Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑18 Sep 2019, 01:34
lazboy wrote: ↑17 Sep 2019, 22:42
You have the benefit of hindsight and yet you people are continuing to argue this. There was no damage done to his eye. Fury himself didn't want the fight stopped. Fury went on to win the fight, fairly.
What is the problem? It was a good thing the fight continued. Fury kept his record, fans got their moneys worth, Wallin got 12 rounds of experience at a high level, etc, etc.
You are saying that there was no damage done to his eye but you don't really know that, nor do I, but he needed serious and urgent medical attention after the fight. Eye damage might make itself manifest later on. Many boxers suffer detached retinas. Sure Fury didn't want the fight stopped. Most fighters don't want the fight stopped even if their eyeball was almost hanging out and their brain was swelling up. Mago Abdusalomov didn't quit. That's what the doctors in attendance - or actors playing doctors as the case may be - are supposed to be there for. A conscientious corner too.
Yeah it was an exciting fight. I agree with your last sentence. But won't you admit that if cuts half as bad had happened to Wallin they would have stopped it? I think it should have been stopped and a second huge upset would have happened, an upset even far huger than the last one.
I'm not a medical dr.
My understanding is: A detached retina is not synonymous with a cut above the eye. It is a separate medical issue. Fury's wound was ugly. We must credit his cut-man as the wound looked worse than it behaved, in terms of blood flow.
His face was not ballooning up like more grotesque examples including Lebedev.
As for you question about Wallin, we can only guess. They may have stopped the fight but the context needs to be explored. Wallin was not a known quantity such as Fury, which includes Furys known resilience and skill level. Furthermore, Fury was performing well, dominating Wallin in the later rounds. It did not appear that he was adversely affected. I would understand the ref stopping the fight for Wallin for his own protection, however Fury did not need this protection.
Wallin a unknown fighter, a significant underdog, the smaller fighter and one who was eating clean punches consistently. Perhaps the fight would have been stopped on the possibility that he would be seriously hurt. That would be reasonable in my opinion - however it is still based on a
possibility that he would be seriously hurt.
It was after all the refs and Judges discretion which allowed Fury to continue, their expertise enabled them to make the decision. It was the right decision for Fury as he ended up winning the fight and there was no indication his eye was damaged. The possibility that he would be seriously injured from the cut was reduced compared to Wallins circumstances.
Regardless of this all:
Fury received medical attention for the cuts. It would be assumed that other areas of his health were investigated. Nothing has been published other than the stitches.
To advocate the stoppage of the fight on the
possibility of damage,
that is not apparent after the event, is not boxing and/or fighting. The sport is high on risk. The risk payed off. The ref and ringside dr made the decision and saved a fight from ending prematurely.
Wallin has made a name for himself. A good name, he gave a good account of himself. Although I'm sure he would be happier if he had won - it would have been seriously disappointing for fight fans to see a fight stopped in such a manner when it was not necessary.