(JUNE 15) In an surprising and,
judging from the reaction of the fans, unpopular decision,
Heather Hardy was awarded a split decision over JackieTrivilino
in a scheduled eight round bout on the undercard of a seven
fight program, headlined by Chris Algieri and Ruslan
Provodnikova, Saturday night at the Barclays Center in the heart
of downtown Brooklyn. The decision came after seven of the eight
rounds had been contested, one of several bizarre aspects of the
fight. [Controversial Stoppage Interview Video
Go here]
Seconds before the start of the final round, the referee
signaled, from midring that the bout was over. It was assumed,
by the crowd, that Trivilino had been declared the winner by
TKO, due to a cut above Hardy's right eye, incurred early in the
bout. However, no movement was made to raise Trivilino's hand in
victory and discussion among ring and medical officials,
continued in Hardy's corner. After more than five minutes, the
ring announcer proclaimed the bout had been stopped due to
Hardy's cut, and the decision would go to the scorecards.
The resulting judges' tallies were announced as 67-66, Trivilino,
67-66, Hardy and,unaccountably, 68-65 Hardy, and were met with
full voiced derision from the crowd, a cascade of boos from
fans, who, up to that point, had expressed almost unanimous
support for Hardy.
Those onlookers, charged with "covering" a sporting event, have
a primary purpose of objectively rendering a report of the
details of the contest. I try to adhere to that dictum. But
given the circumstances surrounding the climax of this bout, I
would be remiss in forgoing my impression that Jackie Trivilino
maintained a decided edge in
the bigger punches, being the aggressor in almost every round
and getting the best,
to my eyes, in the majority of punch/punch exchanges
with Hardy for most of the seven rounds. While Hardy certainly
had some moments throughout the bout when she counterpunched
effectively with left hooks to the head and body, the fight was
clearly, in my view, Trivilino's and she deserved the win,
whether by TKO or decision.
Heather Hardy has developing ring skills. To date, she had
wended her way through nine wins against a convential starter's
kit of opponents that have, historically, been put in front of
an "up and coming" fighter for whom "big things" in the sport
are forecast. On Saturday night, Hardy took a step up in
competition with the most experienced of her opponents yet and
as she broke through to double digit bouts in a career that many
think will result in the promised land of "big things," Heather
Hardy got a small taste of just what lies ahead. It took what
seemed like a convoluted set of circumstances to achieve that
tenth win. And it only gets tougher from here.