dude , watch the fight again. a lot of those jabs thrown? bradley was pumping them out half ass one after another out of range to be honest. especially early in the fight , i guess when he was nervous. i would see him pump soft jabs when they weren't in punching range.
Bradley's jab was much more effective than Pac's. I don't care what compubox saids. He was controling the fight at times with the double jab.
Bradley was hitting the air or PAc's gloves... at least in the fight I saw. PAc was hitting Bradley at will.
I guess they figured Pac had 5x the punching power of Bradley they counted every punch he landed as 5. I almost shat myself when I saw the numbers the compubox idiots were trying to pass off for this fight.
CompuLie is being rigged for a couple of years now. The idea of statistical breakdown wasn't bad if you knew how to use it - compare fighter outputs and % over the years to see aging for example - but it was always BS as "proof" of who won. Now it's rigged and fans are trusting it over their ****ing eyes, CompuLie must go, Lederman and the whole HBO crew with it, and completely inept writers too. It is OUTRAGEOUS that one close fight is causing a major shitstorm because commentators, forged stats etc. at HBO were so off yet so convincing everybody bought their stance, while other robberies are being covered by the same bias and no shitstorm. The Kevin Ioles are in this as well, the media, TVs cause as much damage to pro boxing as judges and promoters.
This will be the next headache for stat-lovers. --According to Ronnie Nathanielsz of Boxing Scene, HBO is seeking permission from the WBC to use a 1" x 1" sensor in the wrist of the boxing glove. Theoretically, this device would be able to measure the speed and force of the punches thrown in real time. The device has already been tested at 60 professional fights and countless amateur fights. I would assume that this would be the first time that this device has been used on a televised card. To borrow from the software vernacular, this would essentially be beta testing for the device before the designers choose to go gold. The amount of data that would be available after this device becomes fully adopted will be staggering. We could figure out what a fighter's average punch speed is for each type of punch that he throws. We would be able to tell if a fighter is slowing down by looking as his average punch speed over his past couple of fights. If a boxer got knocked out by a punch, we could figure out the amount of force necessary to knock that boxer out, and which fighters in the division are capable of producing that kind of power. There would be no more arguments about who is the biggest puncher in a given division, because we would have the measurements. Same thing goes for the fastest hands in a given division. Also it would be easy to figure out if a boxer is carrying his power with him as he goes up or down in weight.-- http://www.badlefthook.com/2012/1/30/2760239/new-tech-on-chavez-vs-rubio-undercard