Washington Commanders owner Josh Harris took out a full-page ad in the Washington Post on Thursday, thanking fans for a successful 2024 season.
The Philadelphia Eagles fans blasted Josh Harris for blocking the 76ers from acknowledging the NFC Championship win.
"Ginger Jesus" will be across the field in New Orleans, Brian Schottenheimer beats out Kellen Moore in Dallas, Eagles O-line remains incredible, Bills mafia whines, and the Sixers owner plays villain.
Harris, who serves as managing partner for the 76ers, Washington Commanders and New Jersey Devils, has acknowledged his experience wrestling at Penn as the place where things started for him.
The Commanders will enter the offseason with the third-most salary cap space. The post Josh Harris Is ‘Proud of Everyone’ After Commanders Run Ends appeared first on Front Office Sports.
On the first day Josh Harris stepped behind the microphone to celebrate buying the 76ers, he promised fans the new ownership group cared deeply about the distressed franchise and vowed a holding that included Fanatics founder Michael Rubin and rapper Will Smith would return the team to greatness.
After the Commanders lost in the NFC Championship game vs. the Eagles, part-owner Magic Johnson went to social media to show his team pride.
The 76ers were noticeably quiet on social media after the Eagles clinched a Super Bowl berth on Sunday. Some have wondered if the Sixers' silence was directed by team owner Josh Harris, who also owns the Washington Commanders who the Eagles blew out 55-23 in the NFC Championship game.
The only thing standing in the Eagles' way of heading to the Super Bowl are the Commanders, which are owned by Sixers managing partner Josh Harris.
Josh Harris started to invest in sports teams and first became the owner of the Philadelphia 76ers. Then onwards, he kept adding other franchises to his portfolio and now has the likes of the Washington Commanders and the New Jersey Devils under his leadership.
If a 12-5 record and the wild-card win over the Bucs didn’t convince remaining skeptics, hammering the NFC's top seed did the trick.
NFL owners wanted a stable, well-run franchise in Washington, and that’s what they’ve gotten from Josh Harris’s group running the Commanders.