After getting clearly outboxed over the first
4 rds, Norton looked to have found his rhythm with a sustained body attack
that really looked to be wearing down Young, but for some reason he appeared
to abandon it around the 10th and the momentum shifted back to Young
1: Holmes 10-9
2: Williams 10-9
3: Williams 10-9
4: Williams 10-9
5: Williams 10-9
6: Williams 10-9
7: Holmes 10-9
8: Williams 10-9
9: Holmes 10-9
10: Holmes 10-9
11: Williams 10-9
12: Holmes 10-9
13: Williams 10-9
14: Holmes 10-9
15: Williams 10-9
DrDuke wrote: ↑11 Apr 2020, 17:20
Larry Holmes vs Carl Williams
1: Holmes 10-9
2: Williams 10-9
3: Williams 10-9
4: Williams 10-9
5: Williams 10-9
6: Williams 10-9
7: Holmes 10-9
8: Williams 10-9
9: Holmes 10-9
10: Holmes 10-9
11: Williams 10-9
12: Holmes 10-9
13: Williams 10-9
14: Holmes 10-9
15: Williams 10-9
Totals: Williams 144-141
Doc, I had this 145-142 for Williams and I see Seamus had it 146-142 also for Williams. Between the three of us I have to say, what fight were the judges watching?
scartissue wrote: ↑12 Apr 2020, 11:04
Doc, I had this 145-142 for Williams and I see Seamus had it 146-142 also for Williams. Between the three of us I have to say, what fight were the judges watching?
Lewis won every round 10-9, 120-108 respectively in whole.
#2
1: Lewis 10-9
2: Lewis 10-9
3: Lewis 10-9
4: Lewis 10-9
5: Lewis 10-9
6: Holyfield 10-9
7: Holyfield 10-9
8: Lewis 10-9
9: Lewis 10-9
10: Lewis 10-9
11: Lewis 10-9
12: Holyfield 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Williams 10-9
Williams 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Williams 10-9
Williams 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Even 10-10
Williams 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Williams 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Holmes 10-9
Round 1: 10-9 Oscar
Round 2: 10-9 Oscar
Round 3: 10-10 Even
Round 4: 10-9 Oscar
Round 5: 10-9 Oscar
Round 6: 10-9 Oscar
Round 7: 10-10 Even
Round 8: 10-9 Mosley
Round 9: 10-9 Mosley
Round 10: 10-9 Oscar
Round 11: 10-10 Even
Round 12: 10-9 Mosley
Total: 117-114 DeLaHoya
Actual scores were 115-113 X 3 all for Mosley. The Harold Lederman card was 115-113 for Oscar. I thought Oscar really did a good job of controlling the fight from the outside until Mosley finally got inside in the later rounds. It was clear to me that Mosley was not a junior middle. He no longer had that speedy pumping jab he had at lightweight and was really gunning for the KO the whole fight. Of course, what we know of him now getting caught up in the PED thing it is now understandable with the weight gain, whereas with Oscar it appeared to be more natural with his height and all. Regardless, I thought Oscar fought a smart fight and deserved the decision.
Here is a fight I missed back when it aired. I recall coming into the house and seeing the knockout (actually the replay of the KO), but missing the whole fight. Calvin Grove v Bernard Taylor for Grove's USBA 130 lb. title.
Round 1: 10-9 Taylor
Round 2: 10-10 Even
Round 3: 10-9 Taylor
Round 4: 10-9 Taylor
Round 5: 10-9 Grove
Round 6: 10-9 Taylor
Round 7: 10-9 Taylor
Round 8: 10-10 Even
Round 9: 10-9 Grove
Round 10: 10-9 Grove
Round 11: The fight is stopped after Taylor decks Grove twice.
Total (through 10 completed rounds): 97-95 Taylor
Now, to begin, I'm obviously at odds with the judges who had it 97-95 and 97-92 for Grove and one for 95-95. Although it was very fast moving and Grove was very sharp I felt Taylor's shots were more authoritative. Perhaps it had a different look at ringside, but this is how I saw it. Good fight.
I watched this recently and thought it was a great fight. Fast, clean punches from both fighters. I won't bore you breaking this down round by round because my score was 120-107 for McKinney (Rojas lost an extra point in the 5th for a low blow). Now, one may look at this score or the scores of the judges (119-108, 120-107, 118-109) and say it was one-sided, but nothing is further from the truth. McKinney didn't dominate any rounds until the 11th and 12th. Those first 10 rounds were as close as could be and many of them I felt McKinney just nicked. Rojas made a mess of McKinney's face during the fight and one might be inclined to think McKinney was the loser if they went by facial damage. But again, I had McKinney winning many of these rounds just barely, but because of his jab and pin-point punching. Good fight.
I think Rosario should have been grateful that the WBC just converted their championship contests to 12 rounds at this time. Ramirez was like a machine throughout this contest. He did not have Rosario's incredible one-punch power but he made up for it with a subtle, steady attack to the body - not to mention a rock-jaw - and was still flying in the 12th while the wheels were slowly coming off Rosario's chassis. I could see the fight being stopped if it went into the true championship rounds. But on my card Rosario's bombs did hold Ramirez honest enough where there was a share in points. Excellent fight. BTW, official cards were 115-113 for Rosario on all 3 cards.
Man, I was screaming at the screen for Orlando to get in there. When he stayed outside he was getting pot-shotted by Vasquez. A bit infuriating and lacking some major thrills, but a decent enough fight. Official scores were 116-115 and 115-113 for Vasquez and 117-113 for Canizales from the Texas judge. Harold Lederman had it 116-112 for Canizales and Larry Merchant agreed with him for Canizales but by one point. So you'll have to be your own judge on this one.