OAKLAND, Calif. -- Minnesota Timberwolves All-Star swingman Jimmy Butler says it will be up to him whether he plays in both ends of a back-to-back this week.

Butler, who has asked for a trade from the Timberwolves, sat out Wednesday's game because of general soreness and made it clear that he might decide to sit out one of the team's next two games as well. The Timberwolves play at the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday night and at the LA Clippers on Monday night.

"I let them know," Butler said after Friday's 116-99 loss to the Golden State Warriors. "They don't know how my body feels. So if I'm nicked up, then you can count on that. I don't know. We'll see how it goes. I don't know what we plan on doing tomorrow. Obviously, I got to get some treatment along with a lot of other guys. But we'll see whenever Sunday and Monday gets here."

Butler's name has swirled around trade talks for weeks, but Timberwolves coach and president of basketball operations Tom Thibodeau has been unable to find a deal to his liking. Butler, who also missed an Oct. 20 game against the Dallas Mavericks for precautionary rest, was asked if he would try to play if the circumstances surrounding his current situation were different.

"I'm not worried about no deal," Butler said. "Injury or not, I got to take care of myself. I realize they have a job to do as an organization; I have one to do as a player. But if I'm not in the right with my body to go out there and do it, I don't want to get hurt. I've been hurt almost every year now, so we're going to take things with caution."

Butler said he would "see how his body feels" before making a decision, but he did not reveal what particular injury he might be dealing with.

"If all of this talk wasn't going on and I sat out because my body was sore, you would not be asking me things like that," Butler said.

Butler scored 21 points in 35 minutes in Friday's loss, but the issues regarding his future continue to hover over everything the Timberwolves do.

He chafed during a back-and-forth when a reporter acknowledged that his injury status wouldn't be as much of a concern if his trade demand wasn't already public. The difference for Butler is that the demand is public, and he has made a career out of trying to play through injuries; sitting out games for precautionary rest or soreness is a sharp contrast from what he has done in the past.

"I know it's true," Butler said when the reporter acknowledged the trade demand factored into concern over his injury status. "So stop asking me questions about if I'm going to sit out or not. If I'm going to sit out, you probably won't talk to me on the day I sit out; but if I do, then I do and you can create a story around it with a lot of made-up stuff like y'all normally do."