Floyd Patterson was robbed versus Joey Maxim

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by McGrain, Jan 1, 2013.


  1. lufcrazy

    lufcrazy requiescat in pace Full Member

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    :lol: what I meant is I won't class it a robbery because I've not seen it myself.
     
  2. mcvey

    mcvey VIP Member Full Member

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    That seems a very reasonable position to me. With hindsight it seems to have been an ambitious fight to make for young Floyd ,as Apollack has observed.
     
  3. lufcrazy

    lufcrazy requiescat in pace Full Member

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    Ambitious yes, strange it was over 8 rounds.
     
  4. mcvey

    mcvey VIP Member Full Member

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    Did that have something to do with Patterson's age?
     
  5. catchwtboxing

    catchwtboxing Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Bump. I am about to do a top-ten for Floyd Patterson and was just curious about this fight. This is one that seems to have been re-written by history as a Patterson win, but we actually had a poster on here who saw the fight that said it was not so, and McGrain cited that those who saw it on TV were fine with the decision. It doesn't seem like the worst decision ever.

    Interesting.

    Any further insights?
     
    Saintpat likes this.
  6. Saintpat

    Saintpat Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Not specific to this fight but the late Mr Garfield makes a point it seems few take into account: judging whether a decision was just by crowd reaction kind of assumes that the crowd is all neutral, that they’re there to render their opinion on the decision with no rooting interest.

    And that just ain’t so. The people booing the decision might very well be, as JG described here, registering that they’re not happy their guy got beat … and they aren’t objective in their opinion.

    Look at it this way:

    If the Patriots score a TD in Foxborough and a ref calls it back because he threw a flag on New England for holding, the crowd will surely boo. Do you take that as ‘well, 70,000 people in the stands all agreed that it was a bad call, so it must have been a bad call’?

    A World Cup soccer team scores a goal and is called offside, nullifying the goal. People rooting for that team boo … must have been a bad call, right?

    It’s no different in boxing. Peoples’ reaction to that decision is probably, as often as not (or more often than not) a reflection of the guy they were rooting for coming up short in the scoring. How many of those people scored it round by round, and how many of them are even qualified to judge if they did? (Not to mention how many beers did they consume, which can skew judgment.)

    Then there’s the gambling factor: whether it’s just Joe Fan betting a fiver or a tenner with the guy sitting next to him, someone laying a wad with a bookie at the neighborhood bar back in the day or now legalized gambling available in most places … you think someone is going to applaud a just decision if he lost the bet? More likely, he’s going to boo, but it is a reflection of his pocketbook speaking rather than his rational scoring.

    As for newspapermen, I’ve never seen an analysis of particular writers and how they scored and how often they went against the grain or for the hometown boy. Most of them probably aren’t as qualified to score a fight as are most people on this forum (and I’ve seen some wild cards on the general forum, believe me, ask @IntentionalButt about that). The guy who is scoring the fight on Friday might be covering baseball on Saturday and football on Sunday … is he a rules and scoring expert on all sports? I have noticed even in fights where some other outlets went against Harry Greb, you rarely if ever find the Pittsburgh press saying they thought he lost … so some ‘hometown boy’ bias can also figure in.

    Just figured I’d throw that perspective out there since a lot of boxing mythology is built around ‘we have accounts that some fans booed’ interpreted as ‘we can basically reverse the decision because it wasn’t popular’ without taking into consideration … popular with whom? The boo-birds are also naturally going to be more vocal and enthusiastic in expressing their disdain, too — if the right guy wins, are the people who thought the decision just going to cheer their lungs out while they’re counting their money from their bets or happy their guy won, or are they going to smile and head for the exits happy?
     
    catchwtboxing likes this.