Mike Gansey’s first free agency period running the Sixers’ basketball operations is almost here, and the roster picture is already taking shape around a few big decisions.
The league’s official negotiating window with external free agents opens Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET, and contracts can be signed beginning July 6 at 12:01 p.m.
ET. Once that frenzy calms down, the Sixers head to Las Vegas for summer league from July 9 through July 19, with their first game set for July 9 at 5:30 p.m.
ET against the Pistons.
Right now, the Sixers have 10 players under contract: Joel Embiid, Paul George, Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe, Dominick Barlow, Jabari Walker, Dalen Terry, Justin Edwards, Johni Broome and Adem Bona. The team exercised Barlow’s option, gave Walker a partial guarantee, and picked up Terry’s team option even though his deal remains non-guaranteed. No. 22 pick Labaron Philon Jr. is expected to sign his rookie deal soon.
That leaves a cluster of internal free agents for the Sixers to sort through: Quentin Grimes, Kelly Oubre Jr., Andre Drummond and Kyle Lowry. Trendon Watford is also in that group after his team option was declined.
On the cap side, the Sixers are working with the standard mid-level exception, projected by Spotrac to be around $15 million for the 2026-27 season, plus a bi-annual exception worth about $5.5 million. There’s a catch, though: using more than $6.1 million of the mid-level exception or tapping the bi-annual exception would hard cap a team at the first luxury tax apron.
How the Sixers navigate that remains to be seen. Bob Myers said on June 8 that the team planned to use the full mid-level exception.
“We have the non-taxpayer mid-level exception,” said Myers, the president of sports for Harris Blitzer Sports and Entertainment. “We have minimum contracts.
We have some of our own guys that we have to make decisions on. I know that we all want to have those answers all at once, but it really has to be one thing at a time.
And one thing at a time gets you to the bigger answer.”
Minimum deals will fill out the rest of the roster, and trades are always a possibility in the NBA. So far, though, the Sixers haven’t been part of the summer’s major dealmaking noise. The current core four is Maxey, Embiid, Edgecombe and George.
Gansey was asked on draft night whether adding Philon changed the outlook for Grimes’ free agency, and he made clear it did not.
“No, this doesn’t change it,” he said. “I obviously wasn’t here with Quentin, but I’ve heard a lot of great things.
We’ve been in contact with his representation as well as Kelly’s. They’re two guys that we’re hopeful to bring back, but you never know with free agency.
That will start here soon.
“But having Labaron, I think it just takes a little pressure off Tyrese and VJ where you have another ball handler. And we’re going to have to get another ball handler, too.
You can’t just rely on a rookie point guard. But I think he’s just too talented and too young that for where he was at in the draft, we couldn’t pass up taking him.”
Gansey has also been blunt about the broader state of the roster. The Sixers need help in a lot of places, not just one or two. Defensive rebounding has been an issue for a while, but last season’s team was basically middle of the pack across the board.
“If you look at our depth chart, we kind of need help at every position,” Gansey said.
That matches what he said at his introductory press conference last month, when he emphasized that the answer will have to come from multiple directions: outside additions, bargain signings and internal growth.
“We’ve got to get guys in here in free agency that we like,” he said. “We’ve got to get minimum guys.
And then the big part is just internal development. With Tyrese, VJ and some of our other young guys, they’ve got to get better, too.
I think it’s internal growth, (the 22nd pick), free agency, and trying to add as much depth as we can to this roster.”
The Sixers have already been connected to a few names once the market opens. The Stein Line’s Jake Fischer and Marc Stein reported Saturday that Cleveland forward Dean Wade is expected to draw interest from playoff teams, including Philadelphia. That connection stands out because Gansey knows Wade from his time in Cleveland.
The Stein Line also linked John Collins to the Sixers on Sunday, saying he is expected to draw interest from Philadelphia along with San Antonio and Orlando once free agency begins.
And HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto reported that the Sixers are among the teams with interest in center Jock Landale, who is expected to have a strong market and could command offers above the bi-annual exception. The other teams listed were the Hawks, Bulls, Lakers, Clippers and Cavaliers.
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Philadelphias frontcourt shopping list is starting to come into focus as free agency approaches, and the Sixers are being linked to a handful of names that fit both need and budget. Reports from Marc Stein, Jake Fischer and Mike Scotto have tied the team to John Collins, Sandro Mamukelashvili and Jock Landale, giving Philadelphia multiple paths to add size and depth without having to chase a splashier move.
The bigger storyline may be the flexibility the Sixers have preserved to this point. They have not agreed to new contracts with their own free agents or picked up any team options yet, leaving room to work with either the full mid-level exception or the bi-annual exception if the right frontcourt target becomes available. For a team that clearly wants help inside, the next decision could say plenty about how aggressive it plans to be. [Read more 🡒]
