With Joel Embiid out due to a knee injury, the 76ers had tough decisions to make at the deadline. They chose to avoid the luxury tax.
First, they flipped Patrick Beverley to the rival Milwaukee Bucks, where he'll play for his old Clippers coach, Doc Rivers. They got the cheaper Cam Payne in the deal.
The 76ers are trading Patrick Beverley to the Bucks, sources tell ESPN.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) February 8, 2024
Then they sent the Detroit Pistons a second-round pick to shed Danuel House's contract.
The 76ers are trading Danuel House and a 2024 second-round pick via the Knicks to the Pistons, sources tell ESPN.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) February 8, 2024
Philadelphia also dealt Jaden Springer for a second-rounder to another rival, the Boston Celtics.
The 76ers are trading Jaden Springer to the Celtics for a second-round pick, sources tell ESPN.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) February 8, 2024
Their biggest move was sending a package of backups and second-round picks to the Indiana Pacers for sharpshooter Buddy Hield.
The Indiana Pacers are trading Buddy Hield to the 76ers for Marcus Morris, Furkan Korkmaz and three second-round picks, sources tell ESPN.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) February 8, 2024
The end result was that Philadelphia lost five players, added two players and got far enough under the luxury tax that they could sign a buyout player, such as Charlotte Hornets guard Kyle Lowry. The result was not that the Sixers became a better team.
Embiid had surgery this week to repair his injured meniscus, but he won't even be evaluated to return for another four weeks. Based on these moves, it doesn't seem like the Sixers are expecting a full-strength Embiid for the playoffs.
But they will have a tremendous amount of financial freedom this summer. Only Embiid is signed past this season. While Tyrese Maxey is due a big contract, the Sixers have maximized their cap space for the summer.
There was one complicating factor that could have thrown a wrench in the plans. Big man Paul Reed has a non-guaranteed $7.7M deal for next season, but it would become guaranteed if the Sixers were to win a playoff round. Is it possible that team president Daryl Morey wanted max cap space so badly that he tanked the team's playoff chances? That could explain Thursday's bizarre series of moves.
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