The Decision Only You Saw...
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Goodnight, Irene
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9463
- Joined: 24 Sep 2007, 04:43
The Decision Only You Saw...
Recently someone was telling me about a fight they saw where they were the only one they knew who scored it for fighter B, & that they felt they must be going crazy because they were quite sure of themselves, but no one --- from the officials at ringside, to other fight fans, to even the losing fighter --- agreed.
Most of us that have been around boxing for a while have been in that situation at least once --- where you felt that no one saw what you seemed to. What are some of those fights where not the judges or the fans agreed with your scoring?
I remember back in 2002 I had Mosley winning the rematch with Forrest. Now, mind you, I haven't seen that fight since, so I won't cling too strongly to that now, nor do I remember my scorecard. I just remember fighting an uphill battle on a forum with all the other members. Me & my loopey scorecard against the world ;)
Any similar stories from past fights?
Most of us that have been around boxing for a while have been in that situation at least once --- where you felt that no one saw what you seemed to. What are some of those fights where not the judges or the fans agreed with your scoring?
I remember back in 2002 I had Mosley winning the rematch with Forrest. Now, mind you, I haven't seen that fight since, so I won't cling too strongly to that now, nor do I remember my scorecard. I just remember fighting an uphill battle on a forum with all the other members. Me & my loopey scorecard against the world ;)
Any similar stories from past fights?
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dagosd2000
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 8638
- Joined: 01 Sep 2007, 03:31
I know a lot of people think Meldrick Taylor got robbed of a decision win with Chavez when Steele stopped the fight with seconds left.(Taylor was ahead on the score cards) But I thought Chavez was breaking him downstairs pretty good. Taylor looked horrible after the stoppage and was never the same fighter again.
Hey,this is a good example for my post about fighters never being the same after their first loss. I could have used this fight as an example.
Hey,this is a good example for my post about fighters never being the same after their first loss. I could have used this fight as an example.
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dempseyfire
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5534
- Joined: 29 Oct 2003, 22:56
Re: The Decision Only You Saw...
I remember at the time I thought Lovemore N'dou outpointed Cotto when they fought. Haven't seen the fight since so I won't hold to that stance too strongly until I rewatch it, but it was definetely MUCH closer than what the incredibly biased Lederman and HBO were saying it was.Goodnight, Irene wrote:Recently someone was telling me about a fight they saw where they were the only one they knew who scored it for fighter B, & that they felt they must be going crazy because they were quite sure of themselves, but no one --- from the officials at ringside, to other fight fans, to even the losing fighter --- agreed.
Most of us that have been around boxing for a while have been in that situation at least once --- where you felt that no one saw what you seemed to. What are some of those fights where not the judges or the fans agreed with your scoring?
I remember back in 2002 I had Mosley winning the rematch with Forrest. Now, mind you, I haven't seen that fight since, so I won't cling too strongly to that now, nor do I remember my scorecard. I just remember fighting an uphill battle on a forum with all the other members. Me & my loopey scorecard against the world ;)
Any similar stories from past fights?
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ringsider
- Heavyweight

Chavez beat ther shit out of Taylor, it was a merciful stoppage.dagosd2000 wrote:I know a lot of people think Meldrick Taylor got robbed of a decision win with Chavez when Steele stopped the fight with seconds left.(Taylor was ahead on the score cards) But I thought Chavez was breaking him downstairs pretty good. Taylor looked horrible after the stoppage and was never the same fighter again.
Hey,this is a good example for my post about fighters never being the same after their first loss. I could have used this fight as an example.
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oliverfennell
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5564
- Joined: 15 Feb 2007, 06:37
Re: The Decision Only You Saw...
