The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Least boxers who risk death deserve is truthful judging

Sacrifices made by fighters should entitle them to a level playing field on the scorecards – and more empathy from the public

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The day after the fight, the non-combatants left town unmarked, entertaine­d. A group of Tyson Fury’s fans ran for a cab to the airport and broke the record for the number of large men in one taxi. Inside the hotel they had left, Fury, with a cut face and swollen forehead, was reflecting on the dubious scoring that earned Deontay Wilder a draw in their world heavyweigh­t title fight.

Fury said he just wanted to get home: “I’ve got a little daughter there and she’s probably forgotten me. She’s only a year old.” A sad look crept over his wife Paris’s face as she lowered her gaze to the table.

For those outside the ring, boxing is a slice of entertainm­ent: a guilty pleasure to some, a completely reasonable form of sport to many. But the day after, you see glimpses of the cost to those who part the ropes. They risk death and serious injury – mental impairment in later life. They can be called bums and quitters and frauds by punters. And they are at the mercy of judges’ scorecards, especially in the opponent’s back yard, as Fury was on Saturday.

Wilder, so truculent all week and menacing in his ring-walk get-up, was an entirely different man an hour after the battle. For days he had exuded a furious resentment of all Fury’s provocatio­ns. The defending champion’s ring-walk costume was apocalypti­c: feathered cape and jewel-encrusted face mask and crown. After the fight, though, he spoke like a soul singer: soft, mellow, reflective. Almost the first thing he said was: “Getting hit in the head ain’t cool.”

Pre-fight hype treads a fine line between turning casual spectators off the sport and finding the right emotional touchpoint­s, which Wilder v Fury did. But even with our adrenalin still flowing, we owe it to them to stop and consider what they have to go through to provide this spectacle, the money from which is no guarantee of happiness.

Both fighters in Los Angeles made a point of articulati­ng the reality behind the 12-round show, the “night out” that left Wilder fortunate to still be in possession of his belt. No wonder, you might say, he was being philosophi­cal.

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