With Sixers seeking Morey's replacement, here's what will be on new leader's plate originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
Daryl Morey’s first draft night with the Sixers is a great illustration of how rapidly things can change in the NBA.
Back in 2020, Morey selected Tyrese Maxey, Isaiah Joe and Paul Reed. He traded away Al Horford and Josh Richardson, acquired Danny Green and Seth Curry, and set the Sixers up nicely for an Eastern Conference-best 49-23 regular season.
We’ll see what sort of transformation Morey’s replacement has in mind.
The Sixers announced Tuesday night that Morey is out as the franchise’s president of basketball operations. Bob Myers will “lead the process of identifying a new leader of basketball operations and oversee the department in the interim,” the team said in a press release. There will surely be some urgency with the NBA draft set for June 23 and June 24. Free agency will begin the next week.
As far as the roster-construction task ahead, there’s multiple massive positives. Tyrese Maxey is a 25-year-old superstar lead guard and VJ Edgecombe just had a fantastic rookie season alongside him. Joel Embiid and Paul George each played integral parts in the Sixers’ historic comeback from a 3-1 series deficit against the Celtics in Round 1 of the playoffs.
Even with the age, injury and contract concerns surrounding George and Embiid, it’s a strong group. All options should be on the table for whoever steps into Morey’s shoes, but the Sixers’ situation would not appear automatically hopeless if the team built around the same foursome.
“With the hesitation that in the NBA, things happen, we have some players who are as close to untouchable as you might have in this league in Tyrese, Joel, VJ, Paul,” Morey said on Feb. 6. “We like our core. We really think it’s a very good core.”
Of course, the long-term commitments to George and Embiid have serious downsides. Embiid’s optimistic about his left knee, but the 32-year-old big man’s norm has been a strange storm of injuries. George turned 36 during the playoffs and most late-30s NBA players are decidedly past their primes.
Going a bit further down the Sixers’ roster, there is not a ton to like. Kelly Oubre Jr. and Quentin Grimes were the two other Sixers to average over 13 minutes in the postseason. Both will be unrestricted free agents this offseason. After them, Andre Drummond, Adem Bona, Dominick Barlow and Justin Edwards were the only players to get any time in head coach Nick Nurse’s playoff rotation.
“We feel like we’re a deep team,” Morey said in February. “Again, people might not agree, but we do feel like a deep team. In fact, there are many people who are writing that we’re a deep team, so it wasn’t just our opinion. I do think Nick … is using our players in an optimal way to win games. You for sure always want more good players than bad players. We still have two roster spots. … So we’ll continue to look to add in that marketplace as well, but we do feel like we’re a deep team.”
The Sixers sent second-year sharpshooting guard Jared McCain to the Thunder at the trade deadline and did not make any dramatic upgrades with their open roster slots. They converted Barlow and Jabari Walker from two-way contracts to standard NBA deals. Dalen Terry also got a standard spot by the end of the year. Morey signed Cameron Payne post-deadline but waived the veteran guard after he suffered a late-season hamstring injury.
In recent years, Morey’s Sixers were often inferior in the long-range shooting department. They finished the 2025-26 season ranked 23rd in both three-point frequency and three-point accuracy, according to Cleaning the Glass. Defensive rebounding also jumps out as a major roster weakness.
The Sixers did nothing to address any of those holes at the deadline and the Knicks exposed them with a second-round series sweep over an exhausted, overmatched team. In addition to the trade market and free agency this summer, the Sixers own the 22nd overall pick in the draft via the McCain trade.
The team has remained unable to advance beyond the second round of the playoffs during managing partner Josh Harris and co-managing partner David Blitzer’s run at the top of the organization. Sixers fans have had plenty of valid sources of displeasure since Harris and his ownership group bought the team in 2011.
Notably, Embiid went out of his way before the deadline to comment on the Sixers “ducking the (luxury) tax the past couple of years.”
With Morey out and his replacement pending, that storyline certainly hasn’t disappeared.
“I understand the perception,” Morey said at what wound up being his final Sixers press conference. “I hope to defeat it by finding a deal that I can go to ownership and say, ‘We think this move is the right move to do for that and create those apron issues,’ but I haven’t been able to recommend that move yet.”