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The '''Philadelphia 76ers''' (commonly known as the '''Sixers''') are a professional basketball team based in Philadelphia, competing in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Eastern Conference Atlantic Division. One of the oldest and most storied franchises in NBA history, the Sixers have won three championships and have been home to some of basketball's greatest players, including Wilt Chamberlain, Julius Erving, Charles Barkley, and Allen Iverson.<ref name="sixers">{{cite web |url=https://www.nba.com/sixers |title=Philadelphia 76ers |publisher=NBA |access-date=December 23, 2025}}</ref>
The '''Philadelphia 76ers''' (commonly known as the '''Sixers''') are a professional basketball team based in Philadelphia, competing in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Eastern Conference Atlantic Division. They're one of the oldest franchises in NBA history, with three championships and a roster of all-time greats that includes Wilt Chamberlain, Julius Erving, Charles Barkley, and Allen Iverson.<ref name="sixers">{{cite web |url=https://www.nba.com/sixers |title=Philadelphia 76ers |publisher=NBA |access-date=December 23, 2025}}</ref>


The team plays at the [[Wells Fargo Center]] in the [[South Philadelphia Sports Complex]], though controversial plans to build a new arena in Center City have sparked intense debate.
The team plays at the [[Wells Fargo Center]] in the [[South Philadelphia Sports Complex]]. Plans for a new arena in Center City have sparked intense debate and community pushback.


== History ==
== History ==
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=== Syracuse Nationals (1946-1963) ===
=== Syracuse Nationals (1946-1963) ===


The franchise began as the Syracuse Nationals:
The franchise started in a different city, under a different name.


* '''1946''' — Founded as Syracuse Nationals in the National Basketball League
* '''1946''' — Founded as Syracuse Nationals in the National Basketball League
* '''1949''' — Joined NBA when leagues merged
* '''1949''' — Joined the NBA when the leagues merged
* '''1955 NBA Championship*** — Defeated Fort Wayne Pistons
* '''1955 NBA Championship''' — Defeated Fort Wayne Pistons
** Featured Dolph Schayes, Hall of Fame forward
** Dolph Schayes, a Hall of Fame forward, led the way
* Competed in small-market Syracuse for 17 years
* Operated in small-market Syracuse for 17 years
* '''1963''' — Relocated to Philadelphia, renamed 76ers
* '''1963''' — Relocated to Philadelphia, renamed 76ers
** Name honors 1776 and Declaration of Independence
** The name honors 1776 and the Declaration of Independence


=== The Wilt Chamberlain Era (1964-1968) ===
=== The Wilt Chamberlain Era (1964-1968) ===
Wilt Chamberlain came home to Philadelphia:


==== The Arrival ====
==== The Arrival ====


* '''1965*** — Sixers acquired Chamberlain from San Francisco Warriors
Chamberlain came home in 1965. The Sixers acquired him from the San Francisco Warriors, and suddenly the franchise had transcended into another dimension. He'd already done the unthinkable in 1962 (that 100-point game), and now he was back in his native Philadelphia.
* Chamberlain was already a legend (100-point game, 1962)
* Philadelphia native returned home


==== 1967: The Greatest Team Ever? ====
==== 1967: The Greatest Team Ever? ====


The 1966-67 Sixers are considered one of the greatest teams in NBA history:
The 1966-67 Sixers remain legendary:


* '''68-13 record*** — Best in NBA history at the time
* '''68-13 record''' — Best in NBA history at the time
* '''Wilt Chamberlain*** MVP, changed game to focus on passing
* '''Wilt Chamberlain''' Changed his approach from scoring everything to setting up teammates for easy baskets
* '''Hal Greer***, '''Chet Walker***, '''Billy Cunningham***, '''Wali Jones'''
* Supporting cast included '''Hal Greer''', '''Chet Walker''', '''Billy Cunningham''', and '''Wali Jones'''
* '''Coach Alex Hannum***
* '''Coach Alex Hannum''' orchestrated the system
* '''NBA Finals*** Defeated San Francisco Warriors 4-2
* '''NBA Finals''' Beat San Francisco Warriors 4-2
* '''Ended Celtics Dynasty*** Beat Boston in Eastern Finals
* '''Ended the Celtics Dynasty''' Defeated Boston in the Eastern Finals, finally breaking their stranglehold on the East
* Considered by some the greatest team ever assembled
* Many consider them the greatest team ever assembled


