By Elliot Worsell
SOME like to be noticed. Others donโt. The best, weโre told, are the latter kind, the ones who shy away from attention, but sometimes being noticed isnโt necessarily by design.
Howard Foster, for example, is one referee who doesnโt like to be noticed. Itโs not his thing. Never has been. Yet, at 8.20 pm on the night of November 23, 2013, he entered the changing room of George Groves, briefly interrupting the boxerโs warm-up, and was all of a sudden noticed.
More than that, he was the centre of attention, just as heโd been moments before, when delivering in a different changing room the same instructions to Carl Froch, and just as heโd be at around 11 pm.
โDonโt hit him while heโs down,โ Foster said to Groves as the boxer sat on a chair and the music playing on a speaker was turned down. โGo to the furthest neutral corner and the important thing is you must stay there. If you come out of that corner, Iโll stop the count. Okay?โ
Groves focused on Foster but it was hard to tell if he wasย reallyย listening. Akin to pre-flight safety commands issued by an air hostess, he waited for it to be over.
โWhen youโre in close,โ Foster continued, โwatch your heads. No holding. When I say break, you break. Again, if youโre holding and I tell you to stop holding, thatโs when you stop holding. You can work inside or you can step back.
โNo hitting the back of the head, keep your punches up, have a good fight and good luck.โ
As Foster looked to escape, remove himself from the spotlight, his exit was thwarted by Grovesโ coach, Paddy Fitzpatrick, who had some instructions of his own.
โI know youโre in a hurry so Iโll keep it brief,โ he said. โI just want to remind you of something Froch actually said…โ
โLook…โ Foster interjected.
โNo, please,ย listenย to me. If he does get caught, accidentally, he said he will deliberately foul back.โ
โIโve spoken to Carl just as Iโve spoken to George. No fouls. A nice, clean fight, thatโs all I want.โ
โI understand. And the other thing is, please let them work inside, just as you said.โ
โAbsolutely,โ said Foster, offering his hand to Fitzpatrick before fleeing.
Three hours later, Groves returned to the same changing room having been stopped to a soundtrack of boos in round nine. The boos, rather than directed at him, were instead directed at Howard Foster, the referee, who sensed Groves was hurt in the ninth round, decided to stop the fight and inadvertently, regrettably became noticed.
His decision enraged the bloodthirsty and confused those of a calmer disposition, while Groves, exhausted, carried the demeanour of someone who had both won and lost. There was a slight cut along the top of his head, seen to by a doctor and some stitches, and large welts beneath his eyes. There were also numerous scuff marks along his neck, shoulders and back, accentuated by translucent skin. But these battle wounds, the result of punches, head-butts and shoulder barges, were curiously juxtaposed by a wide smile, one associated with victory, as well as the upbeat testimonies of all who surrounded him.
โTwo weeks ago,โ Groves recalled, โPaddy said to me, โIโm a bit worried about Howard Foster because he has a habit of jumping in early.โโ
All-knowing rather than happy, the boxerโs ever-present smile suggested he and his coach had seen the controversy coming.
โHoward Foster said to me that the reason he stopped it was because George was hurt,โ added Fitzpatrick. โNow, Froch was hurt six times before George had even taken a solid shot. Being hurt isnโt good enough. This is a world title fight. This man didn’t even give him a chance, let alone a count. No benefit of the doubt whatsoever.โ
โI thought the referee was breaking it up, not stopping it,โ Groves said with a sigh.ย
A couple of weeks on, having had time to ruminate, Groves sat down in his Isleworth apartment and analysed the fight, round by round. When the ninth began, his earlier bolshiness made way for a pensive silence.
โThe only time I ever felt a shot was in the ninth, a bit before the stoppage,โ he said. โThat was the right hand that skimmed me behind the ear. I felt it so went in to tie him up. But itโs not as if Iโm clambering or staggering about. You watch me in the Kenny Anderson fight and Iโm f**king drowning compared to this.
