Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
116-112 Richards on my card. Coming in, I thought Ramirez would win.
-
Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 101021
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
Team Richards prepare WBA appeal following Ramirez 'robbery'
Lerrone Richards will this week launch an appeal to the WBA following his shocking split decision defeat by Albert Ramirez in Montreal.
Richards, 33, somehow ended up on the end of a defeat in the eyes of the judges despite appearing to dominate throughout their 12 rounds at Montreal Casino Thursday night.
Judge Nicolas Esnault had the Londoner winning 116-112 but both Rodolfo Aguilar and Ricardo Duncan scored 115-113 in favor of Ramirez in what was widely considered one of the worst decisions of the year.
The pair had met in a rearranged clash for the WBA interim light heavyweight title and now The Ring has learned that Richards (19-2, 4 KOs) and his management team will lobby the sanctioning body about last week's result.
Having returned to the UK on Friday evening, Richards traveled to central London Monday morning for a meeting with S-Jam to decide how to proceed. It is understood that their appeal will be lodged in the next 48 hours.
Richards told The Ring: "Honestly the last few days have just felt like a blur. It's been three days and been a blur.
"I'm waking up every morning and it’s almost like I'm thinking 'did this actually happen?' It was a robbery, simple as that.
"I need justice in this because he did not win the fight. I've watched it back and even being harsh on myself I won that fight 10-2 in rounds, at worst it was 9-3. That's enough to win a fight, it's not even close.
"I think the result should be overturned and if not, it should be a no contest because I should not have that on my record. The correct thing to do would be order an immediate rematch for the belt."
Richards was supposed to face Venezuelan Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) on February 5 but the fight was postponed just 24 hours prior. The WBA confirmed the news after Ramirez was diagnosed with acute appendicitis.
Once Ramirez had recovered, the fight was then rescheduled for June 4. It looked like it had been worth the wait for Richards, who screamed in celebrations at the end of a contest he was certain to have dominated.
After the result was read out, Ramirez is said to have apologized to Richards' trainer Dave Coldwell and admitted the Brit should have got the nod.
Despite the judges' decision, Richards has now entered The Ring's 175-pound rankings at No. 8 while Ramirez, 34, has dropped from No. 3 to No. 9.
Lerrone Richards will this week launch an appeal to the WBA following his shocking split decision defeat by Albert Ramirez in Montreal.
Richards, 33, somehow ended up on the end of a defeat in the eyes of the judges despite appearing to dominate throughout their 12 rounds at Montreal Casino Thursday night.
Judge Nicolas Esnault had the Londoner winning 116-112 but both Rodolfo Aguilar and Ricardo Duncan scored 115-113 in favor of Ramirez in what was widely considered one of the worst decisions of the year.
The pair had met in a rearranged clash for the WBA interim light heavyweight title and now The Ring has learned that Richards (19-2, 4 KOs) and his management team will lobby the sanctioning body about last week's result.
Having returned to the UK on Friday evening, Richards traveled to central London Monday morning for a meeting with S-Jam to decide how to proceed. It is understood that their appeal will be lodged in the next 48 hours.
Richards told The Ring: "Honestly the last few days have just felt like a blur. It's been three days and been a blur.
"I'm waking up every morning and it’s almost like I'm thinking 'did this actually happen?' It was a robbery, simple as that.
"I need justice in this because he did not win the fight. I've watched it back and even being harsh on myself I won that fight 10-2 in rounds, at worst it was 9-3. That's enough to win a fight, it's not even close.
"I think the result should be overturned and if not, it should be a no contest because I should not have that on my record. The correct thing to do would be order an immediate rematch for the belt."
Richards was supposed to face Venezuelan Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) on February 5 but the fight was postponed just 24 hours prior. The WBA confirmed the news after Ramirez was diagnosed with acute appendicitis.
Once Ramirez had recovered, the fight was then rescheduled for June 4. It looked like it had been worth the wait for Richards, who screamed in celebrations at the end of a contest he was certain to have dominated.
After the result was read out, Ramirez is said to have apologized to Richards' trainer Dave Coldwell and admitted the Brit should have got the nod.
Despite the judges' decision, Richards has now entered The Ring's 175-pound rankings at No. 8 while Ramirez, 34, has dropped from No. 3 to No. 9.
