Did any of you see Timothy Bradley Vs Manny Pacquiao???? DAY LIGHT ROBBERY!!!!!

naveed

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
I DO NOT THINK I HAVE EVER SEEN A WORST DECISION THAN THIS IN BOXING HISTROY.

MANNY THRASHED HIM BUT JUDGES GAVE DECISION AGAINST HIM


JUST HORRIBLE.

IT WAS WORST THAN WHAT THEY DID TO AAMIR KHAN




600
 

wadera

Senator (1k+ posts)
I DO NOT THINK I HAVE EVER SEEN A WORST DECISION THAN THIS IN BOXING HISTROY.

MANNY THRASHED HIM BUT JUDGES GAVE DECISION AGAINST HIM


JUST HORRIBLE.

IT WAS WORST THAN WHAT THEY DID TO AAMIR KHAN




600


yeah man . I am still pissed with the decision .. referees must be blind .. sad day for boxing . and Khan was commenting .. he didn't utter a word after the decision was announced . .I reckon he must be really pissed too
 

butt1940

Citizen
when the reults were being read and it said 15-13 ,13-15 i thought to myself WTF it wasnt even tht close , it should have read 20-10,19-11,18-13 to manny all day.even the commantators were disgusted.bradley felt embarrassed in his interview.
 

inzimam

Councller (250+ posts)
I don't believe in boxing any more

Whats the point of all this BS. Even a blind person could tell it was Manny who dominated through out the fight.

Even my 9 year old son was sure about who really won. What a joke.No wonder boxing is dying.Vegas always win.Never watching Boxing Again.

577125_321042451316715_1044397019_n.jpg
 
Last edited:

biofilm

MPA (400+ posts)
[h=1]Pacquiao's remarkable run comes to unjust ending against Bradley[/h]
LAS VEGAS -- Injustices like the split decision that gave Timothy Bradley a controversial victory over Manny Pacquiao on Saturday are not unheard of in boxing.
Yet that doesn't make the stunning outcome of their welterweight title fight -- one of the most dumbfounding decisions in recent history -- any easier to fathom.
Pacquiao connected on 253 of 751 punches (34 percent), compared to 159 of 839 (19 percent) for Bradley, and outlanded the challenger in 10 of the 12 rounds. The Filipino absorbed Bradley's best shots in the early rounds and, undeterred by his opponent's rapidly diminishing power, relied on his speed and power to entice Bradley into toe-to-toe exchanges and batter him into retreat.
"I don't remember if he hit me with one punch," Pacquiao said afterward.

Yet ringside judges Duane Ford and C.J. Ross both scored it 115-113 to Bradley, dissenting with Jerry Roth, who had it 115-113 to Pacquiao. (SI.com scored it 116-112 to Pacquiao.)
The decision was met with disbelief, then shock, then anger by the mostly pro-Pacquiao crowd of 14,206 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. Said promoter Bob Arum: "I went over to Bradley before the decision and he said, 'I tried hard but I couldn't beat the guy.'"
It marked the end of a remarkable run for Pacquiao (54-4-2, 38 KOs) that spanned more than seven years, 15 victories, and five championships in five weight classes.
After everything he's done for boxing, Manny Pacquiao is the last person who should have been cheated like this. He deserved better.
When a shortage of marketable stars threatened the sport's popularity, Pacquiao emerged as not just the fighter of the decade, but the most socially important boxer since Muhammad Ali.
But it's been a rough year for Pacquiao, Inc.
The consummate sportsman, he's been held to an impossible standard, harangued for simply beating opponents instead of delivering the spine-tingling knockouts of his heyday. His tax and marital problems have been aired in public, while his decision to recommit himself to Catholicism has been mocked. Pacquiao's one-of-a-kind brilliance has been taken for granted, overlooked by a microwave society that's so easily bored and overeager for the next thing and doesn't appreciate what it has until it's gone.
The decision, of course, was no fault of Bradley (29-0, 12 KOs). The junior welterweight champion turned in a heroic effort in his second fight at 147 pounds, overcoming foot and ankle injuries to his left and right feet (respectively), and never acquiescing like so many Pacquiao opponents have done through the years. It was a brave effort by one of the sport's most promising young talents.
It just wasn't enough to win.
"There are three judges out there. What do you want me to do?" Bradley said, when asked whether he felt he deserved the victory, before alluding the the return bout. "We definitely have to do it again."
They will fight a rematch in November -- Arum said it will happen in Florida, Texas or Nevada -- and Pacquiao said he'll be as motivated as ever. There's little question that he's past his peak: the Pacquiao of three years ago would have closed the show in the fourth round, when he had Bradley holding on for dear life after unloading a fusillade of punches from angles that defied geometry.
Yet there he was early Sunday morning, addressing the press after coming up on the wrong end of a gruesome miscarriage of justice, and what did he say?
"Whatever happens, don't be discouraged about boxing," Pacquiao said. "Next time."

It just shows that Americans are CHEATERS!

It's getting worse by the day. Rondu qaum.