Timothy Bradley Jr. earns stunning, controversial split-decision win over Manny Pacquiao. The vast majority of reporters covering the fight at ringside had it
for Pacquiao. Harold Lederman, a former professional judge, scored it
11 rounds to one for Pacquiao.
Arum was outraged, at one point referring to the judges as "The Three
Blind Mice," while he was introducing Pacquiao at the post-fight news
conference.
"Can you believe that?" Arum said. "I had it 10-2! After I got into the
ring after the fight, I went over to Bradley and said 'You did very
well.' He said, 'I tried hard, but I couldn't beat the guy.' This is
crazy. You talk about killing boxing? All three scorecards you throw
out."
It was unfair to Pacquiao, who deserved to win.
Bradley's win over Manny Pacquiao was a joke, but it wasn't bad for boxing. Timothy Bradley's controversial split-decision victory over Manny
Pacquiao on Saturday in their World Boxing Organization welterweight
title fight at the MGM Grand Garden was one of the best things that
could have happened for the sport.
It was a fast-paced, back-and-forth scrap between a pair of quality boxers at the peak of their professions.
That Bradley won a decision the vast majority of those in attendance and
watching on television around the world thought was laughably wrong is
hardly the "death knell" for boxing that promoter Bob Arum said it was seconds after the verdict was read.
Controversy sells. The bigger the controversy, the bigger the rematch.
This rematch will be bigger than Saturday's bout by a wide margin.
Bradley will become a star; he's already a charismatic guy who performed
well when he finally got his chance on the big stage. And Pacquiao's
legion of fans will rally to his support, believing he was wronged and
demanding justice in a second fight.
"Some rounds, I took off and relaxed and didn't throw so many punches,"
Pacquiao said. "I could give him three rounds, and almost every round I
hurt him. I know he felt that."
Judge Jerry Roth had it 115-113 for Pacquiao, but he was overruled by
his counterparts, C.J. Ross and Duane Ford, who had it 115-113 for
Bradley. Ross gave Bradley the final three rounds and five of the last
six. Ford scored five of the last six for Bradley as well.
But bad for boxing? Not in a million years. More people were talking
about the fight when it ended than would have been had Pacquiao gotten
the wide verdict most had expected.
It's created a lucrative rematch for November and helped turn Bradley into a star.
Even to those who felt Pacquiao won, there had to be a respect for
Bradley, who fought a spirited, high-paced battle despite injuring both
of his feet. He attended the news conference in a wheelchair.
No comments:
Post a Comment