WALTHAM -- The NBA's latest last-two-minute report gave the Boston Celtics some frustrating news: On Jaylen Brown's drive to the basket in the final minute of Game 4, officials missed a foul call that would have put Brown at the line shooting two free throws.

Instead, the Milwaukee Bucks got a transition opportunity and cashed in with a 3-pointer from Malcolm Brogdon, which eventually helped them pull out a 104-102 victory, evening the series at 2-2.

Jaylen Brown expressed his displeasure on Twitter.

Brad Stevens however, speaking to reporters prior to Celtics shoot around on Tuesday, said he has moved on.

"From a coach's standpoint, I don't pay any attention to them," Stevens said. "I've moved on a long time ago. Those are part of (the game), and I appreciate the NBA's interest in being transparent. I understand certainly those that argue against it. I also know that it's really important to the NBA and its leadership and that's part of our league -- transparency matters. But I don't even look at them. Occasionally it'll be brought up in these sessions or brought up in conference but I have no idea like the number of calls or anything like that. I don't think I've ever seen a last 2 minute report."

A reporter offered to send Stevens one.

"Shoot me one, that'd be great," Stevens said. "It won't matter, I've moved on."

L2M reports have been a source of frustration for fans for multiple reasons.

First, they don't affect the outcome -- the league, of course, can't send the teams back to Milwaukee to replay the final 45 seconds.

Second, the Celtics had plenty of opportunities to win prior to Brown's drive. Boston went cold again in the first half, and Stevens said the Bucks played "at a different speed than us" for 18 minutes. Boston rallied all the way back, but with a better first-half performance, they likely wouldn't have needed a rally.

Third, officiating an NBA game is incredibly hard, and referees miss calls all the time. In Game 4, officials missed an offensive foul on Giannis Antetokounmpo prior to Brown's drive, and they missed a foul on Jayson Tatum a minute earlier that allowed the Celtics to turn the Bucks over.

"Officiating is an incredibly hard job," Stevens said before Game 4. "These guys do a great job. Officiating, there's so many things going on on each play it's hard to call. You won't hear me complain about the officiating."

Other shoot around notes:

- Terry Rozier said his performance in Games 3 and 4 had been eating at him. The Celtics guard averaged 23 points per game on 47 percent shooting in the first two games of the series before shooting just 26 percent from the field and averaging 9.5 points per game in Milwaukee.

"It's been bothering me a little bit," Rozier said. "But one thing I told myself these games, I wanted to run with a clear mind. Not gonna worry about what happened in the first four games. Obviously I've been watching film. I'll come back out with that fight, put pressure on the defense, create for myself and others and I think that's gonna help us put us over the top to go to the next level, the next series."

- Stevens noted once again that the Celtics' offense was perhaps the biggest issue in Milwaukee.

"I think you need to defend at a better rate than we have, but also obviously our offense has put us in a bind on a number of occasions with blocked shots," Stevens said. "The turnovers -- not as bad in the last game as the game before -- we need to play really well to beat these guys."