Toni KukočF2000–20012017
Coaches
Chuck Daly1Assistant coach1978–19812021

Notes:

  • 1 In total, Daly was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame twice – as coach and as a member of the1992 Olympic team.

Coaches

Esports ventures

In September 2016, the 76ers acquired bothTeam Dignitas andApex Gaming and merged them under the Dignitas brand, becoming the firstNorth American professional sports team to own an esports team.[155]

See also

Notes

  1. ^As managing partners. Limited partners include:
  2. ^The team's corporate headquarters and training facility are in Camden, New Jersey, and not the city of Philadelphia itself.

References

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