One school of thought is that Andy Lee’s seventh-round knockdown of Peter Quillin this past Saturday provded to be the difference between him losing and the actual result of a split draw.
But even with that knockdown, there is one other thing that proved to be the difference between a draw and a defeat — how judge Glenn Feldman scored the third round, in which Quillin scored his second knockdown on Lee of the evening.
Feldman had it 10-9 for Quillin, while judges Guido Cavalleri and Eric Marlinski had it 10-8.
Cavalleri’s final scorecard was 113-112 for Lee. Marlinski’s final scorecard was 113-112 for Quillin. Feldman was the judge who had it a 113-113 draw. And if Feldman had given a 10-8 score to Quillin for the third instead of a 10-9, he would’ve had Quillin ahead at the end by a score of 113-112, giving Quillin the split decision victory.
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But even with that knockdown, there is one other thing that proved to be the difference between a draw and a defeat — how judge Glenn Feldman scored the third round, in which Quillin scored his second knockdown on Lee of the evening.
Feldman had it 10-9 for Quillin, while judges Guido Cavalleri and Eric Marlinski had it 10-8.
Cavalleri’s final scorecard was 113-112 for Lee. Marlinski’s final scorecard was 113-112 for Quillin. Feldman was the judge who had it a 113-113 draw. And if Feldman had given a 10-8 score to Quillin for the third instead of a 10-9, he would’ve had Quillin ahead at the end by a score of 113-112, giving Quillin the split decision victory.
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