LeBanner Solves Judging Problem
Jake Rossen Oct 4, 2010
Michael David Smith and Dan Herbertson of MMAFighting filed a
report from this past weekend’s K-1 event that detailed veteran
kickboxer Jerome
LeBanner leaving the ring when he was told to fight in overtime
against Kyotaro. “Not fair” was LeBanner’s attitude: he believed he
had done enough to win.
Smith called the action “disgraceful.” I wouldn’t go that far: while it’s never recommended you leave a fight before it’s been called, the ambiguity that Japanese promotions thrive on would be enough to drive anyone out of the arena and over a cliff. Arbitrary overtime rounds shouldn’t be called in the first place. In K-1’s defense, LeBanner understood the rules (presumably, anyway) when he walked in. If he didn’t like them, he was in the wrong building. And if he was counting on judges to make reasonable calls, he’s in the wrong sport.
Smith called the action “disgraceful.” I wouldn’t go that far: while it’s never recommended you leave a fight before it’s been called, the ambiguity that Japanese promotions thrive on would be enough to drive anyone out of the arena and over a cliff. Arbitrary overtime rounds shouldn’t be called in the first place. In K-1’s defense, LeBanner understood the rules (presumably, anyway) when he walked in. If he didn’t like them, he was in the wrong building. And if he was counting on judges to make reasonable calls, he’s in the wrong sport.
Related Articles