==== Chamberlain's Departure ====
==== Chamberlain's Departure ====


* '''1968*** — Chamberlain traded to Los Angeles Lakers
'''1968''' changed everything. The Sixers traded Chamberlain to the Los Angeles Lakers in a move that still generates debate and frustration among fans. It left a massive void.
* Controversial move, still debated
* Left void in franchise


=== The Dr. J Era (1976-1987) ===
=== The Dr. J Era (1976-1987) ===
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==== The Arrival of Julius Erving ====
==== The Arrival of Julius Erving ====


* '''1976*** — Sixers acquired '''Julius Erving*** ("Dr. J") from New York Nets (ABA)
Julius Erving arrived in 1976 from the ABA's New York Nets, and he transformed basketball in Philadelphia overnight. "Dr. J" had style, flair, and dunks that nobody'd ever seen before. He was one of the most exciting players to ever lace up shoes. The Sixers became must-see entertainment.
* One of the most exciting players ever
* Spectacular dunks, afro, style
* Transformed Philadelphia basketball
* Made the Sixers must-see entertainment


==== Championship Pursuits ====
==== Championship Pursuits ====


* '''1977 NBA Finals*** — Lost to Portland Trail Blazers
Three Finals appearances, three heartbreaking losses. They lost to Portland in 1977, then to the Lakers twice (1980 and 1982). Magic Johnson's rookie heroics in 1980 stung. The 1982 loss to the Lakers hurt just as much.
* '''1980 NBA Finals*** — Lost to Los Angeles Lakers (Magic Johnson's rookie heroics)
* '''1982 NBA Finals*** — Lost to Los Angeles Lakers again
* Heartbreak defined the era despite regular season success


==== 1983: "Fo, Fo, Fo" ====
==== 1983: "Fo, Fo, Fo" ====


Finally, Philadelphia prevailed:
Finally. Philadelphia broke through.


* '''Moses Malone*** — Acquired from Houston, MVP center
The Sixers acquired Moses Malone from Houston, adding an MVP-caliber center to pair with Erving. Malone's guarantee of "Fo, fo, fo" (meaning four straight sweeps) became legendary. They went 12-1 instead. The starting five of Dr. J, Malone, Maurice Cheeks, Andrew Toney, and Bobby Jones was special. In the Finals, they swept the Lakers 4-0. Moses Malone won Finals MVP. Philadelphia's first NBA title since 1967. It's still their last one.
* '''"Fo, Fo, Fo"*** — Malone's prediction (four sweeps; actually went 12-1)
* '''Starting Five***: Dr. J, Moses Malone, Maurice Cheeks, Andrew Toney, Bobby Jones
* '''NBA Finals*** — Swept Los Angeles Lakers 4-0
* '''Moses Malone*** — Finals MVP
* Philadelphia's first NBA title since 1967
* Last NBA championship for the franchise (as of 2025)


==== The Late Dr. J Years ====
==== The Late Dr. J Years ====


* Continued competitiveness through mid-1980s
The mid-1980s brought continued success. Charles Barkley emerged as a draft pick in 1984. When Erving retired in 1987, the era closed, but the legacy never faded.
* Charles Barkley emerged (drafted 1984)
* Erving retired 1987


=== The Barkley Years (1984-1992) ===
=== The Barkley Years (1984-1992) ===


'''Charles Barkley''' became the face of the franchise:
Charles Barkley became the franchise's new face. The 1984 Draft brought him fifth overall from Auburn. Here was an undersized power forward, fierce and quotable, outspoken in ways that polarized people. From 1988 to 1991, he made All-NBA teams. Yet championship runs never materialized. In 1992, the Sixers traded him to Phoenix, where he won MVP. Love him or hate him, Barkley was beloved and controversial in equal measure.
 
* '''1984 Draft*** — Selected 5th overall from Auburn
* '''Playing Style*** — Undersized power forward, fierce competitor
* '''Personality*** — Outspoken, quotable, polarizing
* '''1988-1991*** — All-NBA seasons
* Teams were competitive but never reached Finals
* '''1992*** — Traded to Phoenix Suns (became MVP there)
* Beloved and controversial figure


=== The Iverson Era (1996-2006) ===
=== The Iverson Era (1996-2006) ===
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==== "The Answer" Arrives ====
==== "The Answer" Arrives ====


