“There was no freedom of movement. At one point, it was 11-2, the foul count, in the second half.
“We were playing five-on-eight out there. It was clear.”
Buford said he’d discussed the attention on the foul discrepancy with his players.
“We knew we were going to get hosed and we just said ‘we’ve got to weather the storm and stick together’ and I think we did a great job of that, to be fair ... It was a big storm in the second half,” he said.
Pressed on the physicality in the contest, Buford stood up and said: “I’m good”, before cutting his press conference short.
In a contest that looked, for a moment, it might go the way of game three, the Breakers ground the Kings down in the first half, holding Sydney to just 27 points, before another third-quarter surrender that has plagued their series.
The Kings had won the third quarter in each game by 5, 12 and 12 and, again, they found another gear in a dominant 25-15 period that trimmed a 12-point deficit to just two at the final break.
Derrick Walton Jr was brilliant with 18 points and kept the Kings in it, while Angus Glover continued a fine series with 12 - all from deep.
Both teams had players who looked to turn hero in the last. A re-energised Will McDowell-White buried a pair of three-pointers for the Breakers and then big Jordy Hunter, one of the delights of the series, had a one-man six-point run for the Kings.
But Sixth Man of the Year Barry Brown Jr refused to lose, sticking a three, throwing down a massive fast-break dunk as gun defender Justin Simon attempted to chase him down and then potting a ridiculous rainbow trey that re-established a double-digit lead and blew the roof off Spark Arena.
It was the dose the Breakers needed to stretch out the Kings, Brantley delivering the knockout blow with a minute to go.
The Kings will host the Breakers in game five on Wednesday night, with the winners to be crowned NBL23 champions.