D
Post I quoted was about dui at low speed and near homeThat's not his point at all.
If you really weren't counting it then you wouldn't have mentioned it at all.You purposely cut my quote just to make it sound like it's something you disagree with, why? You clearly read how I said "Not even counting the shit he did", but made it seem as if my decision was based on the things Jon Jones did.
providing false analogies,
Comparing juicys loss to hammer to a crime is untenable. Being convicted of a crime has detrimental, life altering consequences. Juicy losing to a technicality had no adverse effects on his career whatsoever. The UFC treated it as a win and continued to match him with higher ranked fighters.Too many of you are missing the point or providing false analogies, so let me educate you:
Imagine a guy gets charged with a crime. The judge in the case incorrectly applies sentencing statutes and the guy is found guilty. But the law at the time doesn't allow for an appeal so it is what it is - AN INJUSTICE.
Years later that judge is disbarred because of the mistakes he's made (possibly or possibly not including the mistake referenced above). So that judge is no longer allowed to rule on cases, ever.
If you're the original guy's legal team, wouldn't you explore every avenue possible to get the original conviction thrown out/changed?
He is an undefeated fighter and should be able to market himself as such.Comparing juicys loss to hammer to a crime is untenable. Being convicted of a crime has detrimental, life altering consequences. Juicy losing to a technicality had no adverse effects on his career whatsoever. The UFC treated it as a win and continued to match him with higher ranked fighters.
USADA defeated himHe is an undefeated fighter and should be able to market himself as such.
How many endorsement deals has he lost out on because of this? How many more PPV buys would he have had? These questions are rhetorical.
The right thing to do is correct Mazzagatti's fuck up.
He's a drug cheat that has tested positive multiple times.He is an undefeated fighter and should be able to market himself as such.
How many endorsement deals has he lost out on because of this? How many more PPV buys would he have had? These questions are rhetorical.
The right thing to do is correct Mazzagatti's fuck up.
Besides the fact that not all of this is true and that everyone makes a few mistakes growing up, not one thing in this post has anything to do with the fact that his fight vs Hamill had an incorrect application of the rules and should be changed from a loss to a NC.He's a drug cheat that has tested positive multiple times.
He slammed his car into another vehicle containing a pregnant woman, did not check on her, fled the scene, returned for his money and weed then fled again.
After being at a strip club all night, while intoxicated he and a couple of strippers jumped in his bentley and he proceeded to wrap it around a telephone pole.
Besides the fact that not all of this is true and that everyone makes a few mistakes growing up, not one thing in this post has anything to do with the fact that his fight vs Hamill had an incorrect application of the rules and should be changed from a loss to a NC.
You used his loss of income as your primary argument as to why the decision should be overturned.He is an undefeated fighter and should be able to market himself as such.
How many endorsement deals has he lost out on because of this? How many more PPV buys would he have had? These questions are rhetorical.
The right thing to do is correct Mazzagatti's fuck up.
Even with the problems he has faced in his personal life, he would be making more money if he were able to be marketed as an undefeated fighter.You used his loss of income as your primary argument as to why the decision should be overturned.
Even with the problems he has faced in his personal life, he would be making more money if he were able to be marketed as an undefeated fighter.
Try to stay on topic.
sounds about right...ya just can't go rewriting every bad ref call/DQ to loss/bad judgingHe was dominating the fight and clearly was on the way to a finish, but he also broke the rule. Refs have discretion to take points or DQ. This ref saw fit to DQ. Right or wrong that’s how it ended and it’s in the books. He isn’t an undefeated fighter. Nothing to see here.
If we are gonna argue the fact about that refs decision and give Jon the win then i also want to over turn his judges decision gift over Gus.
If I were that guy's legal team I'd think really, long and hard before going down the "incorrectly applied" sentence road. An "L" on his record his better than a 6 year suspension, 2 TKO losses, and God knows how many potential losses due to eyepoke point deductions.Too many of you are missing the point or providing false analogies, so let me educate you:
Imagine a guy gets charged with a crime. The judge in the case incorrectly applies sentencing statutes and the guy is found guilty. But the law at the time doesn't allow for an appeal so it is what it is - AN INJUSTICE.
Years later that judge is disbarred because of the mistakes he's made (possibly or possibly not including the mistake referenced above). So that judge is no longer allowed to rule on cases, ever.
If you're the original guy's legal team, wouldn't you explore every avenue possible to get the original conviction thrown out/changed?
The things you mention, most of which are either blatantly false or wildly inaccurate, have nothing to do with the topic presented in the OPIf I were that guy's legal team I'd think really, long and hard before going down the "incorrectly applied" sentence road. An "L" on his record his better than a 6 year suspension, 2 TKO losses, and God knows how many potential losses due to eyepoke point deductions.
Trying to hold the results in a sports contest to the same threshold we use for determining whether someone should be imprisoned is problematic, to say the least. We don't even do that in civil lawsuits, if we're talking about revisiting judgements 10 years after the fact. Sorry but Jones' appeals were already exhausted. It was a borderline case to begin with. Jones certainly didn't "win" the fight that ended when he broke a rule, it would have been a No Contest at best. A No Contest means the fight was fucked and there was no outcome worth recording. There is no criminal judicial equivalent, because unless a defendant dies mid-trial, someone's either guilty or innocent, and even if there's a mistrial that process continues until it's all been sorted out.Too many of you are missing the point or providing false analogies, so let me educate you:
Imagine a guy gets charged with a crime. The judge in the case incorrectly applies sentencing statutes and the guy is found guilty. But the law at the time doesn't allow for an appeal so it is what it is - AN INJUSTICE.
Years later that judge is disbarred because of the mistakes he's made (possibly or possibly not including the mistake referenced above). So that judge is no longer allowed to rule on cases, ever.
If you're the original guy's legal team, wouldn't you explore every avenue possible to get the original conviction thrown out/changed?
Of course they do. With were hopping in the Hot Tub Time Machine to go back and right the reffing wrongs, him not intelligently defending himself from an armbar, or having a compound fracture in the middle of a round are both definitely things that should be TKO's on his record.The things you mention, most of which are either blatantly false or wildly inaccurate, have nothing to do with the topic presented in the OP