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.
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access information on a device and to provide personalised ads and content, ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development. List of Partners (vendors)
The subplot involving Harris, Philadelphia and the 76ers is so twisted. But it shouldn't overshadow the main focus for Washington on Sunday.
Josh Harris owns both the Philadelphia 76ers and Washington Commanders among the many sports properties in his portfolio.
Sixers co-owner Josh Harris is the owner of the Washington Commanders, too. Will he actually make the Super Bowl before the Sixers make the NBA Finals?
Those Commanders, a wild-card Cinderella story with a new coach and rookie quarterback, visit Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday for the NFC championship game. It is the second time the teams have met in the postseason. Washington won a wild-card game in Philadelphia after the 1990 season.
When the Commanders take on the Eagles in Philly this Sunday, things could get a little awkward for the Commanders’ owner. Here's why.
The Eagles wouldn’t be in the NFC championship game without their rookie class, including a pair of breakout defensive backs in Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean, both of whom are finalists for Defensive Rookie of the Year.
The Washington Commanders are vying for a first NFC Championship in more than 30 years. Owner Josh Harris might upset some friends in Philadelphia.
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.
Washington Commanders owner Josh Harris has turned around the NFL franchise. Fans of his NBA team in Philadelphia are hoping for the same.
When the Commanders take on the Eagles in Philly this Sunday, things could get a little awkward for the Commanders’ owner. FOX 5's Josh Rosenthal explains why.