Two weeks ago, the idea of LeBron James signing with the Sixers on a minimum contract would have sounded like an AI hallucination. It now appears to be under serious consideration.
On Tuesday, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that the Sixers appeared to be in the inner circle of favorites to land LeBron, alongside the Cleveland Cavaliers and Miami Heat. He added that they were “not in the picture” prior to the Jaylen Brown trade, but LeBron is now “taking their pitch really seriously.”
Charania said
Wednesday that a decision isn’t expected soon, so for now, we’ll have to stay twisting in the wind. But regardless of what James chooses to do, the fact that the Sixers are in the race at all is absurd given where they were in mid-June.
Although the trade for Jaylen Brown looks like a no-brainer at the moment (analytics nerds be damned), there’s at least one universe in which it works out better for the Celtics than it does for the Sixers. But pairing Brown with Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe and Joel Embiid has caught the attention of none other than one of the greatest players of all time.
LeBron might not be the last star to think that way. That’s a testament to the work that new team president Mike Gansey and general manager Jameer Nelson have pulled off this summer.
No matter what happens from here, the Sixers have given fans reasons to buy back in again.
The era of apathy is over
Not only is Brown a clear upgrade over George at this point of their respective careers, but he’s also largely dodged the injury bug to this point. He’s missed no more than 15 games in all but one of his 10 NBA seasons, and he just played 71 this past year.
Given Embiid’s injury concerns, the Sixers couldn’t deal with another year of the nightly will-they-or-won’t-they-play game with both him and George. Brown will miss at least a few games here and there, but he figures to be far more available during the regular season than the 36-year-old George. That should help reduce the strain on Maxey and Edgecombe.
The trade doesn’t come without risk. Brown could be tough to fit on and/or off the court. The two first-round picks that the Sixers gave up could land high in the draft, especially given the new lottery system being trialed for the next few years. Now that the shock from the trade has worn off, smart basketball minds have found ways to rationalize the deal for the Celtics.
This was a risk that the Sixers had to take, though.
Celtics president Brad Stevens explained to reporters that he thought the team’s path “looked a little bit more challenging with 70 percent of our cap and such a high percentage of our usage tied into two players.” As someone who pushed back against the Sixers’ Big 3 hopes five months before they signed George, I can’t argue with that logic.
But the Sixers didn’t have a choice. That money was already allocated either way. It was either going to George, or it was going to someone else.
In that sense, the Sixers likely saw little harm in coughing up the draft capital it took to turn George into Brown. After all, given his age, injury history and the size of his remaining contract, it might have cost them nearly as much just to dump George outright.
Although Embiid is supposedly “fired up” about the trade, this deal likely wasn’t made with him in mind. More than anything, it’s likely about Maxey.
After drafting Labaron Philon Jr. with the 22nd overall pick, Gansey said part of the appeal was that “he can come in and play some minutes and take a load off” Maxey and Edgecombe. That same rationale likely factored into the decision to trade for Brown.
Maxey averaged a league-leading 38.0 minutes per game last year, while Edgecombe wasn’t far behind at 35.0. That put him in a three-way tie with Anthony Edwards and Jalen Brunson for the ninth-most minutes per game in the NBA, which is absurd for a rookie. Given their spotty backcourt depth—Quentin Grimes and a half-season of Jared McCain—that massive workload was more or less out of necessity.
Between Philon and the newly signed Anfernee Simons, the Sixers have new reinforcements behind Maxey and Edgecombe, but their backcourt depth is still spotty beyond that. Luckily, Brown should be able to lighten the offensive burden on both Maxey and Edgecombe, allowing them to play fewer minutes without having the team crater in their absence.
It’s hard to believe this, but Maxey is already entering the third year of the five-year max deal that he signed in 2024. While three years might feel like an eternity in the NBA, front offices operate on far different clocks than the rest of us.
Had the Sixers not made this deal and largely ran back the same roster but with Simons, Dean Wade and Ariel Hukporti in place of Grimes, Kelly Oubre Jr. and Andre Drummond, it’s fair to wonder how much better (if at all) they would be in 2026-27. Now, even if they don’t land LeBron, they’re currently considered one of the favorites in the East.
There has been zero indication that Maxey is already eyeing his exit from Philly. If anything, the addition of Edgecombe last summer should further entice him to stay. But he might have been wondering what the Sixers’ long-term plan was had they just rode out the remainder of George and Embiid’s bloated contracts.
There’s no guarantee that Brown is the answer to that question. The Sixers could once again run into the three-max problem in three years when both Maxey and Brown’s contracts expire right as Edgecombe’s rookie-scale deal runs out. They might eventually reach the same conclusion that the Celtics did about the viability of that model, although the NBA will have a new collective bargaining agreement in place by then.
There’s still plenty for head coach Nick Nurse to sort out on the court when it comes to figuring out the best way to fit Brown alongside Maxey, Edgecombe and Embiid. The LeBron wild card continues to loom large, too.
But the fact we’re having these conversations at all is absurd given where the Sixers were a few weeks ago.













