The executive order President Donald Trump signed Thursday, which banned travel from seven Muslim-majority countries for 90 days and suspends admission of all refugees for 120 days, drew the ire of the sports world.
Before a federal judge blocked the controversial ban, athletes from a wide spectrum of American athletics have criticized Trump’s decision as an infringement of freedom and American values.
Saturday, the NBA contacted the U.S. government to determine how the immigration ban may affect its players, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of The Vertical.
The following statement from NBA spokesman Mike Bass comes via Wojnarowski:
Bucks VP Alex Lasry confirmed Maker, the first-round pick who has started to see more significant minutes and has even cracked the starting lineup recently, was able to make it back into the U.S. following the Bucks’ international road trip to Toronto.
As Wojnarowski points out, the NBA has made a concerted effort to recruit and develop players with Sudanese roots. The league’s Basketball Without Borders initiative in particular would be affected by Trump’s desired legislation.
Though the federal judge blocked the order on a temporary stay, this is expected to be a long legal fight.
