LAS VEGAS – Timothy Bradley's manager has what he casts as a simple explanation for anyone who suspects a fix Saturday night when his fighter upset Manny Pacquiao.
"I know Tim's very grateful that he won. He has
nothing to do with the decision. There's nothing corrupt going on, and
if there was something corrupt going on, Tim wouldn't have won," Cameron
Dunkin said Monday. "They didn't want Tim to win. He was the underdog.
He wasn't supposed to win, and he won, and the judges saw it that way.
They gave him those real close rounds."
A criticism of the split decision continues to resound. Top Rank chairman Bob Arum,
who promotes both fighters, said Monday he has submitted a formal
request to Nevada state attorney general Catherine Cortez Masto for a
full and complete inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the scoring
of the fight.
Ringside judges CJ Ross and Duane Ford scored it 115-113 for Bradley while Jerry Roth favored Pacquiao by the same score.
Boxing experts across the country were nearly unanimous in saying Pacquiao should have been awarded the fight.
"The
public has a right to know. The fighters have a right to know," Arum
said Monday. "The only way to restore fans' confidence in boxing is by
letting an independent body investigate every detail of the fight no
matter how big or small. Sunshine never hurt anyone.
"Unless
there's an investigation, it's not good for boxing, it's not good for
anyone. We want to get some clarity as to what happened."
Arum said he thinks the attorney general should investigate every facet of the fight, including the Nevada Athletic Commission,
the officials, the betting and the promotion (which is Arum's Top
Rank). "Maybe it's just bad judging; we just want to know the truth." he
said. "I'm not making any accusations."
Jennifer Lopez,
public information officer for Masto, said in an email to USA TODAY
Sports: "We can't confirm nor deny whether we have an ongoing criminal
investigation."
Asked about Arum's call for an investigation, Dunkin basically dismissed the idea.
"That's
his business, and there's nothing corrupt going on," he said. "When you
have judges, I don't care if it's figure skating, I don't care if it's
gymnastics or what it is, it's someone's opinion."
Also Monday, Bradley underwent an MRI to determine the seriousness of foot and ankle injuries he suffered in the fight. Test results were not immediately available.
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