CCTV warned that, “Freedom of speech does not mean that it can be arbitrary nonsense.”
Morey’s tweet, on Oct. 4, caused an immediate backlash: Several companies in China cut ties with the Rockets, and CCTV chose not to broadcast exhibition games in Shanghai and Shenzhen between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Brooklyn Nets the next week. (The league was initially panned in the United States by politicians across the spectrum for not more firmly standing behind Morey, pushing Silver to release a new statement days later.)
In recent days, the Chinese government has sought to de-escalate the tensions at the rare intersection of sports, business, and international and domestic politics. Reporters at state-run news outlets were told more than a week ago to stop focusing on the N.B.A. issue.
The N.B.A.’s partnership with China is being threatened against a backdrop of far broader Sino-American tensions, including a 17-month trade war between the United States and China and growing disputes over security and technology issues. Beijing has worried that if the debate over Morey’s tweet continues to fester, the Hong Kong protesters may attract support from athletes around the world and potentially from their fans as well. Beijing officials have even begun to fret that the Hong Kong dispute may lead to calls for a boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
Silver said at the TIME summit on Thursday that he was uncertain whether the N.B.A. would ever return to China, which the league has targeted for international expansion for decades.
And the issue does not appear to be disappearing for the league. During a preseason game in Brooklyn on Friday night featuring the Nets and the Toronto Raptors, at least 100 demonstrators showed up to express support for the Hong Kong protests, which have been going on for months targeting the central government in Beijing.
Protesters charge that the ruling Communist Party is trying to curtail civil liberties in the semiautonomous territory. Joe Tsai, the new owner of the Nets, inflamed the conflict soon after Morey’s tweet, when he posted an open letter on Facebook on Oct. 6, referring to the demonstrators in Hong Kong as a “separatist movement,” while also being critical of Morey.
Keith Bradsher contributed reporting from Shanghai.