The Golden State Warriors may have left Canada on Wednesday with a 127-121 victory over the Toronto Raptors, but that doesn't mean they're thrilled with how the game unfolded.

Head coach Steve Kerr was visibly displeased with some of the calls - and non-calls - in the contest, and sounded off on the officiating a few days later.

"How is it that everybody on Earth can see these traveling violations except for the three people that we pay to do the job? I don't get it. It's bizarre," he said Friday on KNBR 680, as transcribed by CSN Bay Area.

Kerr said referees are trained to identify when players take too many steps without dribbling, but that they let several Raptors - especially star DeMar DeRozan - get away with multiple walks in Wednesday's matchup.

"I can literally put together a blooper reel of plays that are embarrassing travels that are just not called," the 51-year-old said. "I believe it's a case of they have so many things to look at - they are looking at defensive three seconds, the contact in the lane when people are cutting through the lane, they're looking at the charge and block circle - they're looking at everything except what they should be looking at which is the basic rule of the game, which is traveling.

"And it's a shame because guys are getting away with murder out there and the fans see it. My favorite is when you see the visiting team travel and you see like a 1,000 fans in the background all doing the traveling signal with their hands. If those people saw it, how come the refs didn't?"

DeRozan accounted for five of Toronto's 14 turnovers, versus 12 for the visitors.

Related: Kerr goes off on referee after Curry no-call

The Warriors bench boss made a point to mention that his players also committed the violation.

"I want to make it clear - our guys travel all the time, too," Kerr admitted. "So this is not me saying, 'Hey, we're getting a raw deal.' But to me, it's such an important rule. It's the foundation of the game, and when it's violated, it just feels like we're not actually playing the game; we're playing some other form of the game that is unfair ...

"The rules are already sort of geared towards the offense - you can't handcheck, you can't put a hand on a guy or it's a foul. We give so many advantages to the offense; to let them travel and to let them carry the ball, is kind of ridiculous to me."

It's not the first time Kerr has criticized officials. He was fined $25,000 for doing so during The Finals.