Kevin Durant didn’t need much time to size up the Sixers’ new look.
While in Philadelphia this week for MLB All-Star action, the 37-year-old former NBA MVP was asked about the biggest buzz around the city: the Sixers’ shocking acquisition of Jaylen Brown. Durant’s answer came fast and clean.
“Dangerous,” said the Houston Rockets forward. “I’m excited-happy for him-new fresh start. Philly fans are going to love him.”
Durant also added, “Philly fans have the most passion”
That’s the kind of reaction that tells you the league is paying attention. Brown’s arrival has already changed the conversation around Philadelphia, and Durant didn’t shy away from calling it what it looks like on paper: a real problem for opposing teams.
Brown is coming off the best season of his career with the Boston Celtics. He played 71 games, logged 34.4 minutes a night, shot 47.7% from the field and 34.7% from three, and put up 28.7 points per game. He also averaged 6.9 rebounds and 5.1 assists.
Now he joins a Sixers group that already features Tyrese Maxey, Joel Embiid and VJ Edgecombe. That’s a lot of firepower, and it’s why the idea of Philadelphia as a destination suddenly has more weight.
The conversation didn’t stop there. The Sixers’ revamped roster has also fueled speculation that they could be in the mix for LeBron James, but Durant wasn’t offering any inside track.
“I have no clue,” Durant said when asked about his LeBron prediction. “Where he goes, though, I know he’s going to ball out.
He still showed that he got a lot left at 42 years old. Any team is going to be better because of him.”
James’ 2025-2026 season with the Los Angeles Lakers backed that up. He appeared in 60 games, shot 51.5% from the field and averaged 20.9 points, 7.2 assists and 6.1 rebounds.
Whether or not LeBron ends up in Philadelphia, Durant made one thing clear: Brown’s move to the Sixers has already given the team a very different feel.
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Draymond Green Just Sent Sixers Fans A Message They Needed
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For a Sixers team that has lived through its own share of relationship drama, the reminder landed in a place that probably felt familiar. Green pointed to the Joel Embiid-Ben Simmons era as an example of how off-court differences can become a Philadelphia storyline without fully defining what happens in games, and he also used his long-running bond with Stephen Curry to show that even elite teammates do not need to spend every summer in each others pockets to make it work. [Read more 🡒]
Hawks Suddenly Pulled Into A Joel Embiid Debate They Cannot Ignore
The Joel Embiid conversation has a way of pulling other teams into the frame, and Atlanta is the latest to get dragged into the exercise. Any serious look at a deal involving the 76ers star starts with the same uncomfortable backdrop: the injuries have piled up, the contract is massive, and the question is no longer just what Embiid can still give Philadelphia, but how long the team can keep betting on his body holding up.
For the Hawks, the appeal is obvious enough to make the debate unavoidable. A proposal built around Dyson Daniels, Zaccharie Risacher and Corey Kispert would ask Atlanta to part with defense, upside and shooting in one swing, while taking on the kind of star power that can reshape a franchise in an instant. It is the sort of hypothetical that forces both front offices to weigh present value against future flexibility, even if the real answer remains tucked behind the speculation. [Read more 🡒]
