Timberwolves forward Anthony Tolliver is heading to New York City on a red-eye flight late tonight – Monday night -- for Tuesday's meeting of team player reps sounding as torn about how to proceed as he says his teammates and league peers seem to be.
Their most obvious options as Wednesday's league-issued, take-it-or-leave-it ultimatum approaches: Decide to put an offer that has universally angered players to a vote or proceed toward decertifying the union, a complicated move that if followed through would send the matter to the courts and almost certainly scuttle this season.
"Pretty much everything is split," he said on his way to the airport after playing in a charity game in Salt Lake City on Monday night. "Half of the people want to decertify. Half the people want to vote on it."
His unofficial polling includes some teammates and other players in the league. He said he hopes to speak to more of his teammates before the 30 team player reps meeting starting at noon Minneapolis time Tuesday afternoon.
Just like them, Tolliver also said he's not sure yet what to think.
"Probably my best bet is to sit down and figure out what's really important," he said. "I don't want to make any outlandish comments about it right now. I want to see what everybody else has to say before I decide what I want to do. At this point, I'm split down the middle like everybody else. I don't know what I want to do."
Tolliver suggested the best option is to try to talk more with owners, who have offered a 50-50 split of basketball revenues and perhaps more importantly a more restrictive system that would prevent the league's richest, highest-pay teams from far exceeding the salary cap to pay players.
NBA commissioner David Stern says the league will revert its offer to a 53-47 split in favor of the owner's and a hard "flex" cap if the players don't accept by Wednesday's close of business.