Why can’t Johni Broome wear his Auburn number with the 76ers?
Johni Broome led Auburn to the Final Four and piled up a trophy case full of accolades during the 2024-25 college basketball season. But after being drafted by the Philadelphia 76ers on Thursday night, Broome has had to leave behind the No. 4 jersey from his time with the Tigers.
With the Sixers, Broome will wear No. 22.
“Two plus two equals four,” Broome said about his new number while modeling the jersey on Friday, “and four is retired, my number growing up, so I went 22.”
Dolph Schayes played only one season for the Philadelphia 76ers, the franchise’s first in Philly and the last of Schayes’ 15 NBA seasons. Schayes was a 12-time NBA All-Star for the Syracuse Nationals, who became the Philadelphia 76ers in 1963. The Hall of Famer’s No. 4 is retired by the franchise.
During the 2024-25 season, Broome’s accolades included consensus first-team All-American, the SEC Player of the Year Award, the SEC Tournament Most Valuable Player Award, The Sporting News National Player of the Year Award, the Karl Malone Power Forward of the Year Award and the Pete Newell Big Man of the Year Award.
In his final season at Auburn, the 6-foot-10 center/power forward averaged 18.6 points, 10.8 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 2.1 blocked shots in 36 games. He led the SEC in rebounds and blocked shots. His 389 rebounds set a school single-season record, and Broome left the Tigers ranked second in rebounds, third in blocked shots and eighth in points in Auburn history.
But that got him only to 35th in the 2025 NBA Draft – the fifth pick of the second round.
“I don’t really take too much in on where I got picked at versus who picked me,” Broome said during a Friday press conference in Philadelphia. “Obviously, the 76ers felt like I was the right fit for their team, so I’m going to always have a chip of my shoulder wherever I got picked at, so I’m ready to work, prove people wrong.”
Seemingly offsetting his success at Auburn for NBA general managers were his results at the NBA Draft Combine, where Broome’s 28-inch maximum vertical jump ranked next-to-last among the tested players.
“I think we’re here to play basketball,” Broome said, “and they thought that I was a good basketball player. All the things that go inside of it could be taken however you want to take it, but at the end of the day we’re still playing basketball, so I think I contribute to winning. I’m a hard worker, I’m a good teammate and I’m a good guy to have in the organization, so I think that’s why they chose a guy like me.”
Broome said his first connection with the 76ers came when he talked with representatives of the team at a previous NBA Draft Combine.
“We had a great talk at the combine two years ago,” Broome said, “and they kind of told some things that I needed to work on to improve. And this past year I had another talk with them as well at the combine, and they was impressed by me making that jump, me doing the things that they kind of talked about I needed to grow in. So I think they can see the growth and the developmental part in me that still has room to improvement.”
The areas that Broome worked to improve after talking to the Sixers included “just getting my motor running a little bit more, just playing a little bit faster. Also rebounding a little bit more at a higher level. Working on my body, kind of getting in better shape, things like that,” Broome said.
Broome said the extra time in college, which gave him five seasons between high school and the NBA, allowed him to grow into the pro game.
“I think it just matured me in ways that my game needed to grow, areas that needed improvement,” Broome said. “But I think it allowed me to kind of face adversity, so maybe when times get tough or I’ve been through times where I’m not shooting well or I’ve lost a game or two in a row, so I kind of know how to overcome that and bounce back so you can’t get in your head too much. So I think that’s mainly what those years have helped my game with because when I was a little younger I was, maybe, I don’t know, took it a little differently, I’d say.”
Broome said he hadn’t talked with coach Nick Nurse about his projected role with the 76ers, which could include backing up center Joel Embiid as he returns from injury and stepping into the power-forward spot, which appears unsettled at this point.
“I’m going to have to put in a lot of work if I want to step on a court anywhere,” Broome said, “so that’s something I’m willing to do.”
Philadelphia, the Memphis Grizzlies, Oklahoma City Thunder and Utah Jazz will play in the Salt Lake Summer League on July 5, 7 and 8. Then the Sixers will join the rest of the league at the NBA 2K26 Summer League from July 10-20 in Las Vegas.
Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.