โWhen thereโs a stoppage, thereโs usually desperation. But if you look at who is showing desperation, itโs Froch, not me. Even as the stoppage comes, he is punching out of desperation, not control or dominance. He is a desperate man. He knows this is his one and only chance to make something happen. And Howard Foster was equally desperate to stop the fight.โ
Upon doing so, the crowd complained and Groves, almost cradled by the referee, fought to wriggle his way out.
โLook at the face on that security guard,โ said Groves, pointing at a man whose face resembled that of a child watching his sibling get the blame for something he didnโt do. โHeโs at all the Matchroom shows. He probably works all of the Froch shows. He might even be a Froch fan. But he knows. Heโs not stupid.โ
Following the initial commotion, Groves petitioned to the IBF for a rematch, and the rematch, set for the following May, wound up at Wembley Stadium, sold somewhere in the region of 80,000 tickets and secured Groves and Froch for life. It also ended conclusively, with Groves knocked out by a Froch right hand in round eight.
Howard Foster, meanwhile, the referee partly responsible for a great British boxing rivalry, remains one of the countryโs best and more reliable officials. Heโs also no longer a hot topic, much to his delight.
For as long as heโs licensed by the British Boxing Board of Control, this will always be the case. โThe Boardโs policy is that active officials should not talk to the media,โ Iโm informed by Robert Smith, the Board secretary, when exploring the possibility.
The protection makes sense. It prevents officials becoming the centre of attention and, better still, prevents them saying something they shouldnโt. But, equally, trusting the actions of grown adults responsible for the wellbeing of boxers in a prizefight becomes difficult when these same adults seemingly canโt be trusted to formulate an explanation for their actions.
Weโre not talking immediately after the fact, either. That, an emotional response, would be reckless. It would benefit nobody. But surely a considered statement, written or otherwise, would go some way to pacifying the feeling that officials are not only protected but somehow hidden away in a witness protection programme, cleared of all responsibility. Moreover, to accept human error, which is supposedly all a bad decision ever is, doesnโt there need to at least be some understanding of the human responsible for the error?
โI think the Board have it right,โ says retired refereeย Mickeyย Vann, now free to speak. โThey have to clean up the backlash. Theyโre the frontline. If anything goes wrong in boxing, you get on to the Board.
โAfter a fight, youโre like a fighter. Youโre full of yourself, full of emotion, your adrenaline is still flowing, and you might say something you regret. Also, you get so many referees who want to be bigger than the sport and they might say something to get headlines.โ
For American officials, the rules differ slightly. Kenny Bayless, when I first interviewed him, was days away from refereeing the September 2015 bout between Floyd Mayweather and Andre Berto and unwilling to be drawn on that particular subject. He was, however, free and happy to talk about everything else, including the one mistake he believes he has made.
โIโm just as human as anyone and Iโve done it,โ he said. โThe biggest blunder Iโve made was when Manny Pacquiao was fighting Shane Mosley and I was a bit out of position and got a little complacent and ruled a Pacquiao knockdown when it was more of a push. I didnโt get a good view and it was a mistake. I felt it necessary to apologise to Pacquiao afterwards, so I did. It happens.โ
Richard Steele, perhaps second only to Mills Lane in the pantheon of iconic referees, has never had a problem speaking to the media. But he too sees the pitfalls.
โA referee can really hurt himself by speaking to the media too fast,โ he says. โThey should take some time to think about what happened andย thenย address it.
โHe has the whole world listening to him and he might not be telling the truth. He could be damn wrong. In those instances, itโs better if the referee doesnโt speak to the public.โ
Some 25 years have passed sinceย Vann, also a judge, joined Switzerlandโs Franz Marti and Texan Jack Woodruff ringside at the Alamodome in Texas and controversially scored the WBC welterweight title fight between Pernell Whitaker and Julio Cesar Chavez a draw.