* '''1996 NBA Draft*** — Selected '''Allen Iverson*** #1 overall from Georgetown
Allen Iverson entered the league as the #1 pick in 1996 from Georgetown. Questions about his character were everywhere. A bowling alley incident didn't help. But what he brought was revolutionary: cornrows, tattoos, an appearance that challenged every NBA convention. His crossover dribble was fearless. His courage was outsized.
* '''Controversial*** — Bowling alley incident, questions about attitude
* '''Revolutionary*** — Cornrows, tattoos, "thug" appearance challenged NBA
* '''Playing Style*** — Fearless scorer, crossover dribble, heart of a giant


==== 2001: The Peak ====
==== 2001: The Peak ====


The 2000-01 Sixers were Iverson's masterpiece:
The 2000-01 season was Iverson's masterpiece. He won MVP while averaging 31.1 PPG, leading the league in scoring. Coach Larry Brown built a defensive system around him. The supporting cast—Dikembe Mutombo, Eric Snow, Aaron McKie, Tyrone Hill—was solid. They won the Eastern Conference. In the Finals against the Lakers, they lost 4-1. But in Game 1, Iverson's stepover of Tyron Lue became iconic. They were the only team to beat the Shaq and Kobe Lakers in the entire 2001 postseason.
 
* '''Allen Iverson*** — MVP season (31.1 PPG, league-leading)
* '''Coach Larry Brown*** — Defensive-minded system
* '''Supporting Cast***: Dikembe Mutombo, Eric Snow, Aaron McKie, Tyrone Hill
* '''Eastern Conference Champions***
* '''NBA Finals*** — Lost to Los Angeles Lakers 4-1
** '''Game 1 Overtime Win*** — Iverson's stepover of Tyron Lue
** Only team to beat Shaq/Kobe Lakers in 2001 playoffs


==== The Iverson Legacy ====
==== The Iverson Legacy ====


* '''Crossover*** — The signature move, shook defenders
His crossover became legendary. That move shook defenders into completely different ZIP codes. His cultural impact changed how NBA players could look, dress, and express themselves. Cornrows and tattoos challenged the league's dress code. His "Practice?" rant in 2002 became a meme before memes existed. Six-foot, 165 pounds—he never backed down from anyone. Philadelphia embraced him as one of their own. He was traded to Denver in 2006, returned briefly in 2009-10, and never quite recaptured the magic.
* '''Cultural Impact*** — Changed how NBA players could look, dress, express themselves
* '''Cornrows and Tattoos*** — Challenged league dress code
* '''"Practice?"*** — Famous press conference rant (2002)
* '''Heart*** — 6'0", 165 pounds, never backed down from anyone
* '''Philadelphia Icon*** — Embraced by city as one of their own
* Traded to Denver in 2006; returned briefly in 2009-10


=== The Process (2013-2019) ===
=== The Process (2013-2019) ===
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==== Tanking for the Future ====
==== Tanking for the Future ====


After years of mediocrity, GM Sam Hinkie implemented "The Process":
After years of mediocrity, GM Sam Hinkie took a different approach. From 2013 to 2016, the Sixers deliberately lost to accumulate draft picks. "Trust the Process" became the rallying cry. Hinkie traded assets, embraced the tank, and ignored the criticism. Then the NBA pressured the ownership. Hinkie resigned in 2016. Out of that rubble came Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons.
 
* '''2013-2016*** — Deliberate losing to accumulate draft picks
* '''"Trust the Process"*** — Became rallying cry
* '''Hinkie*** — Traded assets for future picks, embraced tanking
* '''League intervention*** — NBA pressured ownership; Hinkie resigned (2016)
* '''Draft picks***: Joel Embiid (2014), Ben Simmons (2016)


==== Joel Embiid Emerges ====
==== Joel Embiid Emerges ====


* '''Joel Embiid*** — Dominant center, missed first two years injured
Embiid sat injured for his first two years after being drafted in 2014. In 2016-17, he finally took the court and became a star. Ben Simmons, the #1 pick in 2016, arrived as a point forward with a different skill set. By 2018-2019, the playoffs returned. Jimmy Butler's trade in the 2018-19 season brought a playoff run. Then came "The Shot"—Kawhi Leonard's bounce, one, two, three, four times on the rim before falling through. Toronto won on that last-second shot.
* '''2016-17*** — Embiid debuted, became star
* '''Ben Simmons*** — #1 pick, point forward
* '''2018-2019*** — Playoff contention returned
* '''Jimmy Butler*** trade (2018-19) brought playoff run
* "The Shot" — Kawhi Leonard's bounce four times; Toronto won on last-second shot


