Uncle Bob
should be investigated, too
By Alex P.
Vidal
LOS ANGELES,
California – I was seated on the second row facing Bob Arum during the post-fight
press conference June 9 night at the Media Center in MGM Grand in Las Vegas when
the Jewish-American promoter exhorted the press to challenge Keith Kizer, executive
director of the Nevada Athletic Commission, to bring all the three judges in
the presidential table and let them explain their scorecards.
“Where’s
somebody from the commission? Why don’t they come up (here) and explain their
decision?” the 79-year-old Arum yelled.
The three
judges -- Duane Ford, CJ Ross, and Jerry Roth -- have been selected by a panel
of five Nevada Athletic Commission commissioners, Arum explained.
“It was
ridiculous,” Arum thundered. “That’s the only word to describe it.”
He volunteered
to pay for the air fare of the judges “to see my eye doctor in Los Angeles.”
Arum said, “The
outcry worldwide about the decision will not be good for the sport of boxing.” But
he agreed that newly crowned WBO welterweight boss Timothy Ray Bradley Jr. “should
be congratulated because the title went to a good guy.”
‘ALL HONEST’
The CEO of
Top Rank, promoter of the WBO welterweight championship bout between dethroned champion
Manny Pacquiao and Bradley Jr., however, described the three judges as “all
honest.”
“I know them
personally and these guys are honest,” he declared.
The rematch
clause did not influence the judges’ scorecards, he swore, saying it could only
be valid in the event of a Bradley victory.
But we beg to
disagree that “the judges most likely had no idea that a rematch clause was
included in the contract.”
Arum also said
the rematch could only take place if Pacquiao would agree to it.
Several weeks
before the fight, it was already reported several times that there was a
rematch clause in the Pacquiao-Bradley contract with no less than Arum himself
was quoted in news items as the source. “I don’t know why the scoring was the
way it was, but it was certainly not based on any consideration of a rematch,”
Arum insisted.
The fact that
there was a rematch clause on the contract, boxing fans will always suspect
there were shady deals when the Pacquiao-Bradley match was being cooked.
By lambasting
the decision but at the same time absolving the Nevada judges, Arum is
confusing the public. He could have directly invited Kizer to represent the
judges in the post-fight press conference instead of running berserk all by his
lonesome self during the press conference as if he was the most aggrieved party
in the highway robbery.
INVESTIGATE
Several hours
later, Arum was reported as saying he would call the Attorney-General in Nevada
to investigate the imbroglio that marred Bradley’s coronation as new WBO 147-lb
champion. Arum has virtually blamed the judges for the fiasco and, in effect, washed his hands. His holier-than-thou antics and Pontius Pilate-like speech suggest
that he is not blameless in the entire hullabaloo. As the most influential
person in the world of professional boxing, he knows many things that most
boxing fans don’t. Backdoor operators
and shrewd negotiators always come out clean when the goings get tough. Subalterns
or the pawns in chess are always the first casualties.
It appears
now that the judges who gave the fight to Bradley have become the veritable
sacrificial lambs as they are being crucified and called names “for doing their
job” so that the real perpetrators are shielded from public wrath.
FINAL
No boxing judges
in recent memory have been asked to explain their score sheets in public
however controversial was the outcome of the championship fight they’d
officiated. The judges’ verdict is always
final and could not be reversed.
There was no
trip to the guillotine for Nevada judges Jose Juan Guerra and Dave Moretti when
they scored in favor of Sugar Ray Leonard, 118-115 and 115-113 respectively,
for a split decision that awarded him Marvelous Marvin Hagler’s WBC
middleweight belt on April 6, 1987 at the Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. In that
highly controversial bout, boxing fans believed only judge Lou Filippo, who
scored 115-113 for the defending champion Hagler, was not part of conspiracy to
rob Hagler.
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