โI must have been comfortable with it because thatโs how I scored it,โ saysย Vann, asked if the fight felt like a draw at the time. โIf I wasnโt comfortable with the result, I shouldnโt have been scoring it. Or I should have scored it differently.โ
Itโs then you wonder, having watched the fight and scored it comfortably in favour of Whitaker (116-112), whether being among 59,000 in San Antonioโs Alomodome, described as โChavez Countryโ by commentator Steve Albert, played any part inย Vannโs verdict.
โNone of that influenced my scoring,โ he says. โYou donโt even hear the crowd when youโre ringside. All you hear at the end of the round are the TV commentators saying what a great round that was for so and so. You think, what the f**k are they on about?โ
The biggest bone of contention concernsย Vannโs actions following round six, a round Whitaker appeared to win but a round in which he debilitated Chavez with low blows.
โBoxing Newsย slaughtered me, but they were wrong,โ he says. โWhitaker hit Chavez in the balls and then banged another one in.
โJoe Cortez, who was never the best ref, didnโt ask me to take a point off. But I was a former fighter and if I was hit in the balls twice it would have taken me a minute or so to recover. So thereโs no way I could give that fighter, Whitaker, the round. Instead, I was the only judge who gave it to Chavez.
โNow, the last round was Chavezโs best and everybody said he won it. I gave it to Chavez, Marti gave it to Chavez, but Woodruff gave it to Whitaker. Nobody said owt about that.
โIn the end, Marti had it a draw, I had the same score, and Woodruff had it 115-113 to Whitaker. But if he hadnโt given that final round to Whitaker, what would you have? Youโd have a draw. Yetย Iย got f**king crucified for it.โ
Vannย survived the backlash and was refereeing a world heavyweight title fight between Lennox Lewis and Frank Bruno just three weeks later.
โI never watched it (the fight) back,โ he admits. โThere was that much furore about it. I had to go in front of the senate committee and endure everything they could throw at me.
โI also had a skip business at the time and the geezer writing for theย Washington Postย called me a f**king โrefuse collectorโ. He called me a dustbin man. They wanted to undermine me.
โI then went to Vegas after the Lewis and Bruno fight and in the hotel they had the magazine for what was on that week. In the magazine it said โโฆalso staying at The Mirage this week is The Infamousย Mickeyย Vann.โ It was so over the top.โ
Robin Reid was able to relate to โSweet Peaโ Whitaker the night he ventured to Nuremberg, Germany and seemingly outboxed IBF and WBA world super-middleweight champion Sven Ottke in December 2003. Judging the fight was Franz Marti, one of the men responsible for Whitaker drawing with Chavez, yet it was the scandalous performance of referee Roger Tilleman that left the biggest impression.
โThat Ottke fight was a blatant robbery,โ says Reid. โThe guy had never refereed a world title fight before and was clearly way out of his depth. I was basically getting points taken off for punching my opponent.โ
In addition to warnings for head-butts and holding, none of which made sense, Reid appeared to score a knockdown in round six that wasnโt counted and was constantly reprimanded for using the inside of his glove following the connection of a clean and correct shot.
โThe referee was a master at ruining the flow of the fight and guiding Ottke to the finish line,โ says Reid. โEvery time I got near and threw a punch, Iโd hear โstop!โ and weโd have a little pause. Despite that, even when I watch it now I struggle to give Ottke three rounds out of the twelve.โ
By round five, Reid was perfectly content. โWhat do you reckon, Brian?โ he asked his coach, Brian Hughes, in the corner.
โJust keep doing what youโre doing, son,โ replied Hughes. โThis is going great.โ
Easier than expected, it was only when Reidโs manager, Jess Harding, emerged at ringside that the magnitude of the task truly hit home.
โRob, youโre being ripped off,โ said Harding. โYouโre four rounds behind. Youโre going to have to knock him out.โ
โAt that point you just see my face drop as the reality dawns on me,โ remembers Reid. โThatโs the last thing you want to hear, especially when youโve just been patting yourselves on the back for a game plan that seems to be working. Now it was like an emotional roller-coaster. Do you stick with something we believed was working or try something different?โ
Reid did a bit of both, yet still suffered the indignity of discovering two of the judges had scored the fight 115-113 and Marti had posted a 117-112 card.
