Philadelphia’s front-office shift isn’t the real issue
The 76ers’ recent shake-up isn’t what’s dominating conversation in Philadelphia. It’s the growing sense that people are losing faith in ownership to turn things around.
After a blowout loss to New York ended their season, Josh Harris stood next to Bob Myers and explained the decision to fire Daryl Morey.
He told fans he understood their frustration, saying he felt it even more than they did. People heard him, but there are real doubts about whether anyone still believes those words have weight.

There’s more to this than just the front office
Fans aren’t just upset over a single playoff exit or one executive being shown the door. It’s about feeling stuck in the same cycle—another early playoff exit, another roster that doesn’t quite fit together, and more assurances that things are changing when they don’t look any different.
That’s why the frustration toward Harris hasn’t cooled down, even after Morey’s departure. Speaking at his press conference, Harris said he didn’t like seeing Knicks fans take over their home court and insisted they did everything possible to prevent it. But for many in Philadelphia, the issue goes beyond ticket sales—it’s about what happens on the court and where this team is heading.
Myers brings a new voice, but the questions remain
The addition of Bob Myers gives the 76ers something they have been missing — someone in the executive seat with a real championship background.
He also adds some much-needed structure to how the search for improvement will be handled. But his presence doesn’t clear up ongoing questions about ownership, from spending concerns to roster management, or why Joel Embiid’s window still hasn’t produced a trip to the conference finals.
Harris used that same opportunity to dismiss claims that he limits luxury-tax spending, saying the front office is free to use it as needed. While that may be true on paper, it’s still up against years of local scepticism and a fan base that has stopped taking press-conference statements at face value.
The city is waiting for evidence, not tone
Philadelphia does not need Harris to sound more frustrated. It needs the franchise to stop producing the same outcome with different explanations. That means a real basketball plan, a cleaner leadership structure and a roster build that does not feel like it is trying to solve three timelines at once.
Harris did the easy part of this week by admitting that anger is justified from fans. The hard part starts now – getting out of yet another season’s fallout, where patience seems increasingly harder for Sixers supporters to handle.
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