Nevada still isn’t getting instant replay right

The Nevada State Athletic Commission should be applauded for using instant replay but fight action shouldn’t be interrupted in the process.

The Nevada State Athletic Commission instituted instant replay for combat sports about a decade ago.

Keith Kizer, the NSAC’s Executive Director at the time, made one thing clear: Replay would be used during the fight but the action itself would never be interrupted. He and the commissioners understood the importance of maintaining the structure of the sport, three minutes of fighting and one minute of rest. Timeouts were allowed only when fighter safety was an issue.

Kizer, a smart guy, and the commissioners at had it right. Current NSAC officials, who have expanded the process, have it wrong.

The NSAC employed instant replay during the Arnold Barboza Jr.-Alex Saucedo fight on the Teofimo Lopez-Vasiliy Lomachenko card Saturday in Las Vegas. Referee Celestino Ruiz ruled a slip when Barboza went down from a punch in Round 7.

The replay official, former referee Joe Cortez, knew better. He turned on a yellow light to indicate the referee’s ruling is under review and Ruiz stopped the action. Cortez informed Ruiz that Saucedo should’ve been credited with a knock down, the call was corrected and the corners were informed of the reversal.

All that is fine. Instant replay is used in an effort to get it right. And that’s what happened.

Here’s the problem: There was no reason whatsoever to stop the action to make the correction. Cortez could’ve waited until the end of the round to confer with Ruiz, who then could’ve informed the fighters of the ruling while they sat on their stools.

What did stopping the action accomplish? Was either fighter going to change his strategy or the way he was fighting because of the correction? Of course not.

One could argue that a fighter might change his or her tactics if that happened late in a close contest, although fighters aren’t apprised of the official scoring until the bout is over. Another possible example: The wrong call on whether a cut was caused by a punch or head butt could lead the injured fighter to coast when he should’ve been attacking or vice versa.

I acknowledge that there is no perfect approach to instant replay. However, in my opinion, the correction can almost always wait a minute or two – whatever time remains on the clock — until the end of the round to maintain the flow of the fight.

We’re frustrated when a tired or injured fighter purposely spits out his mouthpiece to buy time by forcing the referee to stop the action. We’re annoyed when the ref has to call a time-out because of loose tape on a fighter’s glove.

Why? Because it disrupts the flow of the fight.

And while stopping the action for instant replay can result in the correct call, as it did in the Barboza-Saucedo fight, it can also impact the fight in other ways. For example, it could give a tired or injured fighter extra time to recover. That’s not right. Boxing is not like football or baseball, which stops and starts anyway.

Nevada and other jurisdictions are on the right track by using instant replay. Again, it’s important to get these calls correct. The point here is that you don’t have to stop the action – which fundamentally changes the sport – to get that done.

[lawrence-related id=14772]

Nevada still isn’t getting instant replay right

The Nevada State Athletic Commission should be applauded for using instant replay but fight action shouldn’t be interrupted in the process.

The Nevada State Athletic Commission instituted instant replay for combat sports about a decade ago.

Keith Kizer, the NSAC’s Executive Director at the time, made one thing clear: Replay would be used during the fight but the action itself would never be interrupted. He and the commissioners understood the importance of maintaining the structure of the sport, three minutes of fighting and one minute of rest. Timeouts were allowed only when fighter safety was an issue.

Kizer, a smart guy, and the commissioners at had it right. Current NSAC officials, who have expanded the process, have it wrong.

The NSAC employed instant replay during the Arnold Barboza Jr.-Alex Saucedo fight on the Teofimo Lopez-Vasiliy Lomachenko card Saturday in Las Vegas. Referee Celestino Ruiz ruled a slip when Barboza went down from a punch in Round 7.

The replay official, former referee Joe Cortez, knew better. He turned on a yellow light to indicate the referee’s ruling is under review and Ruiz stopped the action. Cortez informed Ruiz that Saucedo should’ve been credited with a knock down, the call was corrected and the corners were informed of the reversal.

All that is fine. Instant replay is used in an effort to get it right. And that’s what happened.

Here’s the problem: There was no reason whatsoever to stop the action to make the correction. Cortez could’ve waited until the end of the round to confer with Ruiz, who then could’ve informed the fighters of the ruling while they sat on their stools.

What did stopping the action accomplish? Was either fighter going to change his strategy or the way he was fighting because of the correction? Of course not.

One could argue that a fighter might change his or her tactics if that happened late in a close contest, although fighters aren’t apprised of the official scoring until the bout is over. Another possible example: The wrong call on whether a cut was caused by a punch or head butt could lead the injured fighter to coast when he should’ve been attacking or vice versa.

I acknowledge that there is no perfect approach to instant replay. However, in my opinion, the correction can almost always wait a minute or two – whatever time remains on the clock — until the end of the round to maintain the flow of the fight.

We’re frustrated when a tired or injured fighter purposely spits out his mouthpiece to buy time by forcing the referee to stop the action. We’re annoyed when the ref has to call a time-out because of loose tape on a fighter’s glove.

Why? Because it disrupts the flow of the fight.

And while stopping the action for instant replay can result in the correct call, as it did in the Barboza-Saucedo fight, it can also impact the fight in other ways. For example, it could give a tired or injured fighter extra time to recover. That’s not right. Boxing is not like football or baseball, which stops and starts anyway.

Nevada and other jurisdictions are on the right track by using instant replay. Again, it’s important to get these calls correct. The point here is that you don’t have to stop the action – which fundamentally changes the sport – to get that done.

[lawrence-related id=14772]

Arnold Barboza Jr. defeats Alex Saucedo by unanimous decision

Arnold Barboza Jr. won the battle of junior welterweight titleholders. Barboza survived a knockdown to defeat Alex Saucedo by a unanimous decision on the Vasiliy Lomachenko-Teofimo Lopez card Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The scores were …

Arnold Barboza Jr. won the battle of junior welterweight titleholders.

Barboza survived a knockdown to defeat Alex Saucedo by a unanimous decision on the Vasiliy Lomachenko-Teofimo Lopez card Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

The scores were 96-93, 97-92 and 97-92.

Barboza (25-0, 10 KOs) outboxed, outworked and outlanded the typically aggressive Saucedo (30-2, 19 KOs), who was game but isn’t the complete boxer Barboza is.

The fighters landed a comparable number of punches but Barboza’s shots were generally cleaner.

Saucedo’s best moment came in Round 7, when Barboza missed a wild punch, got his legs tangled with Saucedo’s and then took a shot to the head that put him down.

The knockdown was initially ruled a slip. However, using Las Vegas’ updated replay rule, a ringside official indicated that Saucedo should’ve been credited for a knockdown and referee Celestino Ruiz ruled it as such.

Barboza is ranked in the Top 10 by the WBC and WBO. With his victory over Saucedo, he almost certainly will move up the ladder another rung.

Saucedo had won two in a row after losing by seventh-round TKO in a title shot against Maurice Hooker in 2018.