45. Phil Pressey
Justin DiVirgilio
Phil Pressey’s stint with the 76ers was also very forgettable. Pressey was signed by the team due to the injury and really was just a flyer taken on by the club. Pressey played in only 14 games with the team, while averaging 3.9 points and 3.3 assists.
44. Arnett Moultrie
Justin DiVirgilio
Arnett Moultrie was apart of the team for the last pre-“Process” season of 2012-13 and for a short time of the first Process season of 2013-14. Moultrie tallied up a total of 59 games playing in a 76ers uniform. For the Sixers, he averaged 3.6 points and 3.1 rebounds. Moultrie was one of the first big men through “The Process'” assembly line and shipped out to another team.
43T. Byron Mullens
Stuart London
Hinkie almost always got the better part of trades, but on Feb. 20, 2014, he flabbergasted most observers by shipping a protected second-rounder (Hinkie loved second round picks like his own children) to the Los Angeles Clippers for 7-foot center Byron Mullens. He had not been good in L.A. and was no better in Philly (averaged 6.8 points and 3.3 rebounds), nor did it particularly bother him. He declined his player option that summer and never played in the NBA again.
43T. Lorenzo Brown
Stuart London
A 6-foot-5 guard, Lorenzo Brown was in the first year of “The Process” as he was signed as a free agent on Nov. 20, 2013. He was officially moved between the Sixers and the G-League (to the then-Delaware 87ers) 11 times. He was good for the Sevens averaging 19.9 points per game, while with the Sixers he averaged 2.5 points per game. Brown actually played 26 games for the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors before being waived in January, 2019. He has signed to play in Serbia this upcoming year.
42. James Nunnally
Justin DiVirgilio
James Nunnally is yet another nine game “Process” member. Nunnally was signed to two 10-day contracts in the midst of the Sixers 26 game losing streak in 2013-14. While with Philly, he averaged 2.9 points per game.
41. Daniel Orton
Justin DiVirgilio
Daniel Orton played for the 76ers in the 2013-14 season for 22 games. Orton was acquired after the Oklahoma City Thunder waived him. Orton, like many others, had a small opportunity and failed to capitalize on it. He only averaged 3.0 points and 2.8 rebounds per game with the Sixers.