==== Post-Process Challenges ====
==== Post-Process Challenges ====


* '''Ben Simmons saga*** — Refused to play (2021), eventually traded
Ben Simmons refused to play in 2021 and was eventually traded. James Harden arrived in 2022. Embiid won MVP in 2023. Still, the playoffs brought disappointment. Second-round exits became a pattern. The championship remains out of reach.
* '''James Harden*** acquired (2022)
* '''Embiid*** — 2023 MVP
* Continued playoff disappointments
* Championship remains elusive


=== Current Era ===
=== Current Era ===


* '''Joel Embiid*** — Franchise player, MVP
Joel Embiid is the franchise player, an MVP-caliber center. Second-round exits continue. The proposed Center City arena sparks ongoing debate. Championship drought stretches past four decades.
* '''Playoff struggles*** — Second-round exits continue
* '''Arena controversy*** — Proposed Center City arena sparks debate
* Championship drought since 1983


== Championships ==
== Championships ==
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| '''Wilt Chamberlain''' || C || 1965-1968 || 100-point game, 1967 champion
| '''Wilt Chamberlain''' || C || 1965-1968 || 100-point game, 1967 champion
|-
|-
| '''Julius Erving''' || SF || 1976-1987 || "Dr. J," revolutionary style
| '''Julius Erving''' || SF || 1976-1987 || "Dr. J," revolutionized the game
|-
|-
| '''Charles Barkley''' || PF || 1984-1992 || Round Mound of Rebound
| '''Charles Barkley''' || PF || 1984-1992 || Round Mound of Rebound
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=== Sixers Legends ===
=== Sixers Legends ===


* '''Bobby Jones*** — Sixth Man, 1983 champion
* '''Bobby Jones''' — Sixth man, 1983 champion
* '''Andrew Toney*** — "Boston Strangler," clutch scorer
* '''Andrew Toney''' Known as the "Boston Strangler" for clutch scoring
* '''Dikembe Mutombo*** Finger wag, 2001 Finals
* '''Dikembe Mutombo''' The finger wag, the 2001 Finals presence
* '''World B. Free*** — Flamboyant scorer
* '''World B. Free''' — Flamboyant scorer
* '''Joel Embiid*** — Current franchise player, 2023 MVP
* '''Joel Embiid''' — Current franchise player, 2023 MVP


== Iconic Moments ==
== Iconic Moments ==
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=== Greatest Moments ===
=== Greatest Moments ===


* '''1967 Championship*** Ending Celtics dynasty
* '''1967 Championship''' Finally ending the Celtics dynasty
* '''1983 Sweep*** — "Fo, Fo, Fo" championship
* '''1983 Sweep''' — "Fo, Fo, Fo" comes true
* '''Dr. J's Baseline Move (1980)*** — Against Lakers in Finals
* '''Dr. J's Baseline Move (1980)''' — Against the Lakers in the Finals
* '''Iverson's Crossover on Jordan (1997)*** Rookie breaks MJ's ankles
* '''Iverson's Crossover on Jordan (1997)''' A rookie breaks MJ's ankles
* '''Iverson Steps Over Lue (2001)*** — Game 1 Finals
* '''Iverson Steps Over Lue (2001)''' — Game 1 of the Finals, immortalized
* '''Embiid's MVP (2023)*** — First Sixer MVP since Iverson
* '''Embiid's MVP (2023)''' — First Sixer MVP since Iverson


=== Infamous Moments ===
=== Infamous Moments ===


* '''Wilt Trade (1968)*** — Lost greatest player
* '''Wilt Trade (1968)''' — Lost their greatest player
* '''1977 Finals Loss*** — Should have won
* '''1977 Finals Loss''' — Should have won
* '''1981 Eastern Finals*** — Lost to Celtics (again)
* '''1981 Eastern Finals''' — Lost to Boston again
* '''Barkley Trade (1992)*** — Gave away All-Star
* '''Barkley Trade (1992)''' — Gave away an All-Star in his prime
* '''Iverson "Practice" Rant*** — Mocked, but misunderstood
* '''Iverson "Practice" Rant*** — Mocked, but the criticism missed the point
* '''The Shot (2019)*** — Kawhi's bouncing buzzer-beater
* '''The Shot (2019)''' — Kawhi's bouncing buzzer-beater broke hearts
* '''Ben Simmons Saga*** — Refused to play, trade drama
* '''Ben Simmons Saga''' — Refused to play, created franchise chaos


== The Process ==
== The Process ==


"The Process" became cultural phenomenon:
"The Process" became something bigger than basketball. It was a philosophy, a fan movement, a way of thinking about rebuilding.


