Louis-Walcott I was one of the worst decisions ever.
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TOP 10 WORST DECISIONS EVER!!!!! great read
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Originally posted by ShotIt is a top 10 over 25 years. More years than than spots on the top list hence not all years will be in there.
What I'm wondering about is what criteria were used to make the choices.
I'm guessing that Leonard-Hagler is in there because it is open-ended--no closure-- while Barrera-Morales met for the third time to give the affair a semblance of finality (though it seems Barrera is talking about taking on Morales for the 4th time if Erik gets past Pacquiao).
To further speak of "worst" decisions, one can cite the one made by one judge in the Pacquiao-Marquez fight who confessed to having made a bad call because he did not know the rule that he could have entered a 10-6 score (adding that he would have had he known.) That judge gets brownie points for honesty, but, his individual decision, spawned by sheer ignorance on the part of someone who must know, is a classic.
Of course, individual decisions may not have been included; only totals.
If so, there can be choices in this year alone, and one does not have to go very far back in the calendar to find one:
The Japanese are known for many things, among them, their being ultranationalistic. Japanese boxing has always been considered by many as synonymous to "hometown decisions". One such decision came about last August when local hero, Koki Kameda went up against Jose Juan Landaeta of Venezuela for the vacant WBA LightFly crown left behind by Gustavo Padilla who had gone to campaign as a Flyweight.
Kameda was KD'd in the first and was thoroughly dominated in the remaining rounds. Just the same, he won a Split D, which caused such an uproar in Japan itself that the television station that carried the fight was swamped with complaints--many of them, impolite and so un-Japanese.
I didn't have to watch the fight to be convinced that the decision was indeed terrible. I only had to look at the reaction of the Japanese themselves.
But, I watched the fight on tape. It has to rank as one of the worst. If Leonard-Hagler and Whitaker-DLaHoya are among the ten worst, then, it seems to me that Kameda-Landaeta has to be worse than the worst.
The author of the article may have not heard of Kameda-Landaeta. He should have done some little research if only to make his list a little more...
Had he done the research, he could not have missed it. It happened just over a month ago. Yes, in 2006--another year that is not in there.
Perhaps, the author was listing only fights in the US? If so, he should have said so.
But, even then....Last edited by grayfist; 09-19-2006, 04:42 AM.
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Originally posted by PigguWhitaker got screwed over a lot. 3 of 10 on that list.
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Originally posted by PederGerman fights doesn´t count in this thread? Otherwise, i could name a few fights..
Oh and did you guys ever hear about that fight with Kevin Leoushing against an African where Kevin KOed him and the ref helped the other guy up and declared him the winner. I think the African died also. Can someone help me out with this info and the correct spelling of Kevins last name?
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The De la Hoya/ Whitaker fight was a clear robbery. You get points maybe not for walking away from clearly dodged punches but the notion that De la Hoya could be scoring by slearly missing those same punches is terrible. sweet Pea was the truth and got robbed in that fight. bottomline. And even though I think Ocsar got robbed against Trinidad it is hard for me to have sympathy for him after the sweet pea fight
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