Originally posted by Mike Brewer
Originally posted by Mike Brewer
Originally posted by Mike Brewer
Steele was under no obligation to "cheat," to flagrantly give Taylor an undeserved chance to try to see if he could last the 2 seconds, while taking all of Chavez' hard work away from him.
Originally posted by Mike Brewer
Originally posted by Mike Brewer
This is why the referee is called "the third man in the ring," because he is the impartial observer and enforcer of the rules. You are basically suggesting that Richard Steele should have ceased to be "im"partial, and made a partial and biased decision to give Meldrick Taylor an undeserved continuance of the fight, even though Steele was ethically-obligated to stop said fight, precisely because Taylor did not answer him when Steele asked if he was okay.
Originally posted by Mike Brewer
The fact is Taylor wasn't the only one who put on a great performance that night, and while he did box wonderfully and touched Chavez more than Chavez touched him, the fact remains Chavez' punches were far more deadly and far more telling to the ultimate outcome of the fight. It's pretty hard to say that a man who was counted out and had to go to the hospital for two weeks "beat" a man who went home to his family afterward. Meldrick Taylor put on the best fight he could possibly have put on, and he did a great job, but it just was not enough to beat Julio Cesar Chavez.
And while Chavez may not have scored as often as Taylor, his punches ultimately carried more weight, they did more damage, and they resulted in a broken Taylor lying flat on his back, who though he did manage to somehow get up, still wasn't responsive enough to answer the ref and so was rightfully deemed unable to continue the fight.
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