The NBA informed teams today in a memo that, as things currently stand, players who are unvaccinated against COVID-19 without a valid medical reason will remain ineligible to play games in Toronto for the 2022/23 season, according to Jake Fischer of Bleacher Report (Twitter link).
Fischer’s report is missing some key contextual information. For one, the policy that prevents unvaccinated players from playing in Toronto was not implemented by the Raptors or the NBA, but by the Canadian government, which has restrictions against non-residents entering the county without being vaccinated.
Last season, there were no exemptions from this rule for NBA players, and it appears that won’t change going forward.
It’s also worth noting that the United States has a border policy on unvaccinated travelers that’s virtually identical to Canada’s (it’s why, for instance, tennis star Novak Djokovic isn’t expected to be eligible to play in the US Open later this month). However, since most NBA travel takes place domestically within the US, that policy does not prevent unvaccinated players from suiting up in any cities besides Toronto unless that city has a specific vaccine mandate of its own, as New York did for much of the 2022 /23 season.
There has been no indication that the Canadian government will drop its vaccination requirement for travelers anytime soon, which is presumably why the NBA sent out a memo to teams now reminding them of that policy. But if that requirement is amended or dropped at some point during the 2022/23 season, there’s no reason to believe the NBA would institute any new restrictions preventing unvaccinated players from traveling back and forth across the US-Canada border.
A huge majority of NBA players are vaccinated against COVID-19 — the exact percentage was estimated last season to be around 97%. So only a small handful of players, including the Nets star Kyrie Irvingfigure to be affected by the border policy.