Negotiations over a potential collaboration between the ownership of the 76ers and the Flyers accelerated during the holidays after NBA Commissioner Adam Silver helped thaw relations.
The Philadelphia 76ers and Comcast have come together on plans to build a new arena in South Philadelphia, abandoning plans to build a $1.3 billion arena
The Philadelphia 76ers are staying in South Philadelphia in the latest -- and likely final -- twist in their quest to build a new arena. The Josh Harris-owned 76ers and the NHL's Flyers (owned by Comcast Spectacor) made an announcement Monday morning that the two teams will continue sharing a home in the South Philly Stadium Complex and will build a new arena slated to open by 2031 in a "50-50 joint venture.
On Sunday afternoon, shocking news broke regarding the Philadelphia 76ers and their new venue. Weeks after getting city council approval for a downtown arena, t
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver spoke Monday, Jan. 13, 2025, about the announcement of the Philadelphia 76ers partnering with Comcast Spectacor, Comcast and the Philadelphia Flyers to build a new South Philadelphia arena and hopefully lure a WNBA team to Philadelphia's new "world-class arena.
Adam Silver played a big part in convincing the 76ers to change plans for their new arena. They will stay in South Philly.
Over the past year, one of the biggest stories regarding the Philadelphia 76ers was their ... After a meeting with NBA commissioner Adam Silver and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, the organization ...
The Philadelphia 76ers will partner with Comcast ... Parker was joined Monday by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, who appeared remotely, and team and Comcast leaders who promised the new plan would ...
It is a head-spin development from the fight the 76ers have lodged over the last two years when it sought to build a new arena in Chinatown and close to the city’s center, and as it went to battle with Comcast,
New Jersey had pitched a massive, multibillion-dollar mixed-use development and arena project on the Camden waterfront for the HSBE-owned team that also came along with generous incentives of up to $800 million in tax credits and up to $500 million of special purpose bonds.
The Sixers had gotten approval for a controversial new arena Center City, on the border of Chinatown, but changed plans.
The deal that will keep the 76ers in South Philadelphia has its roots in Landover, Maryland.