Trump " who is ahead of all other Republican presidential candidates in the polls " proposed preventing Muslims from entering the U.S. "until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on." After President Barack Obama gave a speech mentioning Muslim sports heroes, Trump tweeted: "What sport is he talking about, and who?"
"I read his tweet about the pro athletes. Come on, man. I think we have amazing athletes," Kanter said. "Like Muhammad Ali, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Hakeem Olajuwon. Legends."
Abdullah said the Trump comments were disappointing.
"When you have someone like him say some things " he has a very large following " it's kind of disappointing from my perspective," Abdullah said. "I just encourage everyone to educate yourself before you take a stance on something that you may not really know about. It's a very foreign thing for this country. A majority of this country are Christians."
Schroder says he hasn't noticed any hostility about his faith.
"I never hear nothing bad in Germany or here," he said. "I think a lot of people know that ISIS is not the same as Muslim people and that's the reason I have no problems with fans or anybody."
Harris condemned both violence from terrorists and the anti-Muslim backlash. He mentioned one recent incident in which a severed pig's head was left outside a mosque in Philadelphia.
"The overwhelming majority of Muslims condemn the acts of extremists who have taken parts of the religion and used them to justify heinous acts. At the same time we abhor the comments that play on the fear of others and in some instances have already caused some actions," Harris said. "It's important to speak out against that kind of hate speech now so that it doesn't escalate, and the positive thing is a lot of non-Muslims have been speaking out and speaking in unity with Muslims they know."
In the aftermath of Paris and San Bernardino, Harris said both Muslims and non-Muslims have reasons to feel jittery.
"I fear for everyone. I think everyone fears for everyone's safety, not just Muslims' " and that's the effect that the terrorists want to have on us, they want us to be afraid to go to public places, they want us to be afraid to show unity and they want us to be afraid and start trying to divide and start pointing fingers at each other," he said. "But every Muslim that I know abhors the violence and the terrorism that we're seeing, and it's so against Islam."
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AP Sports Writers Cliff Brunt, Charles Odum and Arnie Stapleton contributed to this report.