Official Olympics no excuses thread: RJJ and Mayweather edition

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by lewis gassed, Dec 6, 2018.



  1. Pimp C

    Pimp C Too Much Motion Full Member

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    Pure robbery
     
  2. Lazar

    Lazar Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Lol. I don’t care either way, the parody is funny tho
     
  3. gmurphy

    gmurphy Land of the corrupt, home of the robbery! banned Full Member

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    lots of koreans said it could have gone either way. americans are so quick to call robbery
     
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  4. lepinthehood

    lepinthehood When I'm drinking you leave me well alone Full Member

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    you could say the cleaner work came from Park Si-Hun, which the judges like to see.
     
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  5. TurtleKing

    TurtleKing New Member Full Member

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    South Korea is riddled with corruption. I love everything Korean (minus Kpop) and have several friends over there, but Korea has a serious problem with corruption.
     
  6. gmurphy

    gmurphy Land of the corrupt, home of the robbery! banned Full Member

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    Ya jones smothered his work.
    At the end of the day it all depends what you like
     
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  7. The Long Count

    The Long Count Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Mayweather lost or at least it was close enough to be debatable

    Roy Jones clearly won his loss was criminal
     
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  8. lepinthehood

    lepinthehood When I'm drinking you leave me well alone Full Member

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    I got many friends from South Korea and they say there is no corruption over there, the fight was a could of gone either way sort of fight!
     
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  9. bcr

    bcr Well-Known Member Full Member

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    This is a weak shitpost, at least get a fight we are one guy didn't out landed the other 86 punches to 32, step up your troll game, mate.
     
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  10. gmurphy

    gmurphy Land of the corrupt, home of the robbery! banned Full Member

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    pimp c had russell vs loma even after 8 roumds when the punch stats were 110-55 lol
    No robbery in korea , it was a close fight that could have gone either way
     
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  11. The Long Count

    The Long Count Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    If this is true than there is no robbery in history. Loma put on a masterclass. Can’t have that fight even and then claim Olympic fights were robberies
     
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  12. Pimp C

    Pimp C Too Much Motion Full Member

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    LMFAO! You can't say that stop trolling.
     
  13. TurtleKing

    TurtleKing New Member Full Member

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    No corruption in South Korea? Do your friends live out on Dokdo away from reality? Politics, business, sports, anything.. The competition for life and success is so high over there that it breeds corruption. Just a short Google search can show you that, let alone actually digging into their history. I'm not just speaking about this particular match, but South Korea as a whole.
     
  14. Pimp C

    Pimp C Too Much Motion Full Member

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    Irrelevant you fool. I stated that Loma won and scored it for Loma these judges flat out robbed RJJ there's no comparison that can be made. You're pissed off that I had scored the fight differently from you and are trying to say that's equal to one of the worst robberies in sports history that's how much and how badly you want to push your agenda. It's sickening and pathetic and you're not a real fan of boxing like many others in this thread. But what else can I expect from a poster who says The nail should have visited Stevenson in his hospital bed while he was in a coma and demanded a rematch.
     
  15. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    Park Si-Hun will always be known as Roy's daddy. :deal:


    Little known fact the Roy 'robbery,' if you're one of the tiny but very vocal minority of crybabies who consider it a robbery, was payback for all the skullduggery and corruption by the host nation at the 1994 Olympics in Los Angeles where many of the US team's representatives were seen to be the beneficiaries of home cooking and gift decisions.

    Seeds of discontent sown in 84

    In 1984 with the Olympics held in Los Angeles, the US boxing team dominated the competition, taking out nine of the 12 gold medals on offer [1]. A major contributor to the unprecedented success of the US boxing team was the absence of the dominant soviet block nations, in particular amateur boxing giant, Cuba. However, many do not hold these absences as solely accountable; there remains to this day a widespread belief that the judging of the 1984 Olympic boxing tournament was heavily biased towards the U.S. team. Throughout the course of the competition there were many questionable decisions and rulings in favour of the US team. When US competitor Henry Tillman, in the inaugural heavyweight competition, was given a decision win over Angelo Musone, the verdict was criticised in Italian newspapers as, 'hallucinatory' and 'scandalous' [2]. After losing a close decision to Steve McCrory of the USA in the flyweight gold medal bout, Redzep Redzepovski of Yugoslavia complained, 'As long as an American is standing on his feet for three rounds it is hard to get a decision over him [3]'. Redzep's comments were strongly supported by the simple fact that 37 of the 38 bouts that went the full three rounds involving Americans, were decided in their favour.

    The most vocal opposition to the officiating came from the Korean team. On paper the Koreans looked to have a strong team with a number of boxers considered to be in medal contention. However, as the Koreans failed to live up to their own lofty expectations, their attention turned to the American officials. The Koreans were particularly incensed by the dubious victory of light welterweight Jerry Page of the U.S over Kim Dong-kil [4]. After losing by a score of 4-1, a storm of protests were lodged by the Korean officials. Soo-In Oh, the vice president of the Korean delegation lodged a formal protest against the judging off the match and even went as far as to threaten to withdraw the entire boxing team from further competition. Oh would later admit that the threat was primarily an attempt to call attention to a string of controversial pro-US decisions [5]. The Koreans’ outrage was supported in all corners with many journalists, including the correspondent of the Los Angeles Times, expressing their opinion that Kim had won [6].

