Sixers news: Daryl Morey defends trade deadline moves; Joel Embiid carefully weighs in on trades; reaction and opinion

Daryl Morey, the Sixers president of basketball operations, will speak to reporters Friday.

// Timestamp 02/06/26 1:03pm

Daryl Morey calls Sixers’ core ‘untouchable’

Joel Embiid with teammates Tyrese Maxey and Paul George.

One factor complicating any deal at the trade deadline was Daryl Morey and the front office considered the team’s core – Joel Embiid, Tyrese Maxey, Paul George, and rookie VJ Edgecombe – “as close to untouchable players as you might have in this league.”

“We really think it’s a very good core,” Morey told reporters Friday. “Obviously we need to prove that on the court, and I think we think lately we have been proving it to a higher level.”

Morey said at the trade deadline, the Sixers were focused on finding a player who could fill in for Paul, who is serving a 25-day suspension for violating the league’s drug policy. But Morey didn’t see any available players that could contribute more than Dominick Barlow has during Paul’s absence.

In 41 games this season (34 starts), Barlow is averaging 8.5 points and 5 rebounds per game. The Sixers signed him to a standard NBA contract Thursday.

“We like so much of what Barlow’s given us but we didn’t see anything that would hurdle what he’s given us,” Morey said.

Rob Tornoe, Gabriela Carroll


// Timestamp 02/06/26 12:30pm

Sixers were willing to go into the luxury tax, Morey says

The Sixers moved under the luxury tax by trading away Jared McCain and Eric Gordon, but Daryl Morey said that wasn’t the primary reason behind the moves.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Morey said the team would’ve been willing to go above the luxury tax threshold – “We’ve done it several times” – but didn’t see a deal or player that justified the numbers.

“For sure, if we had found a trade and were going to end up higher, we’d have ended up above it,” Morey said.

Despite that, Morey said he understands the perception among fans and even Joel Embiid the team just wanted to save money.

“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 the apron issues that it would create,’” Morey said. “But I haven’t been able to recommend that move yet.”

Rob Tornoe


// Timestamp 02/06/26 12:19pm

Morey defends trading Jared McCain without another deal in place

Daryl Morey was pressed on why the Sixers traded Jared McCain without having another deal in place, rather than waiting until the offseason.

“I am quite confident we were selling high,” Morey told reporters Friday. “Obviously, time will tell.”

Morey said the Sixers weren’t considering trading away McCain until teams approached with “aggressive offers,” and that the draft picks will help the team down the road.

“We thought this return was above the future value for our franchise,” Morey said. “The only higher point would have been during his run last season. But otherwise, we feel like we did time this well.”

“The bottom line is Jared’s a great future bet, and we wish him luck,” Morey added. “We feel like this return sets us up better in the future.”

Rob Tornoe


// Timestamp 02/06/26 12:08pm

Sixers tried to improve the roster but ‘nothing materialized,’ Morey says

Speaking to reporters Friday, Daryl Morey, the Sixers’ president of basketball operations, said he understands why fans might be disappointed the team didn’t add any players at the trade deadline.

“I understand the reaction of the fans, but I feel like that comes from folks being excited about this team,” Morey said. “That’s why we had this reaction. And they should be excited.”

Morey said the front office tried to make additions to improve the team using some of the draft picks landed in the Jared McCain trade, but “nothing materialized.”

“I do want folks to know that this team, we think, can make a deep playoff run, as one of the top teams in the East,” Morey said.

Rob Tornoe


// Timestamp 02/06/26 11:31am

Watch: Daryl Morey speaks to reporters


// Timestamp 02/06/26 11:29am

Timberwolves re-signing Mike Conley Jr. after trading him: ESPN


// Timestamp 02/06/26 9:52am

Sixers standings and upcoming schedule

Joel Embiid defends the rim against Deandre Ayton during the Sixers’ loss to the Lakers Thursday.

With three games left before the All-Star break, the Sixers are in sixth place in the Eastern Conference, solidly in the playoff picture after missing the postseason last season.

Thursday night’s loss to the Los Angeles Lakers certainly didn’t help, breaking a five-game winning streak. They’ll face the second-place New York Knicks on Wednesday, who added former New Orleans Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado to their roster at the NBA trade deadline.

Eastern Conference standings

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Upcoming Sixers schedule

  • Sixers at Suns: Saturday, 9 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia, 97.5 The Fanatic)
  • Sixers at Trailblazers: Monday, 10 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia, 97.5 The Fanatic)
  • Knicks at Sixers: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN, 97.5 The Fanatic)
  • NBA All-Star game: Sunday, Feb. 15, 5 p.m. (NBC)

Rob Tornoe


// Timestamp 02/06/26 8:15am

Daryl Morey to speak with reporters Friday

Daryl Morey will speak to reporters Friday following the NBA trade deadline.

Daryl Morey, the Sixers’ president of basketball operations, will speak to reporters Friday afternoon after the team made no additions at the NBA trade deadline, not even to fill in during Paul George’s 25-game suspension.

Morey is scheduled to speak at noon at the Sixers’ training facility in Camden, N.J.

On Thursday, the Sixers traded Eric Gordon to the Memphis Grizzlies in a salary dump. Wednesday they parted ways with Jared McCain, the 2024 No. 16 overall pick. In exchange, team landed a bunch of second-round picks and the Houston Rockets’ 2026 first-round pick.

They did manage to dodge the luxury tax by shedding McCain and Gordon’s salaries.

