The Sixers Just Turned A Problem Into A Championship Window

Hunter Tierney
By Hunter Tierney
July 14, 2026
The Sixers Just Turned A Problem Into A Championship Window

The Sixers don’t usually get to be the team on this side of a story. So when the news hit that Jaylen Brown was coming to Philadelphia, it didn’t feel real at first. It felt like one of those rumors you scroll past and assume will get shot down in an hour. Except this one didn’t. Brown is actually a Sixer now.

But no. It was real. Brown — the Finals MVP, the All-Star, the guy who just carried Boston through a season without Jayson Tatum — is a Sixer. And not in some hypothetical trade-machine universe either. In a deal for 36-year-old Paul George and a few picks.

They certainly had to pay to get him. Two firsts, a couple seconds, that 2031 pick everyone will joke about now and stress over later. That’s not nothing. It matters. It always does.

But this still doesn’t feel like what a Finals MVP is supposed to cost.

The Sixers didn’t touch Tyrese Maxey. They didn’t move VJ Edgecombe. They didn’t empty out the young part of the roster or turn this into one of those messy, three-team everything-on-the-table deals. They took a Paul George situation that was starting to feel like it could box them in, and flipped it into a 29-year-old wing in his prime.

For years, every big Philly move came with a catch. The player didn’t stay healthy. The fit never quite clicked. The timeline felt just a little off. Even when the idea made sense, it always felt like the Sixers were talking themselves into it.

This one doesn’t need much convincing.

Brown isn’t perfect. He can get loose with the ball, and he’s not going to walk in and organize an offense by himself. But perfect wasn’t the ask here.

They needed someone who can put pressure on a game in May. Someone who’s been there, who doesn’t get swallowed by it, who can create real offense without everything needing to run through one set of hands every possession.

They needed someone who makes them feel a little less fragile. Brown does that

Brown Gives Philly A Different Kind Of Force

May 2, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) on the court before game seven of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs against the Philadelphia 76ers at TD Garden.
Credit: Winslow Townson-Imagn Images

The Paul George move made sense at the time. That’s the honest version. They needed a big wing who could score a bit, defend, fit next to Embiid, take some pressure off Maxey, and just generally act like a grown-up when things got messy in the playoffs. On paper, it checked out.

But it didn’t take long before it felt… kind of stale.

Brown is just a different type of player right now. He’s not out there waiting his turn or living off catch-and-shoot looks. He’s coming at you. He gets downhill, he plays through contact, and he turns regular possessions into something a little chaotic because someone actually has to deal with him. And that’s not easy.

That matters for a Sixers team that, for a while now, has looked like it needs everything to go smoothly to function.

The numbers back it up too. Brown took half his shots in the paint last season and got to the line a ton. George? Way less of both. That’s not just a stat thing. That’s a mindset thing.

The Sixers have had talent. They’ve had names. What they haven’t always had is enough guys who make defenses uncomfortable over and over again. Embiid does it when he’s right. Maxey does it with speed. Brown does it by just putting his shoulder down and forcing the issue.

That’s a real shift in how this team can play.

For years, everything has revolved around Embiid being so dominant that everyone else feeds off it. That can still be the best version of this team. If Embiid is healthy, he’s still one of the biggest problems in the league. That doesn’t change.

But Brown gives them another way to function. They don’t need Embiid to be superhuman every night just to look normal. Because let’s be honest, every Sixers season eventually turns into an Embiid health update. Knee, conditioning, face, something. Brown doesn’t fix that. He just makes it a little less suffocating.

That’s why this feels like more than just an upgrade. They’re just… sturdier.

Brown’s played almost 100 more games than George over the last five years. That raises the floor.

And honestly, it raises the ceiling too.

Since 2017-18, they’ve had one of the league’s best regular-season records and still haven't reached a conference final, while 19 other franchises have gotten there in that span. That stat is disgusting if you’re Philly. Brown walks in with something they’ve been missing: proof he can handle deep playoff basketball.

He’s been there. Conference finals, Finals, Finals MVP. He knows what those games feel like when everything tightens up and nothing comes easy.

He And Maxey Finally Give The Sixers A Core With Real Pressure

The cleanest part of this whole thing is the Maxey-Brown fit. That doesn’t mean it’s going to look smooth right away. It won’t. Brown can get a little locked in on his own thing sometimes. Maxey is still figuring out how to balance being a scorer with actually running the offense. Neither one is some oversized playmaker who just makes everything easy for everyone else. There are going to be nights where it gets clunky. There are going to be possessions where they’re kind of stepping on each other’s toes. And yeah, there will be moments where Nick Nurse actually has to step in and sort it out instead of just letting talent figure it out on its own.

