Boxers grow wary of judgment calls
Close fights and narrow decisions produced a wealth of righteous indignation at Workers' Gymnasium in Beijing, where a Russian world champion and a serious American medal contender both felt wronged by the subjective calls of the button-pressing men who judge their punches.
Sergey Vodopyanov, the world champion bantamweight, was edged by India's Akhil Kumar on total punches in a fight that ended 9-all. Raynell Williams fell behind early and never caught up to France's Khedafi Djelkhir.
Vodopyanov held his head in his hands when his verdict was announced, and he angrily stalked out of the ring after leaving powerhouse Russia with just five fighters left in the Games. Williams, the soft-spoken featherweight who seemed to be in prime position for a US medal, was more eloquent in his disappointment with the judges.
"I felt like I was moving great, getting my punches off, but I guess some of the judges thought otherwise," said Williams, whose defeat leaves just four US boxers in the field. "I felt like I was throwing a lot, but I guess they didn't count for a lot."
The complaints about judging have essentially scuttled any good feelings about boxing created by the International Boxing Association's 18 months of reform and transparency under a new administration.
The executive supervising the Olympic boxing competition said he sees no serious problems with the judging in Beijing despite widespread complaints from athletes and coaches, particularly those who have fought Chinese boxers.
Terry Smith, the technical delegate from the AIBA, emphasized the subjective nature of boxing's electronic scoring system when addressing the frustration and disappointment of Olympic fighters who have ripped the Beijing judging.
"I'm always aware of criticism," Smith said. "I don't think we've ever run a major tournament in our lives without picking up criticism."
China's surprising team has six boxers still in the tournament.
Russian resolution
The International Olympic Committee should punish Russia by moving the 2014 Winter Olympics out of Sochi, Russia, the cochairs of the congressional House Georgia Caucus said.Representatives Allyson Schwartz and Bill Shuster of Pennsylvania said in a joint statement they plan to file a resolution declaring that Russia's movement of troops into Georgia on the eve of the Beijing Olympics makes it an unacceptable country to host the Games.
"It is practically and financially untenable to hold the 2014 Winter Olympic Games less than 20 miles from a zone of conflict," according to a draft of the resolution.
Sochi was selected last summer as the location for the 2014 Olympics.
Nothing but blue skies
Pollution concerns evaporated yesterday under a picture-perfect canopy of blue skies and white clouds on the first day of the signature track and field events in Beijing.Heavy showers that drenched the city Thursday cleared away much of the pollution, giving Beijing its first genuinely sunny day since the opening ceremony kicked off a week ago. Temperatures hovered around a comfortable 82 degrees.
In a major bid to clear up the skies, city officials shut down scores of factories, stopped all construction, and removed 2 million vehicles from the roads for a two-month period.