76ers vs Grizzlies Preview

A Philadelphia squad in freefall clings to the playoff race, battered by injuries and coming off four losses in five. Memphis staggers in shorthanded, deep into a lost year, searching for flashes of pride and progress. This is not playoff theater—it's survival mode, and only one team keeps its trajectory on track tonight.

Memphis Grizzlies

Memphis Grizzlies

VS
Philadelphia 76ers

Philadelphia 76ers

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Win Probability (BAC Model)

37%

63%

Moderate Favorite

Competitiveness

6/10

Above Average

Viewing Value

6.4

Background Noise

HEAD-TO-HEAD COMPARISON
Grizzlies
76ers
113.5

ORtg

114.2
115.9

DRtg

114.6
101.5

Pace

99.9
-2.4

Net Rtg

-0.4
36.5

Win%

53.1
-2.7

TQS

-0.5
WLLLL
Last 5
LLWLL
B2B (road 2 of 2)
Rest
B2B
Stat visualization


Record 23-40 34-30 Viewing Value 6.4 — Background Noise Game Competitiveness 6/10

Matchup Overview

Philadelphia limps into this contest with its core gutted: no Joel Embiid, Tyrese Maxey, or Paul George. This is a test of depth and grit for a supposed contender fading down the stretch. The Grizzlies? They’re missing key starters of their own, but their season’s ambitions faded weeks ago. For Philly, every win is oxygen; for Memphis, it’s about auditioning future pieces.

Stats Corner

  • 76ers’ record without Embiid and Maxey (last 5): 1–4
  • Grizzlies’ defensive rating: 115.9 (bottom-third in NBA since All-Star break)
  • Philly’s team quality score (TQS): -0.47 vs. Memphis’ -2.74
  • Both teams average over 115 points allowed per game this past fortnight
  • Grizzlies’ opponents’ offensive rebound rate: 32% (last 5 games—league-worst)
  • BAC Win Probability: Sixers 63% / Grizzlies 37%

The Edge & What Could Break It

BAC Model pick: Philadelphia 76ers. The Sixers win if their patchwork lineup punishes a Memphis defense that can’t control its own glass.

Why Philly?
Andre Drummond’s recent uptick in rebounding—averaging 10+ boards in this injury stretch—gives Philly second chances against a Grizz roster giving up the highest ORB% in the league over the last week.
– The Grizzlies have lost four of their last five, including a 15-point home loss to the Nets and a leaky transition D.
– Even shorthanded, Philly’s remaining bench (Kelly Oubre, Quentin Grimes, Cameron Payne) has outperformed Memphis’ desperate rotations.

Real risks?
Both teams are on back-to-backs, but Philly’s thinner rotation is at higher risk of late-game fatigue. Kyle Lowry’s 38-year-old legs can only carry so much.
If Memphis gets a surprise return from Scotty Pippen Jr. or Santi Aldama, that’s a scoring spark Philly can’t easily match from its own inactive list.

Confidence tag: Decisive. 63/37 split matches the reality—Memphis is punchless, Philly’s injuries are a problem, but the Grizz frontcourt is an open door.

The Bottom Line

Philly needs this. Memphis wants it, but urgency wins out tonight. The rebounding gap and home court tip the scales.

Take Philadelphia to steady the ship and bank a crucial late-season win.