By Lyle Fitzsimmons - In all the years I’ve watched boxing – more than 30 in fact, since I sat with my dad in Grand Island, N.Y. and watched Ken Norton dispose of Duane Bobick in 58 seconds – I’ve been irked each and every time I’ve heard a TV judge thusly describe the action of a just-completed one-sided round:
“Fighter A really dominated for the whole three minutes in Round X, and, with the knockdown, he gets the extra point on the scorecard and wins it, 10-8.”
Anyone else understand my angst?
As those who’ve sat and watched a fight with me will testify, it’s within seconds after hearing such a statement that I’ll clarify, pointing out that in a 10-point must system, scoring a knockdown does not earn you an extra point at all. Ten, in this case, remains 10.
Rather, it docks the fighter who was knocked down an extra point, chipping the nine he would normally have received down to eight or even seven in some extreme cases.
But no matter whether it’s Harold Lederman, Steve Farhood, Steve Weisfeld or someone else crunching the numbers, it’s almost always described incorrectly, as if the winner suddenly jumped from 10 to 11 for displaying his dominance.
It drives me nuts.
So, in accordance with the philosophy of coaching the talent on hand rather than teaching old dogs new tricks, I’ve decided to rebuild the system around my stuck-in-cement colleagues.
Instead of an overly complex formula involving 10 points for winners and nine or less for losers, I propose going back in time to the era when winners of a normally competitive round received one point and the losers received none.
If the round is even, a scoring crutch I try to avoid at all costs, neither fighter receives a point.
Lastly, if a fighter scores a knockdown or more and truly wins a round in decisive fashion, he gets either two or three, actually earning the “extra” point(s) too often rewarded by the TV talking heads. [Click Here To Read More]
“Fighter A really dominated for the whole three minutes in Round X, and, with the knockdown, he gets the extra point on the scorecard and wins it, 10-8.”
Anyone else understand my angst?
As those who’ve sat and watched a fight with me will testify, it’s within seconds after hearing such a statement that I’ll clarify, pointing out that in a 10-point must system, scoring a knockdown does not earn you an extra point at all. Ten, in this case, remains 10.
Rather, it docks the fighter who was knocked down an extra point, chipping the nine he would normally have received down to eight or even seven in some extreme cases.
But no matter whether it’s Harold Lederman, Steve Farhood, Steve Weisfeld or someone else crunching the numbers, it’s almost always described incorrectly, as if the winner suddenly jumped from 10 to 11 for displaying his dominance.
It drives me nuts.
So, in accordance with the philosophy of coaching the talent on hand rather than teaching old dogs new tricks, I’ve decided to rebuild the system around my stuck-in-cement colleagues.
Instead of an overly complex formula involving 10 points for winners and nine or less for losers, I propose going back in time to the era when winners of a normally competitive round received one point and the losers received none.
If the round is even, a scoring crutch I try to avoid at all costs, neither fighter receives a point.
Lastly, if a fighter scores a knockdown or more and truly wins a round in decisive fashion, he gets either two or three, actually earning the “extra” point(s) too often rewarded by the TV talking heads. [Click Here To Read More]
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