LOS ANGELES - In little more than 24 hours, Timberwolves forward Anthony Tolliver went from nearly becoming a Portland Trail Blazer to playing 23 minutes in Friday's loss to the Lakers in Los Angeles, his most playing time in two months.
On Thursday, as the minutes toward the NBA trade deadline clicked away, Tolliver and his expiring contract were set to be shipped to Portland to help make work a three-way deal that would have sent Michael Beasley to the Lakers and brought shooting guard Jamal Crawford from the Blazers.
"I heard some rumors," he said. "My agent mentioned it, so I wouldn't have been caught off guard."
Ultimately, the Wolves refused to take back Lakers veteran guard Derek Fisher's $3.4 million contract option for next season and the deal was scuttled as the clock ticked. The Lakers then shipped Fisher's contract to Houston instead to save themselves luxury-tax money.
And Tolliver stayed, and played more Friday against the Lakers than he had since playing 27 minutes against Detroit on Jan. 18.
Tolliver missed all four of his shots and went scoreless in those 23 minutes. He hadn't played that many minutes in the past two weeks combined. Wolves coach Rick Adelman called upon Tolliver for two reasons:
With Beasley out for the second consecutive night because of an injured toe, Adelman said he wanted Tolliver's length and activity at the small forward spot on a second unit that again couldn't keep pace in the second quarter, just like the night before at Utah.
And ... ?