MANKATO - The Timberwolves on Wednesday greeted news that the NBA intends to fine players for "flopping" with reactions that ranged from unconcerned to a willing suspension of disbelief.
Big Nikola Pekovic simply shrugged when told the league wants to warn a player once during the regular season and then fine him $5,000 for a first offense to as much as $30,000 for a fifth offense if he reacts too theatrically in an attempt to draw a favorable foul call.
"I never flop," Pekovic said. "No, I'm fine. I just know, for me, I don't have to worry because I know I'm not a flopper."
Little J.J. Barea, too, contended that he need not worry, even though sometimes you'd swear he's also a member of the Screen Actors Guild as well as the NBA players association.
"They've got to put in new rules every year, so that's their job," he said. "I'm going to play the same way since I was a kid, so whatever happens, happens."
Those hefty fines will never happen if the aforementioned players union gets its way. The union announced Wednesday evening that it will file a grievance with the league and an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Boards that challenge the proposed fine system because it was not collectively bargained during last year's labor-agreement negotiations.
The NBA's Competition Committee and Board of Governors both decided players who are deemed during a postgame video review -- at the league offices in New York -- to have flopped will receive an automatic penalty after one warning.
"Flops have no place in our game," NBA Basketball Operations Executive Vice President Stu Jackson said in a statement. "They either fool referees into calling undeserved fouls or fool fans into thinking the referees missed a foul call."