Did he say he had ruled it a NC at all mate, due to the reasons stated above?
Did he say he had ruled it a NC at all mate, due to the reasons stated above?
i worked the UCC show. no one was lied to about any weights. weigh ins were public for all to see
So let me get this right...
He took a fight after a surgery, the opponent changed last minute, he still accepted even though the opponent was over the weight initially agreed, lost and is now asking for the result to be overturned?
Coffee drinker, prefer Pepsi and I'm kind of a big deal.
If Sherdog are willing to change records because of fighters/managers emailing them then i shall be undefeated by the end of the week ;D
3-2-0 Pro Fighter managed by TFL Sports Agency
The point of contention seems to be whether or not he was 'blagged' that his opponent was the same weight or not before the fight. Both the fighter and his manager say that he was, while the ref and promoter say he wasn't.
Question: A fighter accepts a fight on the day, against an opponent who he is told by the promoter is a certain weight. It transpires after the fight that the opponent was in fact a considerable amount heavier. Is that grounds for a no contest? Obviously we'd like to think that promoters would be honest about a fighters weight - but is it the responsibility of a fighter/coach to ask to see their opponent on the scales, otherwise accept the fight 'sold as seen'?
Fighting, writing and mood lighting.