These immediately come to mind: I had Mosley over Forrest in the rematch, Forrest over Mayorga in the rematch, Barrera over Pacquiao in the rematch, Audley Harrison over Danny Williams in the first fight and Sprott over Skelton in the rematch. There's probably some others too.Goodnight, Irene wrote:Recently someone was telling me about a fight they saw where they were the only one they knew who scored it for fighter B, & that they felt they must be going crazy because they were quite sure of themselves, but no one --- from the officials at ringside, to other fight fans, to even the losing fighter --- agreed.
Most of us that have been around boxing for a while have been in that situation at least once --- where you felt that no one saw what you seemed to. What are some of those fights where not the judges or the fans agreed with your scoring?
I remember back in 2002 I had Mosley winning the rematch with Forrest. Now, mind you, I haven't seen that fight since, so I won't cling too strongly to that now, nor do I remember my scorecard. I just remember fighting an uphill battle on a forum with all the other members. Me & my loopey scorecard against the world ;)
Any similar stories from past fights?
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dempseyfire
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5534
- Joined: 29 Oct 2003, 22:56
Re: The Decision Only You Saw...
I also have Forrest over Mayorga in their rematch.oliverfennell wrote:These immediately come to mind: I had Mosley over Forrest in the rematch, Forrest over Mayorga in the rematch, Barrera over Pacquiao in the rematch, Audley Harrison over Danny Williams in the first fight and Sprott over Skelton in the rematch. There's probably some others too.Goodnight, Irene wrote:Recently someone was telling me about a fight they saw where they were the only one they knew who scored it for fighter B, & that they felt they must be going crazy because they were quite sure of themselves, but no one --- from the officials at ringside, to other fight fans, to even the losing fighter --- agreed.
Most of us that have been around boxing for a while have been in that situation at least once --- where you felt that no one saw what you seemed to. What are some of those fights where not the judges or the fans agreed with your scoring?
I remember back in 2002 I had Mosley winning the rematch with Forrest. Now, mind you, I haven't seen that fight since, so I won't cling too strongly to that now, nor do I remember my scorecard. I just remember fighting an uphill battle on a forum with all the other members. Me & my loopey scorecard against the world ;)
Any similar stories from past fights?
But Barrera over Pacquiao??? Huh????
I had Rocky Lockridge over Chavez by 2. Cubanito Perez (remember him ?) over Hector Camacho also by 2 I think. Terry McGroom over James Toney by 2. AND I thought Holyfield beat Lennox Lewis in the rematch by 2, after I had Lewis winning the first bout by 2.
Never understood why so few people in the media had no problem with the scoring in Larry Holmes v Carl "The Truth" Williams. I had the Truth a clear 4 pt winner after he swept the first 6. Watched it with my buddy and he agreed, and a guy on the bus next morning said Williams was robbed, but the papers, magazines, tv etc said almost nothing.
Never understood why so few people in the media had no problem with the scoring in Larry Holmes v Carl "The Truth" Williams. I had the Truth a clear 4 pt winner after he swept the first 6. Watched it with my buddy and he agreed, and a guy on the bus next morning said Williams was robbed, but the papers, magazines, tv etc said almost nothing.
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oliverfennell
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5564
- Joined: 15 Feb 2007, 06:37
Re: The Decision Only You Saw...
I thought Barrera was comfortably outboxing Manny early and built enough of a lead to get it by a couple of points.dempseyfire wrote:I also have Forrest over Mayorga in their rematch.oliverfennell wrote:These immediately come to mind: I had Mosley over Forrest in the rematch, Forrest over Mayorga in the rematch, Barrera over Pacquiao in the rematch, Audley Harrison over Danny Williams in the first fight and Sprott over Skelton in the rematch. There's probably some others too.Goodnight, Irene wrote:Recently someone was telling me about a fight they saw where they were the only one they knew who scored it for fighter B, & that they felt they must be going crazy because they were quite sure of themselves, but no one --- from the officials at ringside, to other fight fans, to even the losing fighter --- agreed.
Most of us that have been around boxing for a while have been in that situation at least once --- where you felt that no one saw what you seemed to. What are some of those fights where not the judges or the fans agreed with your scoring?