    Despite the Koreans’ belief that the medals were practically being handed to the Americans, there were examples of fortune going the other way. The one decision to go against an American boxer was awarded in favour of Korea’s Shin Joon-sup. Shin was given the decision in a very close middleweight final against Virgil Hill. No less then four out of Shin’s five wins came by split decision [7]. Further, when Australian Renato Corbett was awarded a 3-2 victory over Korean Chil-sung Chun, the decision was overturned and Chun was given the 4-1 victory [8]. Further, what is regarded as the worst decision of the tournament was against American Evander Holyfield. In his light heavyweight fight with Kevin Barry of New Zealand, Holyfield let rip with a brutal two punch combination, a left to the ribs followed by a left hook. Barry was knocked out but the referee, Gligorije Novocic of Yugoslavia, disqualified Holyfield for a late hit claiming he had called stop after the first blow to the body. When the decision was announced Barry turned to Holyfield and said, ‘you won the fight fair and square.’ Before raising the American’s hand [9].

    Despite the hope that the Joon-sup’s middleweight win would have a cathartic affect on the Korean team, it seemed that the Koreans would not soon forget their treatment at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. Korean team Vice President Oh was quoted as saying, "The judging has been quite unfair so far. We came here to learn a lot about the Olympic Games, because we are the hosts in 1988, and we've decided there's nothing to learn” [10]. Despite Oh’s claims it is felt that the Koreans did learn from the games and much of what they learned was applied at the 1988 Seoul Olympics to the detriment of their international competition. After the Jones decision there were accusations that officials of the Korea Amateur Boxing Federation had bribed or otherwise persuaded some of the judges as a payback for pro-U.S decisions at the 1984 Olympics'

    And Jones wasn't the only opponent of the Korean Park Si-hun who was hard done by either

    Park Si-hun, the Korean light middleweight representative is considered to be among the least deserving gold medallists in Olympic history [6]. Although Park was not without talent, having previously won gold at the boxing world cup in 1985 defeating US boxer Kevin Bryant, in the Olympic tournament he benefited from no less than five consecutive home-town decisions. After receiving a first round bye, Park’s first bout ended when he landed two illegal blows, to the hip and kidney of his Sudanese opponent Abdalla Ramdan. Though the blows should have resulted in Park’s disqualification, Australian referee Ronald Gregor was hesitant, undoubtedly haunted by the attack on the New Zealand referee five days earlier. Gregor consulted with the judges who deemed a disqualification to be inappropriate as Park had not been previously cautioned. As such, with Ramdan unable to continue, Park was declared the winner

    The luck continued to go Park’s way in the third round when he was awarded a unanimous decision over one of the favourites, Torsten Schmitz of East Germany, in a bout that most observers felt Schmitz had done enough to win. Having progressed to the quarter finals Park was matched with Vincenzo Nardiello of Italy. Once more most thought Park had surely been eliminated but once more Park took the decision. After two rounds Nardiello had been ahead on all five score cards, two of the judges also felt he won the third but the other three judges awarded Park the final round by such a wide margin he took the fight 3-2. Nardiello crumpled to his knees and pounded the canvas when the decision was awarded against him. He then charged out of the ring and began screaming at the judges. Italian team officials managed to drag Nardiello to the dressing room only for him to race back out to the ring crying and screaming

    Park’s blessed run continued into his semi final match against Canada’s Ray Downey. For the fourth straight time neutral observers thought Park’s tournament had come to an end, only for him to be awarded another dubious unanimous decision. By now Park had earned himself the moniker, ‘The Unbeatable Park Si-Hun
     
  16. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    'Although that touches on how they benefited in the '84 Games, that piece there is still too much of a pro-American stance when discussing those Olympics and the boxing competition during it.

    Instead of saying that it was the Italian papers that disagreed with the Tillman/Musone decision, why not point out that practically every American paper covering those Games thought it was a horse**** decision, as did the hometown crowd who boo'd the decision given to Tillman?

    Also, I see it was written that one of the Koreans received an "overturned" decision under the jury system (any 3-2 split decision went to the jury), why not point out that that fight was, in addition to a horrible verdict, also an "overturned decision"?

    The decision the Korean got over Virgil Hill (who also got a "jury" decision earlier) in a boring fight was the fair one, as Hill didn't do a whole lot in that fight, at all. The Korean didn't do a whole lot more, but in pressing what little action there was and outlanding Hill, he still did more than enough to earn the decision he received and by no means was it a case of "fortune going the other way". The Korean deserved it, and he got it.

    Why not give a few more examples of bad decisions going the Americans way during those games, like Frank Tate's decision over Ayed in the first round of the tournament when Tate was "gifted" after taking a beating in the second round, as well as clearly being outpunched in the third?

    Or Tate's gold medal fight with Shawn O'Sullivan, which, while close, most in attendance and in the press thought O'Sullivan deserved the verdict and boo'd it given to Tate? Well, the decision may not have been as bad as in some others that went the Americans way, but I do question the scoring of the judges who gave O'Sullivan only a 20-19 second round when he battered Tate to the tune of two standing eight counts, and just about had a third (which would have ended the fight) when he had Tate trapped in the corner and was punching away at him at round's end. What's more puzzling is that some of those judges gave Tate a 20-18 for doing not much more than getting on his bicycle and jabbing away in the third round against an opponent who did a little less.

    Or Biggs' decision "win" over Damiani in the gold medal bout when it was clear that Damiani outpunched and outfought Biggs through the fight (again crowd boo'd, and the press questioned it), including bloodying his nose and swlling up his eye?'
     
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