But the base of it? That part is simple.

Maxey is speed. Brown is force. That’s a pretty good combo to start with.

The Sixers have needed someone who can hurt defenses in a different way than Maxey for a while now. Last season made that pretty obvious. Maxey could torch teams, but it felt like he had to do everything — push the pace, create the advantage, finish the play — and then turn around and do it again a couple minutes later because nobody else could really tilt things the same way.

Brown changes that.

He’s not just someone who benefits from the defense already being in trouble. He’s someone who can cause the trouble himself. That’s the difference. This isn’t just Maxey kicking it out to a guy waiting on the wing. Brown can grab a rebound and go. He can attack a closeout and get all the way to the rim. He can bully a smaller defender. He can force a switch and immediately make it hurt.

And Maxey gets to live off that. People always say “take pressure off Maxey,” but it's not really about removing pressure — it’s about flipping it. Maxey's at his best when the defense is already scrambling, already a step behind. Brown can create that chaos. He draws help. He forces rotations. He makes defenders hesitate just enough. Suddenly Maxey isn’t starting every possession from scratch with five guys staring at him.

It also helps when teams try to switch everything, which is basically playoff basketball now. Brown and Maxey can mess with matchups just by playing off each other. If a smaller guard ends up on Brown, good luck. If a slower wing ends up chasing Maxey, that’s not going to end well either. It’s not some perfect, beautiful motion offense, but it doesn’t have to be.

This roster suddenly feels like it has some shape to it. It’s not perfect, but it makes sense. There’s speed, there’s scoring, there’s some real athletic pressure. Yeah, there are still defensive questions, but this looks like an actual team now instead of something you have to squint at and talk yourself into.

And they didn’t have to blow up the future to fix the present. Brown is 29 — right in that sweet spot where he can help you win now but still lines up with Maxey’s timeline in a way George never really did. Edgecombe is still there. Maxey is still there. If it clicks, this is a legit top-end roster right now. If it doesn’t, they’re not stuck staring at nothing with no way forward.

The LeBron Smoke Says A Lot About The New Reality

Mar 10, 2025; Brooklyn, New York, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) watches from the bench during the fourth quarter against the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center.
Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

All of a sudden, the Sixers weren’t just a team that swapped Paul George for Jaylen Brown. They were a team you could at least imagine making a LeBron pitch without it sounding ridiculous.

That’s a pretty big shift.

Before Brown, the whole LeBron-to-Philly thing felt like something you talked about on a podcast when you ran out of real topics. Fun, sure. Not totally impossible. But also not something you could sit with for too long without it falling apart. Now? Maxey, Brown, Embiid, Edgecombe, plus whatever version of LeBron is coming in? You can at least see the outline. You can see why he’d pick up the phone instead of letting it go to voicemail.

Rich Paul basically said as much on his podcast, mentioning that Philly had LeBron’s attention because of Maxey, Edgecombe, Brown and Embiid. He even brought up how much LeBron likes Maxey and how he could help Edgecombe figure things out. Then Bob Myers hopped on and basically gave a full-on Sixers sales pitch, saying Philly could give LeBron his best shot to win.

Will anything actually come from that? Probably not. LeBron rumors kind of live in their own little universe where the idea is half the fun.

But the fact that the Sixers are even in that conversation now says a lot. Brown flipped the way people look at them overnight.

And yeah, that part is a little dangerous. Philly fans know how this goes. This team has sold hope before. A lot of it. The Process was hope. The Butler year was hope. The Harden version had hope. The George move had hope. At some point, hope starts to feel like a rerun when it never comes with any real playoff success.

So no, this isn’t parade planning time. But it is the best opening they’ve had in a while.

The Sixers didn’t have to talk themselves into a name that used to mean more than it does now. They didn’t have to convince everyone a weird fit would magically work. They got a legit, in-his-prime wing from a rival, with a Finals MVP on his resume, and they kept the pieces that matter for whatever comes next.

That’s kind of insane.

Boston can explain it however they want. The cap got tight. The second apron is brutal. Brown’s situation got complicated. Tatum’s injury changed things. Sure. All of that can be true. From Philly’s side, though, it still feels like Boston had the problem and somehow the Sixers walked away with the answer.

That’s not how this rivalry usually goes.

All stats courtesy of NBA.com.


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