Originally posted by Lomadeaux
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Can you score a round with a knockdown 10-9? 10-10? What is the deal?
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What was Joshua-Klit Round 5 scored?
Joshua dropped Wlad, beat him up a bit, then proceeded to get tossed the last minute of the round
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Originally posted by Eff Pandas View PostTheoretically a judge can do w/e. But most commissions in the US seem to frown upon 10-10 round in general. And they also appear to not like to see too many 10-9 rounds when a KD had happened.
Randomly that makes me recall of some country that maybe still does, but for sure used to be very 10-10 friendly in their scoring. Seems like it was some South American country. And you'd see a high amount of fighters from that country with a high amount of draws on their record (like 5+ & there were a several guys with double digit draws on their record) cuz the judges from that country just gave a high number of even rounds when scoring a fight which had draws being a much more likely outcome.
draws are common in argentina. monzon had 9 of them and he didn't fight all that long ago.
in the past fights were not even scored on a fighter's record if there were no knockouts. fights were scored as draws [called no decisions,] and "newspaper decisions" were awarded to the consensus winner.
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Originally posted by john l View PostReally it should NEVER be 9-9 its a 10 point MUST system so if fighter dominated round and then got knocked down it would be 10-9.
you can get a 9-9 round if a fighter wins a round and has a point taken away. deductions are calculated after you score the round. otherwise your post is spot on, the scoring system is literally called the "10 point must" system.
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Originally posted by New England View Postdraws are common in argentina. monzon had 9 of them and he didn't fight all that long ago.
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Originally posted by Lomadeaux View PostHe did get 10 points.. He won the round. But he was also knocked down. So he lost a point.
Same thing happens when a point is deducted by the ref and they still win a round.
I didn't even read the post.
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Originally posted by Lomadeaux View PostNo... guys I just explained to you how it works. It's a 10 point must system. This is how it works.
Fighter A is dominating a round, gets cracked by Figher B and gets up real quick and isn't hurt.
The Round is scored 9-9. Figher A gets a 10 and figher B gets a 9. Fighter A got a point deducted for being knocked down.
It's a 9-9 round. Get it?
Originally posted by New England View Postthis is wrong! the system is literally called the 10 point must system. if a fighter knocks another fighter down the round is scored 10-8. if a fighter knocks another fighter down but badly loses the round you score it 10-9. the only way a fighter wins a round and gets less than 10 points is if there is a foul.
http://boxrec.com/media/index.php/Ten-point_must_system
Originally posted by john l View PostReally it should NEVER be 9-9 its a 10 point MUST system so if fighter dominated round and then got knocked down it would be 10-9.
Originally posted by New England View Postyou can get a 9-9 round if a fighter wins a round and has a point taken away. deductions are calculated after you score the round. otherwise your post is spot on, the scoring system is literally called the "10 point must" system.
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Originally posted by New England View Postyou can get a 9-9 round if a fighter wins a round and has a point taken away. deductions are calculated after you score the round. otherwise your post is spot on, the scoring system is literally called the "10 point must" system.
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Originally posted by HeadBodyBodyBody View PostWrong. A knockdown is not the same as a point deducted for a foul. Knockdowns are scored within the round itself, whereas point-deductions for fouls are taken away after normal scoring, at the end of the round. The only way a boxer can win a round and end up with less than 10 points is if he has a point deducted for some infringement, as indicated by the referee. You have misunderstood the 10-point must system.
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Correct
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