JUDGES COME UNDER CLOSE SCRUTINY
By David Field, PA Sport Boxing Correspondent, Sydney
Boxing's own 'Big Brother' will be in action during Sydney's Olympic
tournament.
The five appointed judges watching the bouts will be watched themselves by
video cameras as they sit at their scoring computers at ringside.
There has been worry expressed about the future of boxing at subsequent
Olympics, so the latest games will need to be pretty much controversy free,
especially so soon after last year's World Championships in Houston when the
Cuban team walked out after one dreadful decision.
British coach Ian Irwin is fully in favour of the new technology, adding:
"They need to be put under pressure - we all come under the same microscope.
Boxing has to get it right, we must have a good tournament.
"They have got to keep the politics out of it for future games and for
boxing's future - and I am quite confident it will happen.
"The cameras will be in a position that the judges will be looking from,
seeing the shots and seeing when they are pressing the button.
"It's a problem when you get officials from five Continents. The standard in
Europe might be quite different from that of Africa and Asia and that of
America."
The judges have red and blue buttons to press, and a point is scored only if
at least three of them press their electronic key pad within one second of each
other.
When two boxers trade blows in a flurry of fighting, and no full force punches
can land, the judges will wait until the end of the exchange and award a point
to the dominant boxer in it.
It has been reported that the International Amateur Boxing Association would
double the value of any bribe offered to the judge, if IABA were informed and
proof was supplied. The idea, announced at a judges' seminar in Kazakhstan,
apparently appeared in an IABA newsletter last month.
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