Rich DeVos can stop looking for someone to buy the Orlando Magic franchise.

The Milwaukee Bucks already own his team.

They don't even have to play well anymore to beat the Magic. It's as easy as getting dinner at the take-out window.

The Bucks beat the Magic for the 10th consecutive time in a regular-season game, 115-110 Friday night, again proving their dominance and showing why they remain the team to beat in the Eastern Conference.

The Bucks don't try too hard to stop anyone, because they know they can outscore most everyone. They didn't worry about defense Friday -- until it really mattered.

They never led in the second half until Sam Cassell hit a 3-pointer with 47 seconds remaining for the 109-108 advantage they never lost.

On the Magic's next possession, the Bucks used their handcuff defense, forcing the Magic into an off-balance prayer by Darrell Armstrong as the shot clock expired. After that, it was over.

Ray Allen led everyone with 28 points, making six-of-eight from 3-point range. Cassell had 26 points, nine rebounds and eight assists.

The Magic were led by Mike Miller with 25 points, but he left with 3 minutes, 5 seconds left, hobbling off with an sprained left ankle. He is questionable for tonight's game in Memphis. Miller had 20 points by halftime, but the Bucks shut him down after the intermission.

Tracy McGrady had 22 points, making nine of 22 shots.

The Bucks (24-13) won with a 14-4 finish in the last two minutes. They overcame an 11-point deficit early in the fourth by scoring 42 points in the final 12 minutes.

Bucks Coach George Karl said he thought the Magic tired. Magic Coach Doc Rivers said he thought his team grew passive.

"It was almost like, ?We have a 10-point lead on the Bucks; let's just try and hang on,'" Rivers said. "We stopped being aggressive. The way they were playing defense, we could have scored all night if we just stayed aggressive."

The Magic were outshot 53.9 percent to 44.4 percent and outrebounded 44-38.

"We've got to learn how to close out a game," Horace Grant said. "That was one we should have won. We were right there. We led the whole way, but we didn't know how to finish."

The Magic led 90-79 early in the fourth. They even led 106-101 with 2:01 remaining when Troy Hudson hit a big 3-pointer. But Tim Thomas hit two layups and Cassell hit his 3-pointer, sending the Magic down once more.

The Magic still had a chance, but their next play -- a high pick-and-roll with McGrady and Armstrong -- went nowhere.

"We had the game won, and we lost it," McGrady said. "That's why it hurts, not because it was Milwaukee."