I remember back in 2002 I had Mosley winning the rematch with Forrest. Now, mind you, I haven't seen that fight since, so I won't cling too strongly to that now, nor do I remember my scorecard. I just remember fighting an uphill battle on a forum with all the other members. Me & my loopey scorecard against the world ;)
Any similar stories from past fights?
But Barrera over Pacquiao??? Huh????
But maybe somebody slipped some crack into my tea because all anybody ever talked about afterwards was Pacquaio's clear win.
As the thread says, it was a decision only I saw.
Re: The Decision Only You Saw...
Ain't that the truth...oliverfennell wrote:I thought Barrera was comfortably outboxing Manny early and built enough of a lead to get it by a couple of points.dempseyfire wrote:I also have Forrest over Mayorga in their rematch.oliverfennell wrote: These immediately come to mind: I had Mosley over Forrest in the rematch, Forrest over Mayorga in the rematch, Barrera over Pacquiao in the rematch, Audley Harrison over Danny Williams in the first fight and Sprott over Skelton in the rematch. There's probably some others too.
But Barrera over Pacquiao??? Huh????
But maybe somebody slipped some crack into my tea because all anybody ever talked about afterwards was Pacquaio's clear win.
As the thread says, it was a decision only I saw.
I had Malignaggi by 1 point over Cotto.. watching from home on a low-def Internet stream...
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dempseyfire
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5534
- Joined: 29 Oct 2003, 22:56
Re: The Decision Only You Saw...
Very fitting for the thread then!oliverfennell wrote:I thought Barrera was comfortably outboxing Manny early and built enough of a lead to get it by a couple of points.dempseyfire wrote:I also have Forrest over Mayorga in their rematch.oliverfennell wrote: These immediately come to mind: I had Mosley over Forrest in the rematch, Forrest over Mayorga in the rematch, Barrera over Pacquiao in the rematch, Audley Harrison over Danny Williams in the first fight and Sprott over Skelton in the rematch. There's probably some others too.
But Barrera over Pacquiao??? Huh????
But maybe somebody slipped some crack into my tea because all anybody ever talked about afterwards was Pacquaio's clear win.
As the thread says, it was a decision only I saw.
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Ambling Alp
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 3627
- Joined: 15 Jul 2005, 22:31
You aren't the only one that thought Williams was robbed. I had Williams winning 10 out of 15 rounds (145-140). I remember watching this fight and absolutely couldn't believe it when they read the cards. 2 judges had Holmes winning 11 of the 15 rounds, I even thought that possibly the ring announcer accidentally said Holmes by mistake instead of Williams. It was really a disgrace and even today you hardly hear anything about it.Seamus wrote:I had Rocky Lockridge over Chavez by 2. Cubanito Perez (remember him ?) over Hector Camacho also by 2 I think. Terry McGroom over James Toney by 2. AND I thought Holyfield beat Lennox Lewis in the rematch by 2, after I had Lewis winning the first bout by 2.
Never understood why so few people in the media had no problem with the scoring in Larry Holmes v Carl "The Truth" Williams. I had the Truth a clear 4 pt winner after he swept the first 6. Watched it with my buddy and he agreed, and a guy on the bus next morning said Williams was robbed, but the papers, magazines, tv etc said almost nothing.
A decision that I always thought was horrible was Camacho-Mancini. Camacho did absolutely nothing in this fight. Not that I am a big fan of "punchstat" but I wish they had it for this fight. Camacho's punch output was negligible. Not that Mancini looked good. He was often wild and didn't connect often. However at least he was trying. He was at least landing with punches hear and there. All Camacho did in this fight was run. The announcers (this fight was replayed on the USA Network) seemed to like Camacho and seemed to accept the decision. I have never heard anyone else complain about this decision and I have never understood this at all.
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generic screen name
- Heavyweight

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