The Sixers entered the opening stretch of free agency with three club options on the table, and they used those decisions to carve out some flexibility. Philadelphia had until Tuesday at 6 p.m. Eastern to act, and the front office came away with a roster picture that looks a little different than many expected.
The biggest move was the one that looked least likely at first glance: the Sixers picked up Dominick Barlow’s $3.4 million option. That choice keeps Barlow in the mix after a season in which he turned into one of the team’s more useful surprises.
He posted career highs across the board, averaging 7.7 points on 53.9% shooting and 4.8 rebounds per game while starting 59 of 71 games. Philadelphia had converted his two-way deal into a rest-of-season contract, and his rebounding and athleticism fit neatly alongside the core.
Barlow’s return also comes with a wrinkle. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent with a $4.4 million cap hold after the 2026-27 season, per Spotrac.
For now, though, the 23-year-old should be in the rotation next year, depending on what else Philadelphia does in the days ahead. There’s still a path for the two sides to work out a new deal during or after the season.
Philadelphia also exercised Dalen Terry’s $2.6 million option, though that salary does not become guaranteed until January 10. That call was more surprising.
Terry appeared in just 14 games and averaged 4.1 points in 12.4 minutes per game, offering limited production in his short stay. Still, the Sixers may be betting that his appeal as an athletic two-way wing is worth another look.
If that’s the idea, it comes with relatively little downside beyond flexibility on the roster.
The toughest decision went the other way. Philadelphia declined Trendon Watford’s $2.8 million option, and Adam Aaronson of The Philly Voice reported that Watford is unlikely to return.
Injuries kept him from building any real momentum this season, even though he still managed 6.5 points, 3.3 rebounds and 2.5 assists in 53 games. His athleticism was a problem defensively, but his connection with Tyrese Maxey was one of the few clear positives.
The Sixers also did not tender a two-way qualifying offer to Tyrese Martin, Aaronson reported, leaving all three of Philadelphia’s two-way slots open for now.
There are still more roster calls coming. Philadelphia has decisions to make on Adem Bona and Jabari Walker.
Bona’s $2.3 million salary for next season becomes guaranteed on July 7, one day after the NBA’s moratorium period, so if the Sixers plan to move on, they’ll need to do it soon. Walker’s $2.6 million salary is not fully guaranteed until January 10.
Taken together, the choices leave Philadelphia with a $17.1 million cushion below the luxury tax threshold, per Yossi Gozlan. That position gives the Sixers access to the full $15 million non-taxpayer mid-level exception and the $5.4 million bi-annual exception, along with roster flexibility and trade exceptions they can use as they see fit. Re-signing both Quentin Grimes and Kelly Oubre would push them into the luxury tax, though as in previous seasons, they could begin above it and work their way back under later.
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Sixers Free Agency Could Cost Them A Rotation Piece
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But interest in Collins does not come without consequences, especially with Dean Wade also mentioned in the same reporting. If Philadelphia pushes into that tier of the market, it could end up spending enough to force a harder decision on its own free agents, with Kelly Oubre Jr. and Quentin Grimes both sitting in the crosshairs of what becomes a tighter roster math problem. [Read more 🡒]