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
It's good that his management team is doing this and he might get a rematch. There is no recourse in many of these shit decisions. I remember when Campillo beat Shumenov 9-3 in defending his lt. heavy alphabet belt in 2010 and got screwed by Las Vegas judges and there was never talk of a rematch because he had no pullRuthless-RKO wrote: ↑08 Jun 2026, 09:10 Team Richards prepare WBA appeal following Ramirez 'robbery'
Lerrone Richards will this week launch an appeal to the WBA following his shocking split decision defeat by Albert Ramirez in Montreal.
Richards, 33, somehow ended up on the end of a defeat in the eyes of the judges despite appearing to dominate throughout their 12 rounds at Montreal Casino Thursday night.
Judge Nicolas Esnault had the Londoner winning 116-112 but both Rodolfo Aguilar and Ricardo Duncan scored 115-113 in favor of Ramirez in what was widely considered one of the worst decisions of the year.
The pair had met in a rearranged clash for the WBA interim light heavyweight title and now The Ring has learned that Richards (19-2, 4 KOs) and his management team will lobby the sanctioning body about last week's result.
Having returned to the UK on Friday evening, Richards traveled to central London Monday morning for a meeting with S-Jam to decide how to proceed. It is understood that their appeal will be lodged in the next 48 hours.
Richards told The Ring: "Honestly the last few days have just felt like a blur. It's been three days and been a blur.
"I'm waking up every morning and it’s almost like I'm thinking 'did this actually happen?' It was a robbery, simple as that.
"I need justice in this because he did not win the fight. I've watched it back and even being harsh on myself I won that fight 10-2 in rounds, at worst it was 9-3. That's enough to win a fight, it's not even close.
"I think the result should be overturned and if not, it should be a no contest because I should not have that on my record. The correct thing to do would be order an immediate rematch for the belt."
Richards was supposed to face Venezuelan Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) on February 5 but the fight was postponed just 24 hours prior. The WBA confirmed the news after Ramirez was diagnosed with acute appendicitis.
Once Ramirez had recovered, the fight was then rescheduled for June 4. It looked like it had been worth the wait for Richards, who screamed in celebrations at the end of a contest he was certain to have dominated.
After the result was read out, Ramirez is said to have apologized to Richards' trainer Dave Coldwell and admitted the Brit should have got the nod.
Despite the judges' decision, Richards has now entered The Ring's 175-pound rankings at No. 8 while Ramirez, 34, has dropped from No. 3 to No. 9.
-
Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 101021
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
Lerrone Richards: 'How will I feed my family?'
Lerrone Richards has been left questioning his next step after his controversial defeat to Albert Ramirez in Canada last week for the WBA interim light heavyweight title.
Almost everyone watching had Richards a clear winner after 12 completed rounds, however, two of the three ringside judges scored the contest in Ramirez's favour.
Richards has been a forgotten man of British boxing in recent years, struggling to land any fights and managing just one contest a year.
Despite his recent inactivity, Richards put on a clinic on away soil, and felt he was in complete control against the undefeated Ramirez.
"I was doing what I wanted, when I wanted, how I wanted,” Richards told Boxing Scene. “Ramirez was trying to apply pressure and I nullified it, beating him from a distance, beating him inside.
"I just took each round as they came. I didn't look too far ahead and each round I felt like I was building momentum. After the bell rang in the 12th round, I thought, 'Yeah, I'm going to be interim world champion.' There were no nerves. I knew I was going to win the fight. I won it so clear. I just had my hand up and wanted to hear it announced.”
Richards thought he had finally changed his life, then the scorecards were read.
"I'd been dreaming about this for weeks,” he said. “Then when I heard 115-113 to him and 116-112 to me, and after that when they said, '115-113 and still...' honestly, my heart, everything, my whole body, just no energy left my body."
The result caused uproar back home in the UK with fans slating the decision on social media. The locals in Canada were also unhappy with the judges’ verdict.
"I walked through the crowd and there was a lot of interaction, people shouting, 'You won, you won.' It was all a blur,” Richards, 19-2 (4 KOs), recalled. “I walked up the stairs, the doctor wanted to have a look at me, and I remember not really wanting to see the doctor because I hardly got hit. Then I went upstairs, walked to the changing rooms and I just broke down. I'll be honest, I'm not going to lie, I broke down."