=== What Was It? ===
=== What Was It? ===


* '''Sam Hinkie's strategy*** — Trade current assets for future picks
Sam Hinkie's strategy was straightforward: trade current assets for future picks. Lose now, win later. Accumulate assets. Build a championship team from scratch. It was different from how NBA teams operated.
* '''Deliberate losing*** — Ensure high draft position
* '''Asset accumulation*** — Stockpile picks and young players
* '''Long-term vision*** — Build championship team from scratch


=== Cultural Impact ===
=== Cultural Impact ===


* '''"Trust the Process"*** — Rallying cry for fans and team
"Trust the Process" became a rallying cry for fans and team alike. Joel Embiid himself got nicknamed "The Process." Other teams watched and learned. It was controversial, no question, but Philadelphia embraced it like few cities would have.
* Joel Embiid nicknamed "The Process"
* Influenced other teams' rebuilding strategies
* Controversial but embraced by Philadelphia


=== Results ===
=== Results ===


* Drafted Joel Embiid, Ben Simmons
Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons came out of those draft picks. Playoff contention returned. Yet the championship still hasn't arrived. Debate over whether it actually "worked" continues to this day.
* Returned to playoff contention
* Championship still elusive
* Debate over whether it "worked"


== Rivalries ==
== Rivalries ==
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=== Boston Celtics ===
=== Boston Celtics ===


The defining rivalry:
This is the defining rivalry. Celtics dominated for years, blocking Sixers' championship dreams repeatedly. In 1967, Philadelphia finally beat Boston in the playoffs. That moment meant everything. The 1980s brought more matchups with Bird, Barkley, and Dr. J squaring off. Hatred runs deep. Both fanbases despise each other. It's the greatest rivalry in Sixers history.
 
* '''Historical dominance*** — Celtics often blocked Sixers
* '''1967*** — Finally beat Boston in playoffs
* '''1980s*** — Bird vs. Dr. J, Barkley
* '''Hatred runs deep*** — Both fanbases despise each other
* Greatest rivalry in Sixers history


=== Los Angeles Lakers ===
=== Los Angeles Lakers ===


* '''4 Finals meetings*** — Sixers won 1 (1983)
Four Finals meetings. The Sixers won once, in 1983. The other three losses in 1980, 1982, and 2001 stung. That 1983 sweep was sweet revenge.
* '''1980, 1982, 2001*** — Painful losses
* '''1983*** — Sweet revenge, sweep


=== New York Knicks ===
=== New York Knicks ===


* Geographic rivalry
Geographic proximity makes this one real. Atlantic Division battles happen every year. Still, it doesn't have the intensity of the Celtics rivalry.
* Atlantic Division battles
* Less intense than Celtics rivalry


== Venues ==
== Venues ==
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=== Historical ===
=== Historical ===


* '''Convention Hall*** (1963-1967)
* '''Convention Hall''' (1963-1967)
* '''The Spectrum*** (1967-1996) — Iconic arena
* '''The Spectrum''' (1967-1996) — An iconic arena where Dr. J made his mark, home for three decades
** Dr. J's playground
* '''CoreStates/First Union/Wachovia Center''' (1996-2010)
** Philly's basketball home for three decades
* '''CoreStates/First Union/Wachovia Center*** (1996-2010)


=== Current ===
=== Current ===


* '''[[Wells Fargo Center]]*** (2010-present)
* '''[[Wells Fargo Center]]''' (2010-present)
** Shared with Flyers
** Shared with the Flyers
** Part of Sports Complex
** Part of the broader Sports Complex
** Capacity: 20,478
** Capacity: 20,478


=== Proposed ===
=== Proposed ===


* '''76 Place*** Proposed Center City arena (controversial)
* '''76 Place''' A Center City arena that remains controversial
** Chinatown location debate
** Location debates involve Chinatown
** Ownership push vs. community opposition
** Ownership pushes hard, community opposes
** Unresolved as of 2025
** Unresolved as of 2025


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{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|q1=How many championships have the 76ers won?
|q1=How many championships have the 76ers won?
|a1=The Philadelphia 76ers have won 3 NBA championships: 1955 (as Syracuse Nationals), 1967, and 1983. The 1967 team went 68-13 and is considered one of the greatest ever. The 1983 "Fo, Fo, Fo" team swept the Lakers. They haven't won since 1983.
|a1=Three NBA championships: 1955 (as Syracuse Nationals), 1967, and 1983. The 1967 squad went 68-13 and is considered among the greatest ever. The 1983 "Fo, Fo, Fo" team swept the Lakers. No title since then.


