Certainly not an apologist for poor judging. It's one of the things that made me most irritated in my time on my local Area Council, and where I believe most change is needed. One round scored wrongly can change a fighter's life for ever, so it is the next most important thing after fighter safety. You're not reading between the lines at all, and patronising people is not a great approach. Find a post of mine in which I have defended poor judging and I'll happily stand corrected.margaret thatcher wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 17:34you sound like a bit of an apologist for sh!t judging tbh, not the first time you've called it 'odd' for people to be speaking out against the decision. are you the fellow who is/was a bbbc inspector?olij999 wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 14:37This referral to the police is a bit bizarre. What crime does the Speaker think has been committed? Presumably something similar to the cricket spot-fixing (see https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Cr ... /2914.html for that) - conspiracy to cheat or something? If so, what evidence (or even reasonable suspicion) does he have of financial malpractice? What he's really saying is that he thinks it was a really bad decision, but that happens in lots of sports every weekend and isn't criminal. All very odd.TheGun13 wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 12:35 This is the interesting quote from Hoyle:
"I also believe that something seriously went on here - whether it was undue influence, one must question why?"
I wonder how deep they will go here. Some of the organisations involved with this fight I'm sure won't stand up to much scrutiny if investigated, but the question is whether the authorities have the appetite to get deep into this. I'm certain the BBBOC don't.
Also, what I don't get is why people are picking on Ian John-Lewis in this specific case (setting aside, for the moment, people's views on his past decisions as referee or judge) - none of the three judges scored a majority of the rounds for Catterall. If you ignore the point deduction from each fighter and the one-point adjustment in Catterall's favour for the knockdown, the score in rounds comes out as 8-4 (IJL), 7-5 and 6-6. None had Catterall winning 7 rounds or more.
surely you should understand why the guy with the widest card, with the biggest history of awful judging, would get picked on more. not sure why you dont get it when it's pretty simple
I'm commenting that it is "odd" for one judge to be targeted when none of the three scored in favour of Catterall. Some people on this thread seem to think that sacking IJL would somehow solve the issue. My question is how does picking on one judge make sense when all three judges have, in my view, scored the fight poorly? IJL agreed with at least one of his fellow judges in every single round except one, so he is hardly an outlier here. He had it 8-4 Taylor, while the other had it 7-5 and 6-6, which are no more acceptable in my view. Calling for the head of one judge on a plate doesn't solve any underlying problem. I have strong views on what the issues may be (and as mentioned on another thread, I don't believe there is any criminality) and what would solve them, and I know exactly what I would be doing if I was Catterall's lawyer. But I am not going to set any of that out on a forum.