Even Ramirez, now 23-0 (19 KOs), admitted that he had been lucky to walk away with his belt and undefeated record intact.
"He spoke to my coach and, to be fair to him, told my coach, 'I didn't win that fight. Richards has won. I'm sorry.'” said Richards. "I watched the fight about five times and you can tell he knew after that fight. He was almost like, 'Whoa, I've won?' He almost didn't look happy."
Richards, who has long struggled to get the top names at super middleweight and light heavyweight, is now left in no man's land after the result.
"This is people's lives, man. People's mental health. People don't realise what it does to people,” the 33-year-old said. “People didn't want to fight me before. They just saw me school one of the top guys in the division. Who wants to fight me now?
"If no one wants to fight me, how am I going to get my income to provide for my family? Because as fighters, we have to fight to earn money. If there's no fight, there's no income. There is no money. How am I going to put food on the table for my family?"
Richards revealed that his team is working on an appeal with WBA and that he wants an immediate rematch and the loss struck off his record. He would also be happy to travel back to Canada to settle the score.
"I'll fight anyone, anywhere. I've proven that,” he said. "I just hope that out of a bad situation, something good can come of this."
Lerrone Richards has been left questioning his next step after his controversial defeat to Albert Ramirez in Canada last week for the WBA interim light heavyweight title.
Almost everyone watching had Richards a clear winner after 12 completed rounds, however, two of the three ringside judges scored the contest in Ramirez's favour.
Richards has been a forgotten man of British boxing in recent years, struggling to land any fights and managing just one contest a year.
Despite his recent inactivity, Richards put on a clinic on away soil, and felt he was in complete control against the undefeated Ramirez.
"I was doing what I wanted, when I wanted, how I wanted,” Richards told Boxing Scene. “Ramirez was trying to apply pressure and I nullified it, beating him from a distance, beating him inside.
"I just took each round as they came. I didn't look too far ahead and each round I felt like I was building momentum. After the bell rang in the 12th round, I thought, 'Yeah, I'm going to be interim world champion.' There were no nerves. I knew I was going to win the fight. I won it so clear. I just had my hand up and wanted to hear it announced.”
Richards thought he had finally changed his life, then the scorecards were read.
"I'd been dreaming about this for weeks,” he said. “Then when I heard 115-113 to him and 116-112 to me, and after that when they said, '115-113 and still...' honestly, my heart, everything, my whole body, just no energy left my body."
The result caused uproar back home in the UK with fans slating the decision on social media. The locals in Canada were also unhappy with the judges’ verdict.
"I walked through the crowd and there was a lot of interaction, people shouting, 'You won, you won.' It was all a blur,” Richards, 19-2 (4 KOs), recalled. “I walked up the stairs, the doctor wanted to have a look at me, and I remember not really wanting to see the doctor because I hardly got hit. Then I went upstairs, walked to the changing rooms and I just broke down. I'll be honest, I'm not going to lie, I broke down."
Even Ramirez, now 23-0 (19 KOs), admitted that he had been lucky to walk away with his belt and undefeated record intact.
"He spoke to my coach and, to be fair to him, told my coach, 'I didn't win that fight. Richards has won. I'm sorry.'” said Richards. "I watched the fight about five times and you can tell he knew after that fight. He was almost like, 'Whoa, I've won?' He almost didn't look happy."
Richards, who has long struggled to get the top names at super middleweight and light heavyweight, is now left in no man's land after the result.
"This is people's lives, man. People's mental health. People don't realise what it does to people,” the 33-year-old said. “People didn't want to fight me before. They just saw me school one of the top guys in the division. Who wants to fight me now?
"If no one wants to fight me, how am I going to get my income to provide for my family? Because as fighters, we have to fight to earn money. If there's no fight, there's no income. There is no money. How am I going to put food on the table for my family?"
Richards revealed that his team is working on an appeal with WBA and that he wants an immediate rematch and the loss struck off his record. He would also be happy to travel back to Canada to settle the score.
"I'll fight anyone, anywhere. I've proven that,” he said. "I just hope that out of a bad situation, something good can come of this."
-
Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 101021
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
Lerrone Richards on Albert Ramirez heartbreak: 'I cried like a baby'
It was supposed to be the moment Lerrone Richards’ life changed but the only thing he felt was the energy draining from his body.
