Former Milwaukee Bucks front office suit Craig Robinson, the brother-in-law of former President Barack Obama, has taken a front office position with the New York Knicks, according to Shams Charania of The Vertical.

Robinson is in line to fill many holes for the organization, including player development, but will not replace general manager Allan Houston of the Knicks’ G-League affiliate Westchester Knicks, according to ESPN's Ian Begley, countering prior reports.

New York has retooled the front office since showing the door to former president Phil Jackson, promoting Steve Mills to his prior seat and hiring former Sacramento Kings vice president Scott Perry as the team's general manager.

Robinson was hired in 2015 as the Bucks’ vice president of player and organizational development after a two-year stint with Brown University of the Ivy League and six years with the Oregon State Beavers, job which coincidentally started with Obama's start of his first term.

ESPN hired Robinson on Oct. 7 of 2014 as a college basketball analyst, where he first saw national notoriety. He then began to work broadcasting games and doing studio work on ESPNU before getting a call from the Bucks.

The 55-year-old was a renowned player from 1979-83 at Princeton University, where he was a two-time Ivy League Player of the Year.