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Thunder puzzled by lack of review on Giannis Antetokounmpo's last-second dunk

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Westbrook says OKC dug 'too big of a hole' in 1st quarter (1:21)

Russell Westbrook recaps Oklahoma City's tough loss to Milwaukee and talks about the controversial non-call to end the game. (1:21)

OKLAHOMA CITY -- A controversial non-call after Giannis Antetokounmpo stepped on the baseline before finishing a dunk with 1.1 seconds left gave the Milwaukee Bucks a 97-95 win over the Thunder, snapping OKC's six-game winning streak.

"I guess we'll see something on the ticker that says referees missed that one," Carmelo Anthony said. "We can't do nothing about that at this point, so we might as well forget about it and move on and get ready for -- who we play Sunday? Dallas? Get ready for Dallas."

After a full-court heave from Russell Westbrook fell just short in hitting the net, Anthony and Steven Adams spent a few moments following the final buzzer talking with the officiating crew. Crew chief Derrick Stafford said after the game via a pool reporter that the play with Antetokounmpo was not reviewable.

"In any reviewable matter, there has to be a whistle called on the floor," Stafford said. "There was no whistle blown for the play, so we couldn't review it."

Anthony was correct about the NBA review, as the two-minute report for the game noted the missed out-of-bounds call on Antetokounmpo. The report listed four missed non-calls in all, including a lane violation on Westbrook and two potential violations on Antetokounmpo on previous plays.

With 4.7 seconds left in Friday's contest, Westbrook had tied the game on a 3-pointer, giving him 40 points on 16-of-34 shooting. The Bucks called timeout and set up a play for Antetokounmpo, who spun baseline on Josh Huestis and finished a dunk over Westbrook.

"You can't control reffing," Huestis said. "At the end of the day, I'm a perfectionist. I put it on myself to maybe play a little better defense and stop him from spinning baseline, period. So that's something I take seriously, and I think I need to work on not even letting him get there in the first place. Missed calls happen. It's not something you can control."

Antetokounmpo finished with 23 points on 10-of-16 shooting, 12 rebounds and six assists as the Bucks swept a road back-to-back against the Minnesota Timberwolves and Thunder.

"Simple," Antetokounmpo said. "Came down to the last play. Coach trusted me, having the ball late and making a play. I'm just trying to go and do what I do best. Drive the ball to the rim and try to make something happen."

With Paul George sidelined with knee soreness, Westbrook, who also posted 14 rebounds and nine assists, took charge in bringing the Thunder back from a 22-point deficit to tie the game in the final seconds. He got a piece of Antetokounmpo's winning dunk but couldn't keep it out of the basket.

"I couldn't see that," Westbrook said of Antetokounmpo stepping out. "I was trying to stop it, but I have to think you've seen it, so it's over now. It don't matter."

"They made a dunk, won the game," he added.

This is the second game this season that has ended controversially for the Thunder, with the league acknowledging an illegal screen seconds prior to Andrew Wiggins hitting a half-court shot to lift the Timberwolves over OKC on Oct. 22.

After a scattered 8-12 start to the season, the Thunder entered Friday's game 12-3 in December. During the Thunder's six-game winning streak, the offense had been clicking better than at any point in the season, with their three stars finding a balance and clear acceptance of roles.

But the Thunder found out Friday morning, shortly before their shootaround, that they would be without George.

Asked if George's absence made it difficult to adjust offensively, Westbrook was brief.

"Obviously," he said.

George expressed his puzzlement over the Antetokounmpo dunk.

A game in March between the Washington Wizards and Portland Trail Blazers ended in similar controversial fashion to Friday's contest. The Blazers pleaded to officials that Markieff Morris stepped out of bounds before his go-ahead baseline jumper with 0.4 seconds left. The officials said there was nothing they could do.

As ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reported, a recent meeting was held to address escalating tension between officials and players. Two of the three officials in Friday's game -- Leon Wood and Stafford -- were on the Christmas Day crew for the Golden State Warriors-Cleveland Cavaliers tilt in Oakland, California, that missed two foul calls Kevin Durant committed on LeBron James. Wood was standing a couple of feet from the play with Antetokounmpo.

"I look at things totally differently," Thunder coach Billy Donovan said of Friday's replay controversy following the Bucks' winning play. "The league, and the officials, have to deal with that. That's what they're in control of; we're not. I'm more concerned about the fact that we didn't play well in the first quarter and there are some things we need to do better.

"Obviously, he stepped out of bounds. Everybody knows that. I didn't get a chance to personally see the replay. I was trying to ask for a review. They couldn't review it, but that's something the league has to deal with."