- Had been scheduled to travel to Melbourne for basketball tournament
Former NBA enforcer Metta Sandiford-Artest has claimed he is unable to travel to Australia because of his role in the league’s most infamous brawl, the ‘Malice at the Palace’.
Sandiford-Artest, previously known as Metta World Peace and earlier in his career as Ron Artest, made the explosive claim in a post on X before later deleting it.
He was planning to travel to Australia to headline the Summer Jam streetball festival in Melbourne from February 20.
In the now-removed message, he wrote: ‘So because of the Malice in Palace … I cannot travel to Australia.’
He also referenced what he described as ‘manipulated edits’ and suggested the fallout from the 2004 fight continues to affect his movements internationally.
The 46-year-old had been expected to attend Summer Jam between February 20–22, but his post has cast doubt over those plans.

Metta Sandiford-Artest claims he cannot travel to Australia due to fallout from the infamous Malice at the Palace

Sandiford-Artest received an 86-game suspension, the longest ever for an on-court NBA incident at that time

Sandiford-Artest had been scheduled to attend Summer Jam between February 20 and 22 before plans were disrupted
The ‘Malice at the Palace’ erupted on November 19, 2004, during a game between the Indiana Pacers and Detroit Pistons at The Palace of Auburn Hills.
With Indiana leading 97–82 late in the fourth quarter, Sandiford-Artest – then playing under the name Ron Artest – fouled Ben Wallace on a layup attempt. Wallace shoved him in response, triggering an on-court confrontation.
Moments later, while Sandiford-Artest lay on the scorer’s table attempting to calm down, a fan threw a drink that struck him.
He charged into the stands in retaliation, igniting a chaotic melee involving players and spectators. The game was abandoned with 45.9 seconds remaining.
The NBA responded with historic discipline. Sandiford-Artest was suspended for the remainder of the 2004–05 season, missing 86 games, the longest suspension for an on-court incident in league history at the time.
Nine players were suspended for a combined 146 games, and the league later introduced sweeping security reforms.
In criminal proceedings that followed, he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanour assault and battery charge. He received probation, community service, a fine and anger management counselling, but did not serve jail time.
Australia applies a ‘character test’ under its Migration Act when assessing visa applications. Individuals can automatically fail if they have a substantial criminal record or were sentenced to 12 months or more imprisonment.
Sandiford-Artest’s misdemeanour conviction and probation-only sentence would not typically meet that automatic threshold.
However, visa decisions remain discretionary, and authorities can request full disclosure and supporting documentation when considering entry.
There has been no public confirmation from Australian officials that he has been formally banned. For now, the claim rests solely on Sandiford-Artest’s deleted post.
Daily Mail has contacted the Australian Government Department of Home Affairs for comment.
Summer Jam is still scheduled to go ahead with NBA star Lance Stephenson as the headline act.

