How does one get a 115-115 in a 12 rounder?

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  • War Room
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    #1

    How does one get a 115-115 in a 12 rounder?

    Can't say I've seen this before.

    Franklin works 12 hour shifts M-F, bitch titties, was there to lose and Whyte went life & death with him. The man is a joke.
  • dannnnn
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    #2
    By scoring 10-10 rounds. I wish more judges would do it tbh because you end up with a scorecard which more accurately reflects the fight. A close round with very little to split them (most early "feeling out" rounds for example) being worth as much as a decisive winning round is nonsense when you think about it - especially with those rounds going to the home fighter 90% of the time - and is a leading culprit as to why we often see one-sided scorecards in competitive fights.

    Once upon a time, scoring even rounds was very common and it would be of benefit to the integrity of the sport if it were to make a return.

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    • War Room
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      #3
      Originally posted by dannnnn
      By scoring 10-10 rounds. I wish more judges would do it tbh because you end up with a scorecard which more accurately reflects the fight. A close round with very little to split them (most early "feeling out" rounds for example) being worth as much as a decisive winning round is nonsense when you think about it - especially with those rounds going to the home fighter 90% of the time - and is a leading culprit as to why we often see one-sided scorecards in competitive fights.

      Once upon a time, scoring even rounds was very common and it would be of benefit to the integrity of the sport if it were to make a return.
      Draws are usually 114-114.

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      • Citizen Koba
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        #4
        Originally posted by War Room

        Draws are usually 114-114.
        Alexander must have scored two rounds 10 - 10 and 5 rounds apiece 10 - 9

        It's unusual these days to score 10 - 10 rounds and judges are discouraged from it but it remains well within the scoring rules.

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        • just the facts
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          #5
          Originally posted by Citizen Koba

          Alexander must have scored two rounds 10 - 10 and 5 rounds apiece 10 - 9

          It's unusual these days to score 10 - 10 rounds and judges are discouraged from it but it remains well within the scoring rules.
          Wouldn’t that scenario get you 116-116?

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          • Citizen Koba
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            #6
            Originally posted by just the facts

            Wouldn’t that scenario get you 116-116?
            No... look at it as if that means each of em lost 5 points (5 rounds) from a maximum of 120.

            Or each got 7 x 10 points and 5 x 9 points = 70 + 45 = 115

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            • War Room
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              #7
              Originally posted by Citizen Koba

              No... look at it as if that means each of em lost 5 points (5 rounds) from a maximum of 120.

              Or each got 7 x 10 points and 5 x 9 points = 70 + 45 = 115
              _____

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              • M312
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                #8
                Not sure why judges are asked not to score 10-10 rounds. They say it makes it less likely there's a draw.


                But if there's no winner, don't force yourself to pick one, that's how the really odd cards where close fights end up lopsided happen.

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                • elfag
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                  #9
                  10 point must system just means atleast one of the guys must get 10 points. If both guys dont do anything then 10-10 is a fair score.

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                  • IronDanHamza
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                    #10
                    10-10 rounds.

                    Judges almost never score them though. Seems in thsi fight they did.

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