Cecil Peoples would like to
explain himself.
Cecil Peoples wrote:First of all what you need to understand is that from where the judges are sitting, we get to see things that the fans at home may miss. Mauricio Rua was being aggressive but it wasn't effective aggressiveness which is what we as the judges look for when scoring a fight. The way I saw it, Lyoto was landing the more cleaner and damaging strikes throughout the fight - if you take a look at the judging criteria clean strikes are valued more-so than the quantity of strikes landed. Although Rua threw a lot of low kicks they were not as damaging as Lyotos diverse attack in the earlier rounds which is why I scored the first three rounds for Machida.
You have to keep in mind we always the favor the fighter who is trying to finish the fight, and leg kicks certainly don't do that.
Leg kicks don't end fights? I think
these people would disagree with you. There is
nothing in the judging criteria that says or implies that leg kicks should be so disvalued.
When both fighters are engaged in a striking match what I always look for is the fighter who is being judicious, picking his spots, being accurate and landing the cleaner strikes which ultimately is what Lyoto did more effectively than Rua. Lyoto made Shogun come after him, he determined where the fight took place which in my opinion constitutes as effective Octagon control.
I recognize the fact that Rua did have a few takedown attempts during the course of the fight however Lyoto defended them all successfully which counts as effective grappling in his favor, where as unsuccessful takedown attempts are not scored at all. Therefore going by that criteria, I believe Lyoto won the fight clearly. I'm just glad the other judges on the panel saw it the same way and I'm sure the fans who understand the technicalities of the sport agree with the decision too.
You only think Lyoto was landing cleaner strikes because you don't think leg kicks count, you dumb ass. Rua landed significantly more strikes in the fight. Oh, and despite your insane definition of Octagon control, the official judging criteria states that since the fight was over 90% standing,
clean strikes should be weighed the most, followed by effective grappling, followed by Octagon control, and finally effective aggressiveness.
Here's how it should have been called:
1. Clean strikes - Shogun
2. Effective grappling - Lyoto
3. Octagon control - Shogun
4. Effective aggressiveness - Shogun
Winner - Mauricio "Shogun" Rua.
weemadando wrote:And the current criteria is ridiculous. Someone give me a definition of Octagon Control that doesn't suck.
This is how the judging criteria defines it:
J. Octagon Control
1. The fighter who is dictating the pace, place and position of the fight.
2. A striker who fends off a grappler's takedown attempt to remain standing and effectively strike is octagon control.
3. A grappler who can takedown an effective standing striker to ground fight is octagon control.
4. The fighter on the ground who creates submission, mount or clean striking opportunities
Shogun won #1, Lyoto won #2, but since it wasn't a large part of the fight, #1 should count for more. #3 and #4 are irrelevant since the fight did not go to the ground. And yes, this is a stupid criteria.