The 33-year-old southpaw, a longtime member of boxing’s Who Needs Him? Club, had finally landed the opportunity he had craved for years and it looked as though he had not let it slip.
But after 12 rounds against undefeated Albert Ramirez, two of the three scoring judges somehow thought the Venezuelan had done enough to beat Richards 115-113, or 7-5 in rounds.
“I’m standing there and the decision is getting read out,” Richards tells The Ring. “I’m thinking ‘yeah, I’ve definitely won that fight.’
“I hear the first scorecard, 115-113 Ramirez, and I thought ‘oh no, this can’t be happening.’
“I was shocked, I just shook my head. Then they said 116-112 to me. That’s good but even then I’m thinking that score is a lot closer than reality.
“And then when I heard 115-113 again, I was like, ‘Oh, my gosh.’ Then they said, ‘And still.’ I don’t know what happened then. My hand just dropped and all I felt was all the energy rush out of my body.
“I was … in shock.”
As was almost everyone who watched the showdown at Montreal Casino on Thursday night. Even Ramirez, the beneficiary of the decision, could not believe it.
“Ramirez came over and apologised,” Richards adds. “Because even he knew he lost. He even told my coach Dave Coldwell. He apologised to Dave and said ‘I'm sorry. Richards won that fight.’
"Fair play to him for saying that but at the same time, it doesn't make it easier, you know? I mean, I was heartbroken.”
Boxing history is littered with incorrect decisions, some are close but others are hard to comprehend. The two 115-113 scorecards in favour of Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) fall into the latter.
“My performance was tactically perfect,” says Richards, who scored himself a 118-110 winner after watching the fight back. “I was comfortable. I was out-landing, boxing outside, inside, shutting things down when I needed to, I wasn't getting caught with anything clean. I was controlling the whole fight.
“When the bell went, I remember I was so happy because all the hard work throughout the years had paid off. Not just in the two training camps I had for Ramirez, because the first fight was postponed, but all that hard work had all paid off.
“I ran to the corner, jumped on the ropes and screamed to high heavens, thinking that my life has changed, my children's lives have changed. My mum and dad's lives have changed. Everyone's life is going to change now.
“I've done my part. I've achieved what I've always wanted to achieve. For it to be taken away from me is not right.”
As revealed by The Ring on Monday, Richards and his S-Jam management team are now preparing an appeal to the WBA, who sanctioned the fight for their interim light-heavyweight title. Richards hopes for an immediate rematch at the very least but believes the defeat should be scrubbed from his record.
“I kind of held myself together once I heard the result,” he says. “I walked upstairs to the changing room like a zombie, if I'm honest.
“And I'm not going to lie, man, when I got there I just started crying. I was devastated. I’m a grown man and I’m not much of a crier but I cried like a baby.
“I do this for my family, I do it for my mum, my dad, my two baby boys. Of course I do it for myself but people are counting on me. If I get beaten by the better man I can look at myself and know I need to improve here or there.
“But if I win a fight by 10 rounds, what can you do? At that point they should give me the decision.”
Despite his record currently showing a defeat, Richards was a new entry in The Ring’s latest light-heavyweight rankings, entering at No. 8 while Ramirez dropped from No. 3 to No. 9.
“The silver lining is that people saw a glimpse of how good I can be,” Richards says. “That was not even 60 per cent of me in that ring and I can do much more and that’s frightening.
“I just took someone ranked No. 3 with Ring Magazine to school. My new ranking means the world to me and now I hope the WBA make the correct decision and I can put it right in the ring.”
It was supposed to be the moment Lerrone Richards’ life changed but the only thing he felt was the energy draining from his body.
The 33-year-old southpaw, a longtime member of boxing’s Who Needs Him? Club, had finally landed the opportunity he had craved for years and it looked as though he had not let it slip.
But after 12 rounds against undefeated Albert Ramirez, two of the three scoring judges somehow thought the Venezuelan had done enough to beat Richards 115-113, or 7-5 in rounds.
“I’m standing there and the decision is getting read out,” Richards tells The Ring. “I’m thinking ‘yeah, I’ve definitely won that fight.’
“I hear the first scorecard, 115-113 Ramirez, and I thought ‘oh no, this can’t be happening.’
“I was shocked, I just shook my head. Then they said 116-112 to me. That’s good but even then I’m thinking that score is a lot closer than reality.
