Can a day go by without players and referees having problems with each other? The latest incident of that sort happened last night during the fourth quarter of the Oklahoma City Thunder's 95-88 victory over the Sacramento Kings at Chesapeake Energy Arena.

With about three minutes left in the game, Russell Westbrook aggressively drove to the rim, catching an unintentional hand in the face by De'Aaron Fox and a bump by Willie Cauley-Stein in mid-air. Westbrook did not even attempt a shot and grabbed his face while falling to the ground. The official near the OKC baseline, Matt Boland, apparently did not see any foul. He called a traveling violation on Westbrook for jumping and falling to the ground without releasing the basketball.

Thunder coach Billy Donovan was irate. Westbrook got back to his feet and had some strong words for the ref. After being screamed at enough by the reigning MVP, Boland called a technical foul on Westbrook and ejected him immediately after.

After the game, Carmelo Anthony spoke about the issue and said he was “done” with the refs. Per ESPN's Royce Young, Anthony said:

“I'm done with them. I'm done with the refs. No disrespect, but I'm done with those guys.”

Does Anthony deserve a fine for saying he is “done” with officials? He did not criticize them, but given the ongoing issues between players and refs, the 15-year veteran will probably get his fine soon.

Westbrook left the game one assist away from yet another triple-double. He recorded 19 points, 16 rebounds, nine assists, one steal and 10 turnovers. For the second straight game in OKC, Westbrook left the locker room before media got access.

Coach Donovan got a tech himself and added that the ref approached him and apologized for committing a mistake:

“I was yelling to the other official across the floor to get his attention and the guy just T'd me up. And he came by and apologized to me, so I definitely didn't deserve a T.”

These are the type of situations players and referees expect to solve in a meeting that will take place during the All-Star break.