'What a joke': Boxing world left raging over Tim Tszyu 'disgrace'
Aussie boxing fans were left seething on Sunday over one judge's scores for Tim Tszyu's victory over Terrell Gausha in his much-anticipated US debut.
Tszyu overcame illness and an alarming first-round knockdown to announce his arrival on the international stage with a unanimous points decision in Minneapolis.
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The Aussie conceded dark thoughts crept into his head after Gausha sent him crashing to the canvas in the opening two minutes of the all-or-nothing world title eliminator.
But the 27-year-old showed true grit to recover and win over the trio of American judges, claiming a brave victory that keeps his world title dream alive.
The judges scored the fight 116-111, 115-111 and 114-113 in Tszyu's favour, with the latter causing uproar in the boxing world.
Tszyu landed 236 punches at 31.5 per cent, while Gausha only landed 163 at 27.8 per cent.
Fans and commentators were left gobsmacked that judge Robert Hecko felt the fight was as close as it was.
Boxing reporter Dan Rafael said the 114-113 score was “absurd”, while Brendan Bradford of CODE Sports called it “tremendously bad judging”.
Judge Robert Hecko scored it 114-113. That is tremendously bad judging. Wow.
Also, the cut on Tszyu's head was from a headbutt in Rd 1. #TszyuGausha #Boxing pic.twitter.com/QRCZRvz5ne— Brendan Bradford (@1bbradfo) March 27, 2022
Gausha obviously won the first round. I could see MAYBE one or two others at most even though I went for Tszyu in those rounds. Those scores were absurd. #TszyuGausha #boxing
— Dan Rafael (@DanRafael1) March 27, 2022
114-113?? Bruh what?? Lol#TszyuGausha
— Will Blackmon 🍷 (@WillBlackmon) March 27, 2022
One of the judges scored it 114-113😂 Never change you moronic Americans. Bloke was a punching bag for 10 of the 12 runs. #TszyuGausha
— Rory Flanagan (@Rory_Flanagan) March 27, 2022
😂😂how a judge scored it 114-113 is a joke! #boxing #TszyuGausha
— Bryson Goodwin (@Bryson_Goodwin) March 27, 2022
Anyone think they Tszyu scorecards were shocking?
— Boxing Talk (@BoxingTalk02) March 27, 2022
114-113 ???? BOXING IS SO CORRUPT ☠️☠️☠️
— Eli 🇦🇺 (@RobsChestPound) March 27, 2022
How the hell did a judge have that as 114/113 what a joke
— Tom (@tommyha11_) March 27, 2022
Anywhere between 118-109/116-111 Tszyu. How a judge had it 114-113 was a complete disgrace
— nang2942 (@nang2942_promo) March 27, 2022
Absolute disgrace. We are in Australia, and thought Tszyu had to knock him out, just to be sure. That 114-113 is an absolute disgrace, and a reason why there needs to be international judges, with no country allegiances.
— MelbourneRangers (@TheRangers1972) March 27, 2022
Tim Tszyu vows to learn from Terrell Gausha scare
Tszyu enhanced his undefeated record to 21-0 and retained the No.1 WBO super-welterweight ranking.
But the ailing Australian - suffering from the flu - had critics raising "question marks" about his performance.
"Oh man, there's definitely some shit thoughts going through your head," Tszyu told Fox Sports' Main Event after being floored by a stunning right-hand blow to his head.
"That's a great lesson for myself; I got back up and I dug deep."
Asked what he still had to learn before hopefully facing the winner of the May 14 rematch between Jermell Charlo and Brian Castano, Tszyu said: "Everything".
"Everything and anything. There's a lot more to learn. This sport, there's so much to learn.
"You've got to keep going, keep training hard and keep on improving and keep fighting warriors like Terrell Gausha."
Commentating from ringside, Australian boxing legend Jeff Fenech agreed that Tszyu will need to address some weaknesses to be ready for Charlo or Castano.
"The performance was great," Fenech said.
"But there were so many different things that I've seen today that he can fix.
"He wasn't slipping to the side, making the jab miss and coming over with the right hand. He was trying to go straight through it.
"He was leading with the left hook, which left him open for the straight right hand.
"And the biggest thing was those pity-pat punches, where he was trying to set one big one up. instead of just getting to the side and working the body and then coming up."
with AAP
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