โWhen they were reading the scores,โ he says, โI remember thinking, wow, Iโve absolutely p***ed it. I didnโt think Iโd get it this wide in Germany. Maybe this place isnโt as bad as they make out.
โThen all you heard was โAndย still…โ Ottke looked at me, with his bruised eyes and swollen cheekbones, and kind of shrugged as if to say, sorry, welcome to Germany.โ
Tilleman died in 2012. He never had to explain his bizarre performance that night. Reid, though, has his own take on why Ottke appeared to have been so protected and why the result of the fight seemed decided before a punch was even thrown.
โOttke made an absolute fortune in Germany,โ he says. โI didnโt realise just how popular he was. He was everywhere: on posters, billboards, even on their version ofย This Morning.
โGermany wasnโt producing a lot of world champions at the time, but Ottke had a world title and they werenโt about to give it up. This is my theory, not fact. If heโs getting a million euros per defence, a percentage of that goes to the IBF or WBA as a sanctioning fee. So you can either have him as your champion or you can have Robin Reid, a guy who can only make 70-grand fighting Joe Calzaghe. I know who Iโd want. Maybe thatโs just my way of getting my head around what happened.โ
As paydays dried up and his career petered out, Reid needed an explanation. He deservedย thatย at least.
โThat win was my ticket to the Calzaghe rematch,โ he says. โIf I had the IBF and WBA titles, there was no way he could avoid me anymore. Now I would have something to bring to the table; now I would be in a stronger position than he was. Also, the rematch would have been even bigger because it would have been a unification fight.
โThatโs what devastated me more than the defeat. That rematch was all I ever wanted.โ
Richard Steeleโs moment of controversy arrived in March 1990 when he watched Meldrick Taylor accumulate rounds, as well as brain damage, in a WBC and IBF super-lightweight title fight against Julio Cesar Chavez.
โI made the right call at the right time,โ says Steele, who stopped the fight when Taylor, upright but unsteady following a 12th round knockdown, was unable to answer his questions with two seconds left on the clock. โI only wish I could have made the call earlier to save the young man. Because of that fight, he was never the same again.
โThis kid was a great fighter and a gold medallist at the (1984) Olympics. Not only was he winning the fight, I thought he had a chance to finish it.
โBut Meldrick was winning rounds as if it was an amateur fight โ on points โ and Chavez was the one doing bodily harm. He was breaking bones. Meldrick swallowed four pints of blood. Man, that is something. All the bones were shattered in his right eye. He took a beating.
โWhen he got hit by that right hand, it was over. He didnโt know where he was. He couldnโt answer me.โ
Plenty accused Steele of robbing victory from Taylor. He was too trigger-happy, they claimed, and should have taken into account the fightโs proximity to the finish line when halting the man in front. Yet Steele, 28 years later, feels his decision has been vindicated.
โAt first, I was sick of it,โ he admits. โBut I had the privilege of getting some medical reports which explained why he couldnโt answer me. Not only was his body dehydrated, his brain was dehydrated. He had no liquids in his body or in his skull. Thatโs why he couldnโt answer me.
โAfter I got that information, I was very proud of what I did. Wherever I go, people ask me about that fight. But now they understand I did the right thing. It took the world a long time to realise I did the right thing.โ
Howard Foster canโt talk because heโs not allowed to talk. Roger Tilleman canโt talk because he passed away. Meldrick Taylor, meanwhile, canโt talk because the damage he suffered in his fight with Julio Cesar Chavez left him unable to do so.
Thankfully,ย Mickeyย Vannย does enough talking for the lot of them.
โI never, ever made a mistake. Thatโs me telling you,โ he says. โBut, of course, Iย didย make mistakes. Iโd just never admit them. Because that, to me, is a weakness. Never, ever admit youโve made a mistake.โ