Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 76ers paid Webber $36 million over the next 1½ seasons, which is $7 million less than he would have been paid to play. After the buyout, the 76ers waived Webber, making him a free agent. Webber signed with the Detroit Pistons shortly thereafter. The moves allowed the 76ers to make Iguodala the unquestioned leader of the team, and evaluate ...
The Rights to Ricky Sanchez is a sports podcast about the Philadelphia 76ers, founded and hosted by former New York sports radio executive Spike Eskin and television comedy writer Michael Levin. The podcast debuted in 2013 and is named after Puerto Rican basketball player Ricky Sánchez , whose contractual rights the 76ers owned from 2007 to 2012.
The Process, an American music group; The Process (collective), an art and philosophy collective formed in the early 1990s; The Process Church of The Final Judgment, a religious group that flourished in the 1960s and 1970s; The Process (Philadelphia 76ers), a reference to the rebuilding phase of the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers in the mid-2010s
The Process was unpopular with NBA executives and team owners, who lobbied league commissioner Adam Silver to step in due to the 76ers' poor performance affecting league revenue sharing. [ 41 ] [ 42 ] Harris would eventually agree to a suggestion by Silver to hire Jerry Colangelo , former owner of the Phoenix Suns , as team chairman in December ...
During the 1990s, the 76ers declined to an 18–64 record in 1995–96 before popular high-scoring guard Allen Iverson led the team back up the table. In 2000–01 the Iverson-led 76ers won fifty-six games and defeated the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern Conference finals to reach the 2001 Finals but lost to the Lakers four games to one in the ...
The 2017–18 Philadelphia 76ers season was the 69th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The team was 25–25 after the first 50 games, but finished the remainder of the season with a 27–5 record. It was the team's first playoff appearance since 2011-12.
This page was last edited on 14 December 2024, at 21:40 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The 1976–77 NBA season was the 28th season for the Philadelphia 76ers franchise in the NBA. Just months earlier, the American Basketball Association had ended its ninth and final campaign and the two leagues combined. In a special $6 million deal, the Nets sold Julius Erving, the ABA's leading scorer, to the Philadelphia 76ers for $3 million. [1]