|q2=Who is the greatest 76er of all time?
|q2=Who is the greatest 76er of all time?
|a2=This is debated between Julius Erving (Dr. J), Wilt Chamberlain, and Allen Iverson. Dr. J (1976-87) revolutionized the game and brought a championship. Wilt won the 1967 title. Iverson (1996-2006) was an MVP who became a cultural icon. All have valid claims.
|a2=That's debated between Julius Erving, Wilt Chamberlain, and Allen Iverson. Dr. J revolutionized the game and brought a championship from 1976-87. Wilt won the 1967 title. Iverson was an MVP who became a cultural icon from 1996-2006. Each has a legitimate claim.


|q3=What does "Trust the Process" mean?
|q3=What does "Trust the Process" mean?
|a3="Trust the Process" refers to GM Sam Hinkie's rebuilding strategy (2013-2016) of deliberately losing to accumulate draft picks. It became a fan rallying cry. The strategy yielded Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons. Embiid himself is nicknamed "The Process."
|a3="Trust the Process" was GM Sam Hinkie's rebuilding strategy from 2013-2016, involving deliberate losses to accumulate draft picks. It became a fan rallying cry. The approach yielded Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons. Embiid himself is nicknamed "The Process."


|q4=Why do Sixers fans hate the Celtics?
|q4=Why do Sixers fans hate the Celtics?
|a4=The Celtics blocked the Sixers from championships repeatedly in the 1960s-80s. Boston's historical dominance, close geography, and arrogant fanbase (from Philadelphia's perspective) created deep hatred. The 1967 Sixers ending Boston's dynasty was cathartic. It remains the Sixers' biggest rivalry.
|a4=Boston blocked Philadelphia from championships repeatedly in the 1960s-80s. The Celtics' historical dominance, close geography, and what Sixers fans see as arrogance created deep resentment. When Philadelphia's 1967 team ended Boston's dynasty, it was cathartic. It remains the franchise's biggest rivalry.
}}
}}



Latest revision as of 22:58, 23 April 2026

Template:Infobox SportsTeam

The Philadelphia 76ers (commonly known as the Sixers) are a professional basketball team based in Philadelphia, competing in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Eastern Conference Atlantic Division. They're one of the oldest franchises in NBA history, with three championships and a roster of all-time greats that includes Wilt Chamberlain, Julius Erving, Charles Barkley, and Allen Iverson.[1]

The team plays at the Wells Fargo Center in the South Philadelphia Sports Complex. Plans for a new arena in Center City have sparked intense debate and community pushback.

History

Syracuse Nationals (1946-1963)

The franchise started in a different city, under a different name.

  • 1946 — Founded as Syracuse Nationals in the National Basketball League
  • 1949 — Joined the NBA when the leagues merged
  • 1955 NBA Championship — Defeated Fort Wayne Pistons
    • Dolph Schayes, a Hall of Fame forward, led the way
  • Operated in small-market Syracuse for 17 years
  • 1963 — Relocated to Philadelphia, renamed 76ers
    • The name honors 1776 and the Declaration of Independence

The Wilt Chamberlain Era (1964-1968)

The Arrival

Chamberlain came home in 1965. The Sixers acquired him from the San Francisco Warriors, and suddenly the franchise had transcended into another dimension. He'd already done the unthinkable in 1962 (that 100-point game), and now he was back in his native Philadelphia.

1967: The Greatest Team Ever?

The 1966-67 Sixers remain legendary:

  • 68-13 record — Best in NBA history at the time
  • Wilt Chamberlain — Changed his approach from scoring everything to setting up teammates for easy baskets
  • Supporting cast included Hal Greer, Chet Walker, Billy Cunningham, and Wali Jones
  • Coach Alex Hannum orchestrated the system
  • NBA Finals — Beat San Francisco Warriors 4-2
  • Ended the Celtics Dynasty — Defeated Boston in the Eastern Finals, finally breaking their stranglehold on the East
  • Many consider them the greatest team ever assembled

Chamberlain's Departure

1968 changed everything. The Sixers traded Chamberlain to the Los Angeles Lakers in a move that still generates debate and frustration among fans. It left a massive void.

