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Up 27, Bulls blow it

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The Bulls had one final chance after Dunleavy turned the ball over on an inbound pass under the Milwaukee basket with 7.5 seconds left. Udoh knocked the ball out of bounds reaching for Dunleavy's pass, and the Bulls called a timeout.

"We just wanted to fight back and make it a great game," Lamb said. "We did that and came all the way back and got a lead. We told ourselves we could win the game."

Hamilton took an inbound pass and worked his way to the foul line, but missed a fadeaway over Lamb as time expired, the ball bouncing off the side of the rim.

Carlos Boozer had 19 points and 11 rebounds for the Bulls. Deng added 10 points and eight boards.

"It's tough, man," Boozer said. "I wish we could go back out there and finish it differently."

The game was reminiscent of the biggest lead the Bulls ever blew at home, a 35-point advantage in a home loss to the Sacramento Kings on Dec. 21, 2009.

Hamilton and Boozer combined for 17 points in the third quarter as the Bulls seemingly blew the game open.

The Bulls outscored Milwaukee 28-13 in the third and opened the 27-point lead on Hinrich's 3-pointer with 2:50 to go in the quarter. That gave Hinrich his season high for points, just the third time he's reached double digits this season.

Just before Hinrich's 3, The Bulls' third 3-pointer in less than 2 minutes, Skiles inserted Ilyasova, Lamb and Udrih into the game, the last time he substituted.

"No, I never thought of putting the starters back in," Skiles said. "There was a noticeable uptick in our pressure and we weren't giving up offensive rebounds, and we got off on the break with that group that was in there."

Hamilton scored eight of his 17 first-half points in the second quarter as the Bulls took a 48-40 lead at halftime.

Milwaukee hit just 20 percent from 3-point range (3 of 15). The Bucks entered the game shooting 16 percent from beyond the arc over their last three games (10 of 62).

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