MANKATO – Timberwolves training camp invitee Kyrylo Fesenko arrived in Minnesota weeks ago so he could work out, lose some more weight and prepare himself to earn his way onto an NBA roster for the first time since he played three games for Indiana in 2012.
He has another good reason, too.
Fesenko says he wants to reclaim an NBA job so he can bring his mother, wife and other relatives to the United States from his hometown in Ukraine, the divided, strife-torn Eastern European country in which Fesenko was born on Christmas Eve 1986 and raised.
His hometown of Dnipropetrovsk is far from the disputed portions of Ukraine, a four-hour drive that has brought refugees but no fighting between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian separatists to the industrial central region of the country where his mother and wife live. Fesenko and his wife were married in June.
He is a half-world away from a home he last visited in August, but he's reminded of the conflict every time he thinks of a neighbor who was killed when a Malaysia Airlines jet mistakenly was shot down over the country in July.
"It was really tragic. That's when it actually finally hit me that it's for real," Fesenko said. "That it's not somewhere out there."
He estimated he spends three or four hours a day communicating on Skype with family and friends to keep up to date on what's happening with them and with his country.
"It's a huge concern for me," he said. "If the conflict will resolve itself, I'll be the happiest person in the world."