“And then when I heard 115-113 again, I was like, ‘Oh, my gosh.’ Then they said, ‘And still.’ I don’t know what happened then. My hand just dropped and all I felt was all the energy rush out of my body.
“I was … in shock.”
As was almost everyone who watched the showdown at Montreal Casino on Thursday night. Even Ramirez, the beneficiary of the decision, could not believe it.
“Ramirez came over and apologised,” Richards adds. “Because even he knew he lost. He even told my coach Dave Coldwell. He apologised to Dave and said ‘I'm sorry. Richards won that fight.’
"Fair play to him for saying that but at the same time, it doesn't make it easier, you know? I mean, I was heartbroken.”
Boxing history is littered with incorrect decisions, some are close but others are hard to comprehend. The two 115-113 scorecards in favour of Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) fall into the latter.
“My performance was tactically perfect,” says Richards, who scored himself a 118-110 winner after watching the fight back. “I was comfortable. I was out-landing, boxing outside, inside, shutting things down when I needed to, I wasn't getting caught with anything clean. I was controlling the whole fight.
“When the bell went, I remember I was so happy because all the hard work throughout the years had paid off. Not just in the two training camps I had for Ramirez, because the first fight was postponed, but all that hard work had all paid off.
“I ran to the corner, jumped on the ropes and screamed to high heavens, thinking that my life has changed, my children's lives have changed. My mum and dad's lives have changed. Everyone's life is going to change now.
“I've done my part. I've achieved what I've always wanted to achieve. For it to be taken away from me is not right.”
As revealed by The Ring on Monday, Richards and his S-Jam management team are now preparing an appeal to the WBA, who sanctioned the fight for their interim light-heavyweight title. Richards hopes for an immediate rematch at the very least but believes the defeat should be scrubbed from his record.
“I kind of held myself together once I heard the result,” he says. “I walked upstairs to the changing room like a zombie, if I'm honest.
“And I'm not going to lie, man, when I got there I just started crying. I was devastated. I’m a grown man and I’m not much of a crier but I cried like a baby.
“I do this for my family, I do it for my mum, my dad, my two baby boys. Of course I do it for myself but people are counting on me. If I get beaten by the better man I can look at myself and know I need to improve here or there.
“But if I win a fight by 10 rounds, what can you do? At that point they should give me the decision.”
Despite his record currently showing a defeat, Richards was a new entry in The Ring’s latest light-heavyweight rankings, entering at No. 8 while Ramirez dropped from No. 3 to No. 9.
“The silver lining is that people saw a glimpse of how good I can be,” Richards says. “That was not even 60 per cent of me in that ring and I can do much more and that’s frightening.
“I just took someone ranked No. 3 with Ring Magazine to school. My new ranking means the world to me and now I hope the WBA make the correct decision and I can put it right in the ring.”
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
In my mind, this is the most frustrating and aggravating part of the sport. The B-side fighter goes on the road and puts together an outstanding performance, but the A-side fighter gets protected with an unwarranted hometown verdict, a split decision in this instance.
Now, Richards and his team are left to petition for an immediate rematch, which may or may not be granted. And if it is ordered, there's no guarantee Richards can put together a similar performance again, and, if Ramirez is the highly-rated fighter he is supposed to be, one would think he can make adjustments to negate or neutralize the success the Englishman had in the first fight.
The bottom line to me, the judges got it wrong the first time, and Richards paid the price. A rematch, if it does happen, doesn't actually right that initial wrong.
Now, Richards and his team are left to petition for an immediate rematch, which may or may not be granted. And if it is ordered, there's no guarantee Richards can put together a similar performance again, and, if Ramirez is the highly-rated fighter he is supposed to be, one would think he can make adjustments to negate or neutralize the success the Englishman had in the first fight.
The bottom line to me, the judges got it wrong the first time, and Richards paid the price. A rematch, if it does happen, doesn't actually right that initial wrong.
-
Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 101021
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
Re: Albert Ramirez vs. Lerrone Richards | DAZN - 4 June 2026
Richards' trainer Coldwell irate after loss: 'You're ruining lives'
Nearly a week on, the emotions are settling in for trainer David Coldwell after his fighter Lerrone Richards lost a contentious split decision against Albert Ramirez.