Rob Tornoe


// Timestamp 02/06/26 8:10am

Joel Embiid carefully comments on Sixers trade deadline moves

Joel Embiid during Thursday night’s loss to the Lakers.

LOS ANGELES — When asked to assess the 76ers’ approach and execution at the trade deadline, Joel Embiid kept his words politically correct.

But his multiple pauses to look to his right at a team public relations staffer observing his postgame media session — not out of nervousness, but as if this was the way he could make his desired point — spoke volumes.

“The only thing I’ll say, I believe in myself,” Embiid said late Thursday, after the Sixers dealt guards Jared McCain and Eric Gordon and did not add any players. “I believe in Tyrese [Maxey]. I believe in everybody in this locker room. But the main thing is I believe in myself.

“So no matter what, we’re going to go out there and compete and still try to win it.”

Those comments came exactly one week after Embiid said publicly that he hoped the Sixers (29-22) would not make moves purely to duck the luxury tax and would instead try to bolster a roster that, after Thursday’s 119-115 loss at the Los Angeles Lakers, sat in sixth place in a crowded Eastern Conference.

“Hopefully, we keep the same team,” Embiid said then. “ … We’ve got a good group of guys in this locker room and the vibes are great. … Hopefully, we think about improving, because we have a chance.”

When those previous comments were referenced to Embiid following Thursday’s game, the standout center coyly quipped, “I don’t remember what I said.”

Keith Pompey


// Timestamp 02/06/26 8:05am

Sixers awaiting additions after subtractions

Sixers fans will have to wait and see after a uninspiring trade deadline.

The shaping of the 76ers took a step backward this week … perhaps just momentarily.

The team moved on from Jared McCain, a fan favorite and 2025 Rookie of the Year front-runner, and seldom-used veteran guard Eric Gordon before Thursday’s 3 p.m. trade deadline. In return, the Sixers acquired a first-round pick, three second-rounders, and a second-round pick swap.

Shedding those players’ salaries gives the Sixers just over $7.6 million in cap space under the first apron. That means they can sign players on the buyout market in addition to using up to $8 million in a trade exception to acquire a player.

After the deadline, the Sixers signed forward Patrick Baldwin to a 10-day contract and center Charles Bassey to his second 10-day stint, giving the Sixers 14 standard contracts. And 48 minutes before Thursday’s game against the Los Angeles Lakers, the team announced it converted starting power forward Dominick Barlow’s two-way contract to a standard deal.

That enabled Barlow remain active for the remainder of the season.

But for now, they’re not in a good situation.

The buyout market could be key for the Sixers if they don’t sign Baldwin and Bassey for the remainder of the season.

Since then, the Sixers traded away players who were well-liked in the locker room for what on the surface appear to be moves to help them get below the luxury tax threshold.

But it’s still too early to fully judge the moves that were made.

McCain was exceptional in his rookie season before suffering a season-ending knee injury in December 2024. But he struggled with consistency this season, leaving him out of the rotation. Gordon played in only six games, with his last appearance coming Dec. 23 against the Brooklyn Nets.

So these moves were made on the margins and will only be crystalized once we see how they affect the roster this season and what they do with their draft picks in the future.

But in the interim, the Sixers got a little worse over two days while several contenders in the East improved.

Keith Pompey


Jared McCain trade looks bad on paper

Jared McCain, the Sixers’ 2024 first-round pick, was traded to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday.

Sixers president Daryl Morey is scheduled to meet with the media on Friday, so we’ll have to wait to hear the official defense of the team’s decision to trade 2024 first-round pick Jared McCain to the Thunder for what is most likely to be a low-value first round draft (plus the obligatory smattering of second round picks). We don’t have to wait to judge the optics of the thing.

The optics are poor, and will remain true even if the thing ends up making more sense than we can immediately glean.

The Sixers didn’t trade McCain for a player who is more likely to help them contend for championship, be it this year or beyond. They didn’t trade him for a pick that they then flipped for a player who can help them capitalize on their momentum this season. Everywhere else, teams got better, and many of them did so in ways beyond this season. The Timberwolves can re-sign Ayo Dosunmu. The Pacers can pair Ivica Zubac with Tyrese Haliburton next season. The Sixers can hope that a late first round pick is worth something in June.

A good way to judge the optics of a move is to attempt to write an executive summary of it in as favorable a way as possible. That’s an extraordinarily difficult task, in this case.

The Sixers just traded away a guy who they drafted at No. 16 barely a year-and-a-half ago and who would probably be drafted higher in a redo. In exchange, they received a pick that currently projects as the No. 24 pick in the 2026 draft, three picks later than where the Sixers grabbed Tyrese Maxey six years ago. It is a range of the draft that rarely yields starters, let alone stars. It is a range where the odds say you are more likely to draft a player who never cracks a first-division rotation than one who becomes a meaningful starter.

Just look at the track record. Of the 42 players drafted with the last seven picks of the first round since 2020, only 17 have started more than 17 NBA games. Just eyeballing it, you’d be hard-pressed to identify 10 of those 42 who’ve turned out to be better than the median potential outcome of even this year’s version of McCain. Jaden McDaniels and Desmond Bane are stars. They are followed by Payton Pritchard, Immanuel Quickley, Quentin Grimes and Santi Aldama. Beyond that: Peyton Watson and Cam Thomas, and then Bones Hyland, Day’Ron Sharpe, Nikola Jovic and Kyshawn George. You get the picture.

David Murphy

// Timestamp 02/06/26 8:00am

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