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NBA free agency: Sixers add backup center Ariel Hukporti; how Dean Wade fits; latest trade rumors and signings

After a slow start to free agency, the Sixers also agreed to a deal with forward Dean Wade late on Tuesday, making it less likely Kelly Oubre Jr. and Quentin Grimes return.

The Sixers are signing former New York Knicks center Ariel Hukporti to a one-year deal.
The Sixers are signing former New York Knicks center Ariel Hukporti to a one-year deal.Read more
Sue Ogrocki / AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki
What you should know
  1. NBA free agency officially kicked off Tuesday evening, as teams were allowed to begin negotiating with free agents from other teams.

  2. After a slow start to Day 1, the Sixers and forward Dean Wade agreed to a four-year deal worth $39 million. The deal makes it less likely the team re-signs Kelly Oubre Jr. or Quentin Grimes.

  3. The Sixers didn't waste any time adding a backup center on Day 2, adding Ariel Hukporti from the Knicks on a one-year, $3.4 million deal.

  4. While most people will focus on Wade's personal connection to Mike Gansey, he's also a great fit for the Sixers, writes columnist David Murphy.

  5. The first big dominoes of the free agency fell when LeBron James informed the Lakers that he would not be returning to Los Angeles for his 24th NBA season. Later, Kawhi Leonard was traded to back to the Toronto Raptors.

Pinned

Sixers to sign former Knicks center Ariel Hukporti

The Sixers have agreed to sign Ariel Hukporti to a one-year, $3.4 million contract, The Inquirer confirmed Wednesday morning.

The move gives the Sixers a new option at backup center behind Joel Embiid, the former NBA Most Valuable Player who has struggled with numerous health issues in recent seasons. Veteran Andre Drummond, now an unrestricted free agent, and Adem Bona, whose $2.3 million salary for 2026-27 becomes fully guaranteed July 7, saw their roles fluctuate last season.

Hukporti, an athletic 7-footer, played his first two NBA seasons with the New York Knicks, averaging 2.2 points and 2.9 rebounds in 9.2 minutes across 54 regular-season games in 2025-26. He only logged spot minutes during the Knicks’ playoff run to the championship, primarily when big men Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson got in foul trouble.

» READ MORE: Sixers agreeing to one-year, $3.4 million deal with former Knicks big Ariel Hukporti

Gina Mizell

John Collins to sign with Pistons

John Collins, who was previously linked to the 76ers, has agreed to a three-year, $51 million deal with the Detroit Pistons, a rising power in the Eastern Conference that also plans to retain Roman Catholic alum Jalen Duren.

The Sixers nabbed Dean Wade, who will play on a four-year, $39 million deal, for a role similar to what Collins will play for the Pistons as a guy expected to slot in at power forward and providing defense and spacing.

Collins has been a more productive offensive player, however, hence the $17 million salary. He previously played for the Los Angeles Clippers, Utah Jazz and Atlanta Hawks and has career averages of 15.7 points and 7.7 rebounds.

DeAntae Prince

Murphy: Dean Wade is a great fit for the Sixers

While many will focus on Sixers president Mike Gansey’s personal connection to new forward Dean Wade, the 29-year-old is a player who would have made a lot of sense on virtually any incarnation of the Sixers in the post-Ben-Simmons era. The rare stretch four who adds big value on defense, Wade developed from an undrafted free agent to a critical playoff rotation piece in Cleveland by excelling at a lot of the dirty work that exceeds the capabilities and/or willingness of many 6-foot-9 shooters. This postseason, the Cavaliers outscored opponents by a net of 16.2 points per 100 possessions when Wade was on the court versus off it. That’s impressive stuff.

The benefit to the Sixers will be similar to what it was throughout his seven years in Cleveland. Wade can play small alongside a couple of bigs the way he did with Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. He can play a power four alongside a trio of guards, as he sometimes did with James Harden, Donovan Mitchell, and Sam Merrill. He could even give Nick Nurse an option as a small-ball five, though a lot depends on the other pieces the Sixers will presumably add this offseason.

Wade is hardly a prolific scorer. Among players who have averaged 20 minutes per game in 200+ games over the last four seasons, only Nicolas Batum has scored fewer than Wade’s 5.4 points per game. But he is an effective enough shooter — .375 on about six three-point attempts over 100 possessions this postseason — to create space for others on the offensive end.

Backup center options for the Sixers include some familiar faces

A quiet start to the Sixers' free agency finally turned newsworthy after 10 p.m., when The Inquirer confirmed that forward Dean Wade had agreed to a four-year, $39 million contract.

Other than looming decisions on starting forward Kelly Oubre Jr. and sixth man Quentin Grimes, backup center is now the Sixers' biggest positional priority. Who could be gettable with the Sixers' remaining salary? Here's a rundown:

Guerschon Yabusele

How Wade signing impacts Oubre, Grimes, and the Sixers cap space

Dean Wade’s addition makes it less likely that the Sixers will be able to bring back starting forward Kelly Oubre Jr., and sixth man Quentin Grimes, who also entered unrestricted free agency. Yahoo! reported Tuesday night that Oubre planned to meet with at least the Sixers, Los Angeles Lakers, Indiana Pacers, and Portland Trail Blazers.

The Sixers have between $5 and $6 million remaining of the mid-level exception to use on an outside free agent. They are $16.6 million total under the first apron.

Andre Drummond, Trendon Watford, and Kyle Lowry (who is expected to retire) are the other free agents for a Sixers team with limited financial flexibility. All-NBA guard Tyrese Maxey ($40.8 million), former MVP Joel Embiid ($57.7 million), and former perennial All-Star Paul George ($54.1 million) all remain on max contracts, accounting for the vast majority of the nearly $165 million salary cap.

Day 1 recap: Stars move early, but Sixers strike late

Stars have been on the move this summer and that theme continued on the first day of NBA free agency.

After Giannis Antetokounmpo, LaMelo Ball and Ja Morant were all traded to new teams, the early free-agency fireworks on Tuesday centered on Kawhi Leonard's return to the Toronto Raptors via trade and LeBron James' decision to part ways with the Los Angeles Lakers, as reported by ESPN's Shams Charania.

James' decision slowed the NBA's usual flurry of free-agent deals down to a trickle as teams and players waited to see where he would decide to play his 24th NBA season.

Sixers add Dean Wade from the Cavs

Mike Gansey’s first free-agency move as the 76ers’ president of basketball operations was adding a player with whom he is quite familiar.

Late Tuesday night, Dean Wade has agreed to a four-year, $39 million contract, a league source confirmed to The Inquirer. The deal comes out of the nontaxpayer mid-level exception, and will hard cap the Sixers at the first apron.

Wade was one of Gansey’s success stories in his previous job as the Cleveland Cavaliers’ general manager. The 29-year-old Wade evolved from undrafted player to rotation forward, and last season averaged 5.8 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 1.5 assists in 22.3 minutes across 59 games. His 6-foot-9, 230-pound frame allows for defensive versatility, and he is a career 36.7% three-point shooter.

» READ MORE: Dean Wade joining Sixers turns quiet first night of free agency into a Mike Gansey reunion

Gina Mizell