Most believe Richards did more than enough to hand Ramirez his first defeat. Instead, two of the three judges saw it the other way last Thursday at Montreal Casino in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, which left Richards and his trainer aghast.
“It hit me hard today,” Coldwell told The Ring.
“I'm seeing just what reality is, really. I was back in the gym with Steven Cairns [earlier this week], and you just feel you should have another champion in the gym. We should be on a high. We should be absolutely buzzing, and again, we were talking about it, it was just flat disbelief and disappointment for Lerrone because we know that he did literally everything he was supposed to do to win the fight.”
It was a long and winding road to arrive at a fight that should have changed Richards’ life for the better. Richards (19-2, 4 KOs) and Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) were originally scheduled to fight in February, but acute appendicitis caused the latter to withdraw on the day of the weigh-in. The last-minute cancellation meant an entire training camp and trip to Canada were for naught.
Four months later, Richards finally got his shot against Ramirez, at the time The Ring’s No. 3-ranked light heavyweight.
Richards, a slick southpaw from London, largely thwarted the hard-hitting southpaw from Venezuela, who entered the fight having won four straight fights by knockout.
Coldwell felt Richards was largely in control, but still wanted him to keep his foot on the gas in the championship rounds.
“I was adamant with him, keep winning the rounds,” Coldwell said. “It wasn't a case of 'right, we’re X amount of rounds in front, take the foot off the pedal.' That's why we came to the end of the 11th, I said to him, ‘Listen, I need you to win this round. I need you not to take your foot off the pedal. Keep pushing to win the round. Don't let him outwork you.
“I had a feeling that obviously they're going to look to shaft him in some way, and I thought you don't want it to be one of those where you take your foot off the pedal the last round and then it's a draw because you lost the last round or he nicks a decision in the last round. I knew they were going to try and screw him, but so you just wouldn't keep winning the rounds, they can't screw you.”
The final bell rang, and Coldwell believed Richards won at least nine of the 12 rounds and was going to leave enemy territory with the best win of his career. Then, as time passed before the decision was announced, Coldwell’s hope slowly started to dissipate and his feeling that Richards was going to get robbed began to grow.
Judge Ricardo Duncan’s scorecard read 115-113 for Ramirez, then the second judge, Nicolas Esnault, had it 116-112 for Richards. Coldwell believed the fight was going to be scored a draw before the final scorecard was read.
He pleaded internally that Richards wouldn’t get ‘shafted’ by the decision. The final judge, Rodolfo Aguilar, had it 115-113 for Ramirez, and Coldwell’s worst nightmare became a reality.
“I think the first thing that came out of my mouth was bull—t,” Coldwell said. “I just shouted bs across the ring, and it was just BS. It was a BS decision, that's what it was. What pisses me off about this sport is there's no accountability for judges. Yet, everybody else in the sport is accountable to their actions. Everybody else, a boxer has a bad night and loses through a poor performance, it's on him and his team, but these judges, they get away with murder.
“You’re ruining people's lives.”
Coldwell hopes that Richards can land a rematch with Ramirez, though, he’d prefer it to go to purse bids and that it would land on more neutral ground. Richards appealed the decision to the WBA and is seeking an immediate rematch against Ramirez.
If that comes to fruition, he believes Richards’ confidence from the 12 rounds against Ramirez and knowing he can fight on the inside could lead to an even more impressive performance the second time around.
“If there's a rematch, Lerrone will absolutely torture him next time,” Coldwell said. “He'll be even better next time.”
For now, though, Coldwell and Richards will have to deal with the heartbreak that too many fighters have had to deal with after being on the wrong end of a bad decision. They now have to hope Richards can attain another opportunity to change his life for the better.
“Had he come up with the interim WBA light heavyweight title, he is now in the big leagues,” Coldwell said. “He’s at the top table. He's got something there. His purses go up, his exposure goes up, opportunities go right through the roof, involving big fights and money that can change his family's life.
“This is what these fighters are in for. They're living the life from young kids chasing a dream, get an opportunity, and now that he's been screwed, the money drops down again and it affects fighters' lives.”
Since the fight, Ramirez has dropped to No. 9 in The Ring's light heavyweight rankings, while Richards has entered the top 10 at No. 8.
Nearly a week on, the emotions are settling in for trainer David Coldwell after his fighter Lerrone Richards lost a contentious split decision against Albert Ramirez.
