The Sixers have repeatedly made trade deadline deals to duck below the luxury tax line in recent years, an approach that has rubbed star center Joel Embiid the wrong way. However, Sixers managing partner Josh Harris insisted to reporters on Thursday that the ownership group has no aversion to paying the tax to fortify a contending roster, as Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice.com relays.
“The front office absolutely has the green light to go into luxury tax,” Harris said. “In fact, we’ve been in and out of luxury tax. And so it’s not an issue. I mean, it’s just not an issue. We’re building an arena here. I can tell you that the amount of dollars you spend on that versus the luxury tax, it’s magnitudes more. We built this facility. We’ve signed a number of max deals. So there’s no issue with the luxury tax. And so I’m glad that you asked.”
Bob Myers, the president of sports for Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment, followed up to say that he has received those same assurances from Harris and fully trusts the Sixers’ owners to back them up.
“I just can’t imagine a day where if I said to Josh or leadership said to Josh, ‘This deal makes us a contender, but you have to go into the tax,’ if he says no, which he won’t, I wouldn’t work for somebody like that,” Myers said. “Because look, to be honest, if you look at the history of teams that have won a championship – I was one of them – we were in the tax. It’d be great if you can win a championship by not being in the tax. Very hard to do. But it has to make sense. Again, I’m not worried about that part of the job, because if that comes up, I know what the answer will be.”
We have more on the 76ers:
- Myers and Harris told reporters on Thursday that Nick Nurse isn’t expected to be involved in the search for a new head of basketball operations, since he’s “got enough on his plate” already, per Aaronson. Still, Myers said he wants to hire an executive who will be a “great partner” for Nurse, while Harris praised the veteran head coach for the job he has done through three seasons in Philadelphia while dealing with the inconsistent availability of his star players. “Nick’s a championship coach,” Harris said. “He’s won an NBA title. So I think he’s earned the right to be here. He’s our coach moving forward into next season.”
- Gina Mizell of The Philadelphia Inquirer (subscription required) identifies the five biggest challenges that Daryl Morey‘s successor in the Sixers’ front office will face, starting with how to handle Joel Embiid‘s and Paul George‘s maximum-salary contracts and what to do with unrestricted free agents like Quentin Grimes, Kelly Oubre Jr., and Andre Drummond.
- In a story examining the Sixers’ decision to part ways with Morey, Kyle Neubeck of PHLY Sports considers how significantly limitations from ownership factored into some of the team’s missteps in recent years and wonders whether the next head of basketball operations will be working under those same restrictions.
- Who will the 76ers land with the No. 22 overall pick in next month’s draft? In a story for PhillyVoice, Aaronson rounds up several recent mock drafts, noting that a wide variety of prospects are projected to land in Philadelphia in that slot, including wings like Alabama’s Amari Allen and Santa Clara’s Allen Graves and bigs such as Houston’s Chris Cenac and UNC’s Henri Veesaar.

Myers is not great at drafting basketball players.
idk feels like the owner is over compensating lol
I can’t believe they’re moving Bob Myers over to the football side
Crazy that Joel has the cahones to take the Mic and bash the team, just crazy