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"My toughest fight was with my first wife." - Muhammad Ali

September 27
At Carson, Calif. (HBO): Shane Mosley vs. Ricardo Mayorga, 12 rounds, junior middleweights; Andre Berto vs. Steve Forbes, 12 rounds, for Berto's WBC welterweight title

October 4
At Temecula, Calif. (HBO): Sergio Martinez vs. Alex Bunema, 12 rounds, for vacant WBC interim junior middleweight title; Yuriorkis Gamboa vs. Marcos Ramirez, 10 rounds, featherweights; Alfredo Angulo vs. Andrey Tsurkan, 10 rounds, junior middleweights

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 Time for Ex-Boxers to be Judges?

BoxingInsider.com
Time for Ex-Boxers to be Judges?
Published by BoxingInsider

Sunday, April 20th, 2008 at 11:15 am

By Scoop Malinowski

Controversial decisions in boxing have been around since the origins of the sport. And lately we’ve had our unfair share, including Augustus-Burton, Golota-Ruiz, Tarver-Johnson, Golota-Byrd and Navarro-Kawashima.

Very little action has been taken to remedy this terrible ill of the great sport. Something needs to be done.

I have an idea. How about employing ex-boxers to be judges? How about adding some former boxers to the current pool of judges? Who understands the art of boxing, effective aggression and ring generalship better than a former professional fighter?

Larry Hazzard is a former fighter who was a superb referee. Many other boxers have become refs, such as Eddie Cotton, Jersey Joe Walcott and Randy Neumann. It doesn’t make sense that there are so few (if any) boxers working as professional judges today.

Former fighters like Iran Barkley, Jackie Tonowanda, Juan Laporte, Alex Stewart, Alex Ramos and Gerry Cooney I am sure would make excellent judges if they wanted to.

I believe boxing commissions around the world should consider the innovation of adding one or even two former boxers to work as part of their official judging trios. It could be a nice payday for the boxers as well, especially the ones who have struggled with the transition from a boxing career to regular work. I have full confidence that boxers can adequately handle the responsibilities of being professional judges.

Today there are many former fighters who are working as TV commentators, boxing journalists, promoters, non-profit fundraising organization heads, etc. Why not employ some former fighters as professional boxing judges?

With the preponderance of horrendous decisions lately, the time is right to do something constructive. There is nothing more despicable in boxing than to see a winning fighter getting robbed of a victory by incompetent or corrupt judges. I believe that a former fighter with a fair reputation would have more empathy and respect for the two prizefight participants than some of these questionable judges we know nothing about.

Feedback is welcome: mrbiofile@aol.com


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