Most believe Richards did more than enough to hand Ramirez his first defeat. Instead, two of the three judges saw it the other way last Thursday at Montreal Casino in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, which left Richards and his trainer aghast.
“It hit me hard today,” Coldwell told The Ring.
“I'm seeing just what reality is, really. I was back in the gym with Steven Cairns [earlier this week], and you just feel you should have another champion in the gym. We should be on a high. We should be absolutely buzzing, and again, we were talking about it, it was just flat disbelief and disappointment for Lerrone because we know that he did literally everything he was supposed to do to win the fight.”
It was a long and winding road to arrive at a fight that should have changed Richards’ life for the better. Richards (19-2, 4 KOs) and Ramirez (23-0, 19 KOs) were originally scheduled to fight in February, but acute appendicitis caused the latter to withdraw on the day of the weigh-in. The last-minute cancellation meant an entire training camp and trip to Canada were for naught.
Four months later, Richards finally got his shot against Ramirez, at the time The Ring’s No. 3-ranked light heavyweight.
Richards, a slick southpaw from London, largely thwarted the hard-hitting southpaw from Venezuela, who entered the fight having won four straight fights by knockout.
Coldwell felt Richards was largely in control, but still wanted him to keep his foot on the gas in the championship rounds.
“I was adamant with him, keep winning the rounds,” Coldwell said. “It wasn't a case of 'right, we’re X amount of rounds in front, take the foot off the pedal.' That's why we came to the end of the 11th, I said to him, ‘Listen, I need you to win this round. I need you not to take your foot off the pedal. Keep pushing to win the round. Don't let him outwork you.
“I had a feeling that obviously they're going to look to shaft him in some way, and I thought you don't want it to be one of those where you take your foot off the pedal the last round and then it's a draw because you lost the last round or he nicks a decision in the last round. I knew they were going to try and screw him, but so you just wouldn't keep winning the rounds, they can't screw you.”
The final bell rang, and Coldwell believed Richards won at least nine of the 12 rounds and was going to leave enemy territory with the best win of his career. Then, as time passed before the decision was announced, Coldwell’s hope slowly started to dissipate and his feeling that Richards was going to get robbed began to grow.
Judge Ricardo Duncan’s scorecard read 115-113 for Ramirez, then the second judge, Nicolas Esnault, had it 116-112 for Richards. Coldwell believed the fight was going to be scored a draw before the final scorecard was read.
He pleaded internally that Richards wouldn’t get ‘shafted’ by the decision. The final judge, Rodolfo Aguilar, had it 115-113 for Ramirez, and Coldwell’s worst nightmare became a reality.
“I think the first thing that came out of my mouth was bull—t,” Coldwell said. “I just shouted bs across the ring, and it was just BS. It was a BS decision, that's what it was. What pisses me off about this sport is there's no accountability for judges. Yet, everybody else in the sport is accountable to their actions. Everybody else, a boxer has a bad night and loses through a poor performance, it's on him and his team, but these judges, they get away with murder.
“You’re ruining people's lives.”
Coldwell hopes that Richards can land a rematch with Ramirez, though, he’d prefer it to go to purse bids and that it would land on more neutral ground. Richards appealed the decision to the WBA and is seeking an immediate rematch against Ramirez.
If that comes to fruition, he believes Richards’ confidence from the 12 rounds against Ramirez and knowing he can fight on the inside could lead to an even more impressive performance the second time around.
“If there's a rematch, Lerrone will absolutely torture him next time,” Coldwell said. “He'll be even better next time.”
For now, though, Coldwell and Richards will have to deal with the heartbreak that too many fighters have had to deal with after being on the wrong end of a bad decision. They now have to hope Richards can attain another opportunity to change his life for the better.
“Had he come up with the interim WBA light heavyweight title, he is now in the big leagues,” Coldwell said. “He’s at the top table. He's got something there. His purses go up, his exposure goes up, opportunities go right through the roof, involving big fights and money that can change his family's life.
“This is what these fighters are in for. They're living the life from young kids chasing a dream, get an opportunity, and now that he's been screwed, the money drops down again and it affects fighters' lives.”
Since the fight, Ramirez has dropped to No. 9 in The Ring's light heavyweight rankings, while Richards has entered the top 10 at No. 8.
-
Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 101021
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59