MarJon Beauchamp was the last player the Sixers acquired before the 2025-26 season began. After the final preseason game, the team waived Emoni Bates and signed Beauchamp to an Exhibit 10 contract.
He spent the majority of the season in the G League playing for the Delaware Blue Coats. In 19 games for the Coats he averaged 25.2 points shooting 47% from the field and 35% from three-point range.
The Sixers rewarded his strong play there, cutting undrafted free agent Hunter Sallis to give Beauchamp their
final two-way roster spot. Beauchamp wouldn’t appear in a game for the Sixers until Feb. 9, helping fill in on a night the team was decimated by injuries, illnesses, suspensions and the trade deadline.
His appearances continued to be sporadic, but he shot it well in the time he was given. In the first nine games Beauchamp appeared for the Sixers, he shot 49% from the field and 38% from three.
That was good enough to earn a start, albeit in a game the Sixers were so injured they were basically punting it to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Beauchamp went 5-of-18 from the floor in his 31 minutes against the defending champs. He would only appear in garbage time the rest of the season as the Sixers’ wings got healthy to end the campaign.
It’s a shame Beauchamp’s production came when the team was so depleted. Not that it would have led to any huge impact, but the random 3-of-4 three-point nights he had can swing a regular season game. It’s just the type of fun, random end-of-bench production the Sixers haven’t had since… Corey Brewer?
Of course, there’s a reason those were the only times Beauchamp got the opportunity. His struggles to translate his success in the G League to meaningful minutes is catapulting him towards “4A player” territory.
That type of 4A player, one that does have the ability to hit some shots on any given night, is a pretty good use of a two-way contract. Unfortunately for Beauchamp, he is running out of two-way eligibility; only players with four years of experience or less can be signed to them. If he’s able to find a team next season, it would be his fifth year in the league.
Beauchamp’s fate looks destined to be lighting up the G-League or somewhere in Europe. As a wing-sized player who possesses at the very least, the idea of a jump shot, that could be enough for someone to take another flyer on him.











