I watched Richard Hall vs. Julian Letterlough the other day, and I was wondering how people would score a round like the first.
I thought Letterlough's knockdown was a lot better... he blasted Hall with an overhand left. Hall knocked Letterlough down with an inside punch that didn't look overly hard, but it was the punch that caused the knockdown, and it wasn't just because he was off balance.
Hall looked more hurt than Letterlough, but it looks like Hall overcame more to get off the canvas and then turn around to drop Letterlough.
Is there an inherent bias to score a round for the guy who got off the canvas to drop the other guy?
What do you all think?
What? I thought if a round has 2 guys suffering a KD each, then it'd be an 8-8 round. It doesn't matter who won the round, both guys were down and the points have to reflect that.
I completely disagree with 10-10 rounds (even though the only judge who seems to believe they exist is that cunting piece of fucking shit Larry O'Connell), but an 8-8 round seems logical.
How the hell can an 8-8 round be logical while a 10-10 round isn't? :dunno:
Much like Oscar/Quartey rd. 6. You score the round 10-9 in favor of whoever did better the rest of the round, unless one KD is terribly effective and the other is of the flash variety.
this should be correct
if the round is pretty even then you scored it a 10-10 but whoever is winning the round should get the 10 and whoever lost the round get the 9. basically the knockdown would cancel each other
Much like Oscar/Quartey rd. 6. You score the round 10-9 in favor of whoever did better the rest of the round, unless one KD is terribly effective and the other is of the flash variety.
What? I thought if a round has 2 guys suffering a KD each, then it'd be an 8-8 round. It doesn't matter who won the round, both guys were down and the points have to reflect that.
I completely disagree with 10-10 rounds (even though the only judge who seems to believe they exist is that cunting piece of fucking shit Larry O'Connell), but an 8-8 round seems logical.
It's actually against the rules to score a round 9-9 or 8-8 without a foul point deduction when a fight is sanctioned under the 10 point must system.
I totally disagree with 10-10 rounds unless there is a serious case that the round was 100% even and there is no way to break the tie. I've never seen one of those though... outside of a round where Samuel Miller was knocked down in the first 15 seconds of the round against Darrell Woods, got up and proceeded to beat Woods to death for the rest of the round. It was as clear of a 10-10 round that I've ever seen.
I watched Richard Hall vs. Julian Letterlough the other day, and I was wondering how people would score a round like the first.
I thought Letterlough's knockdown was a lot better... he blasted Hall with an overhand left. Hall knocked Letterlough down with an inside punch that didn't look overly hard, but it was the punch that caused the knockdown, and it wasn't just because he was off balance.
Hall looked more hurt than Letterlough, but it looks like Hall overcame more to get off the canvas and then turn around to drop Letterlough.
Is there an inherent bias to score a round for the guy who got off the canvas to drop the other guy?
What do you all think?
An even round...
9-9
The way I see it a KD immediately wins a point.
So the guy would be on 10.
If the same then happens to him and it's an even round apart from the KD's then it's 10-10.
If one guy outboxes the other aside from the KD's, then it's 10-9.
Simples.
What? I thought if a round has 2 guys suffering a KD each, then it'd be an 8-8 round. It doesn't matter who won the round, both guys were down and the points have to reflect that.
I completely disagree with 10-10 rounds (even though the only judge who seems to believe they exist is that cunting piece of fucking shit Larry O'Connell), but an 8-8 round seems logical.
I watched Richard Hall vs. Julian Letterlough the other day, and I was wondering how people would score a round like the first.
I thought Letterlough's knockdown was a lot better... he blasted Hall with an overhand left. Hall knocked Letterlough down with an inside punch that didn't look overly hard, but it was the punch that caused the knockdown, and it wasn't just because he was off balance.
Hall looked more hurt than Letterlough, but it looks like Hall overcame more to get off the canvas and then turn around to drop Letterlough.
Is there an inherent bias to score a round for the guy who got off the canvas to drop the other guy?
What do you all think?
Depends on what the rest of the round is like...If fighter A is landing at will gets the other guy hurt and you can clearly see him hurt and then he puts him down ...Fighter B gets up is still hurt but catches fighter A with something lucky? Maybe gets him with an offbalance shot I score round 10-9 for fighter B...If they are both giving each other the business in a closely contested round I would score it a 10-10 rounds....Lefty
It's either 10-10, 10-9 or 10-8.
It's on the 10 point must, and only a point deduction from the referee can change that.
Anyway, I was just wondering if people had the bias of scoring it for the guy who went down first and then got up to knock the other guy down.
Even though I thought Letterlough's punch was a lot better that put Hall down, there was a voice in the back of my head telling me that Hall deserved that round.
well i'd go 10-9 for the guy who i thought had the better round, regardless of who had the better KD....
unless 1 guy was clearly hurt bad by the KD.
I say its 10-9 with the fighter who inflicted the most damage and controlled the round. Its one of the things that are left to the discretion of the judges and not set in concrete
he means if each fighter KD the other fighter once....
9-8 or 9-9? or is it 10-9?
It's either 10-10, 10-9 or 10-8.
It's on the 10 point must, and only a point deduction from the referee can change that.
Anyway, I was just wondering if people had the bias of scoring it for the guy who went down first and then got up to knock the other guy down.
Even though I thought Letterlough's punch was a lot better that put Hall down, there was a voice in the back of my head telling me that Hall deserved that round.
I watched Richard Hall vs. Julian Letterlough the other day, and I was wondering how people would score a round like the first.
I thought Letterlough's knockdown was a lot better... he blasted Hall with an overhand left. Hall knocked Letterlough down with an inside punch that didn't look overly hard, but it was the punch that caused the knockdown, and it wasn't just because he was off balance.
Hall looked more hurt than Letterlough, but it looks like Hall overcame more to get off the canvas and then turn around to drop Letterlough.
Is there an inherent bias to score a round for the guy who got off the canvas to drop the other guy?
What do you all think?
10-7 if the guy has been KD twice... :fing02:
16y ago
How do you score a round with 2 knockdowns? | BoxingScene Community