The Dr. J Era (1976-1987)

The Arrival of Julius Erving

Julius Erving arrived in 1976 from the ABA's New York Nets, and he transformed basketball in Philadelphia overnight. "Dr. J" had style, flair, and dunks that nobody'd ever seen before. He was one of the most exciting players to ever lace up shoes. The Sixers became must-see entertainment.

Championship Pursuits

Three Finals appearances, three heartbreaking losses. They lost to Portland in 1977, then to the Lakers twice (1980 and 1982). Magic Johnson's rookie heroics in 1980 stung. The 1982 loss to the Lakers hurt just as much.

1983: "Fo, Fo, Fo"

Finally. Philadelphia broke through.

The Sixers acquired Moses Malone from Houston, adding an MVP-caliber center to pair with Erving. Malone's guarantee of "Fo, fo, fo" (meaning four straight sweeps) became legendary. They went 12-1 instead. The starting five of Dr. J, Malone, Maurice Cheeks, Andrew Toney, and Bobby Jones was special. In the Finals, they swept the Lakers 4-0. Moses Malone won Finals MVP. Philadelphia's first NBA title since 1967. It's still their last one.

The Late Dr. J Years

The mid-1980s brought continued success. Charles Barkley emerged as a draft pick in 1984. When Erving retired in 1987, the era closed, but the legacy never faded.

The Barkley Years (1984-1992)

Charles Barkley became the franchise's new face. The 1984 Draft brought him fifth overall from Auburn. Here was an undersized power forward, fierce and quotable, outspoken in ways that polarized people. From 1988 to 1991, he made All-NBA teams. Yet championship runs never materialized. In 1992, the Sixers traded him to Phoenix, where he won MVP. Love him or hate him, Barkley was beloved and controversial in equal measure.

The Iverson Era (1996-2006)

"The Answer" Arrives

Allen Iverson entered the league as the #1 pick in 1996 from Georgetown. Questions about his character were everywhere. A bowling alley incident didn't help. But what he brought was revolutionary: cornrows, tattoos, an appearance that challenged every NBA convention. His crossover dribble was fearless. His courage was outsized.

2001: The Peak

The 2000-01 season was Iverson's masterpiece. He won MVP while averaging 31.1 PPG, leading the league in scoring. Coach Larry Brown built a defensive system around him. The supporting cast—Dikembe Mutombo, Eric Snow, Aaron McKie, Tyrone Hill—was solid. They won the Eastern Conference. In the Finals against the Lakers, they lost 4-1. But in Game 1, Iverson's stepover of Tyron Lue became iconic. They were the only team to beat the Shaq and Kobe Lakers in the entire 2001 postseason.

The Iverson Legacy

His crossover became legendary. That move shook defenders into completely different ZIP codes. His cultural impact changed how NBA players could look, dress, and express themselves. Cornrows and tattoos challenged the league's dress code. His "Practice?" rant in 2002 became a meme before memes existed. Six-foot, 165 pounds—he never backed down from anyone. Philadelphia embraced him as one of their own. He was traded to Denver in 2006, returned briefly in 2009-10, and never quite recaptured the magic.

The Process (2013-2019)

Tanking for the Future

After years of mediocrity, GM Sam Hinkie took a different approach. From 2013 to 2016, the Sixers deliberately lost to accumulate draft picks. "Trust the Process" became the rallying cry. Hinkie traded assets, embraced the tank, and ignored the criticism. Then the NBA pressured the ownership. Hinkie resigned in 2016. Out of that rubble came Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons.

Joel Embiid Emerges

Embiid sat injured for his first two years after being drafted in 2014. In 2016-17, he finally took the court and became a star. Ben Simmons, the #1 pick in 2016, arrived as a point forward with a different skill set. By 2018-2019, the playoffs returned. Jimmy Butler's trade in the 2018-19 season brought a playoff run. Then came "The Shot"—Kawhi Leonard's bounce, one, two, three, four times on the rim before falling through. Toronto won on that last-second shot.

Post-Process Challenges

Ben Simmons refused to play in 2021 and was eventually traded. James Harden arrived in 2022. Embiid won MVP in 2023. Still, the playoffs brought disappointment. Second-round exits became a pattern. The championship remains out of reach.

Current Era

Joel Embiid is the franchise player, an MVP-caliber center. Second-round exits continue. The proposed Center City arena sparks ongoing debate. Championship drought stretches past four decades.

