CHICAGO -- Dwyane Wade is not a fan of the NBA's last two minute officiating reports. The All-Star guard reiterated that position in the wake of two close losses the Bulls suffered during their annual "Circus Trip" last week.

"I hate 'em," Wade said. "I hate the two-minute reports. I'll go on record again saying that. It's bad for our game to come back with those two-minute reports. Because they come back and they show the imperfectness of our game in two minutes. It's imperfect the whole game, let's not just breakdown the [last] two minutes. Players get called out and get fined for saying something to the refs, but the NBA is calling our refs out for making the wrong play or the right play, whatever the case may be.

"Let's just leave it alone. It's in the game, it's the call that's been made on the floor. We're mad at it then, let's move on. I hate the two-minute report that comes back and say, 'Ah, well, they should have called this.' Well, we lost. It's not making none of us feel better by saying, 'See, I told you.' We lost the game, so I hate 'em. But I've said that multiple times."

In losses to the Clippers on Nov. 19 and Denver on Nov. 22, several questionable calls went against the Bulls. The league acknowledged in the two-minute reports of both games that the referees missed a handful of calls that should have gone the Bulls' way. Wade, a 14-year veteran, believes the league should stop the reports altogether.

"It's the whole game, it's not just two minutes," Wade said. "There's things that affect the game from the beginning of the game that comes back in the [last] two minutes, which is unfortunate, but everyone's human. Some things you might have said earlier, you might have did earlier comes back and affects you late in the game. And it may come out in the two-minute report that it was the wrong thing. So what? It affected you and you lost."

Bulls head coach Fred Hoiberg said that his team had to put the information in the two-minute reports behind them, but acknowledged he did look to see what the league had to say.

"Sure, you look at it," Hoiberg said. "Every coach is going to look at the two-minute report. Sometimes it works in your favor. Those refs are human. There are going to be mistakes made. You just have to put it behind you and move onto the next one."