Championships

Year Opponent Series MVP Notes
1955 Fort Wayne Pistons 4-3 As Syracuse Nationals
1967 San Francisco Warriors 4-2 68-13 regular season
1983 Los Angeles Lakers 4-0 Moses Malone "Fo, Fo, Fo"

Finals Losses

  • 1977 — Portland Trail Blazers
  • 1980 — Los Angeles Lakers
  • 1982 — Los Angeles Lakers
  • 2001 — Los Angeles Lakers

Legendary Players

Hall of Famers

Player Position Years Notable
Wilt Chamberlain C 1965-1968 100-point game, 1967 champion
Julius Erving SF 1976-1987 "Dr. J," revolutionized the game
Charles Barkley PF 1984-1992 Round Mound of Rebound
Allen Iverson G 1996-2006, 2009-10 "The Answer," 2001 MVP
Moses Malone C 1982-1986, 1993-94 1983 Finals MVP, "Fo Fo Fo"
Dolph Schayes F/C 1949-1964 Syracuse Nationals star
Hal Greer G 1958-1973 1967 championship
Billy Cunningham F 1965-1972, 1974-76 Player and coach
Maurice Cheeks G 1978-1989 1983 championship point guard

Sixers Legends

  • Bobby Jones — Sixth man, 1983 champion
  • Andrew Toney — Known as the "Boston Strangler" for clutch scoring
  • Dikembe Mutombo — The finger wag, the 2001 Finals presence
  • World B. Free — Flamboyant scorer
  • Joel Embiid — Current franchise player, 2023 MVP

Iconic Moments

Greatest Moments

  • 1967 Championship — Finally ending the Celtics dynasty
  • 1983 Sweep — "Fo, Fo, Fo" comes true
  • Dr. J's Baseline Move (1980) — Against the Lakers in the Finals
  • Iverson's Crossover on Jordan (1997) — A rookie breaks MJ's ankles
  • Iverson Steps Over Lue (2001) — Game 1 of the Finals, immortalized
  • Embiid's MVP (2023) — First Sixer MVP since Iverson

Infamous Moments

  • Wilt Trade (1968) — Lost their greatest player
  • 1977 Finals Loss — Should have won
  • 1981 Eastern Finals — Lost to Boston again
  • Barkley Trade (1992) — Gave away an All-Star in his prime
  • Iverson "Practice" Rant*** — Mocked, but the criticism missed the point
  • The Shot (2019) — Kawhi's bouncing buzzer-beater broke hearts
  • Ben Simmons Saga — Refused to play, created franchise chaos

The Process

"The Process" became something bigger than basketball. It was a philosophy, a fan movement, a way of thinking about rebuilding.

What Was It?

Sam Hinkie's strategy was straightforward: trade current assets for future picks. Lose now, win later. Accumulate assets. Build a championship team from scratch. It was different from how NBA teams operated.

Cultural Impact

"Trust the Process" became a rallying cry for fans and team alike. Joel Embiid himself got nicknamed "The Process." Other teams watched and learned. It was controversial, no question, but Philadelphia embraced it like few cities would have.

Results

Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons came out of those draft picks. Playoff contention returned. Yet the championship still hasn't arrived. Debate over whether it actually "worked" continues to this day.

Rivalries

Boston Celtics

This is the defining rivalry. Celtics dominated for years, blocking Sixers' championship dreams repeatedly. In 1967, Philadelphia finally beat Boston in the playoffs. That moment meant everything. The 1980s brought more matchups with Bird, Barkley, and Dr. J squaring off. Hatred runs deep. Both fanbases despise each other. It's the greatest rivalry in Sixers history.

Los Angeles Lakers

Four Finals meetings. The Sixers won once, in 1983. The other three losses in 1980, 1982, and 2001 stung. That 1983 sweep was sweet revenge.

New York Knicks

Geographic proximity makes this one real. Atlantic Division battles happen every year. Still, it doesn't have the intensity of the Celtics rivalry.

Venues

Historical

  • Convention Hall (1963-1967)
  • The Spectrum (1967-1996) — An iconic arena where Dr. J made his mark, home for three decades
  • CoreStates/First Union/Wachovia Center (1996-2010)

Current

  • Wells Fargo Center (2010-present)
    • Shared with the Flyers
    • Part of the broader Sports Complex
    • Capacity: 20,478

Proposed

  • 76 Place — A Center City arena that remains controversial
    • Location debates involve Chinatown
    • Ownership pushes hard, community opposes
    • Unresolved as of 2025

Frequently Asked Questions

Template:FAQ

See Also

References

  1. "Philadelphia 76ers". NBA. Retrieved December 23, 2025

External Links