Sherdog’s Top 10: Burglars
Number 2
Leonard Garcia had three jaw-dropping decisions come down in his
favor. | Photo: D. Mandel/Sherdog.com
2. Leonard Garcia
Garcia’s place in the history of egregious decision thievery has less to do with quantity than quality. He has a draw that probably should have gone against him and three split decision victories on his record, and all three of them were “Robbery of the Year” candidates with a strong claim for spots on the all-time worst list.
This pattern of winning awful, undeserved decisions began with Garcia’s scrap with Jameel Massouh at WEC 42 in 2009. Despite “Bad Boy” being out-landed by a 2-to-1 margin and giving up a pair of takedowns, judges Lester Griffin and Dave Hagen were so mesmerized by Garcia’s penchant for swinging big and missing big that they awarded him two of three rounds.
Advertisement
The real capper to Garcia’s reign of undeserved terror over the division came against Nam Phan at “The Ultimate Fighter 12” Finale in December 2010. This was the quintessential Garcia performance, as it embodied the fundamental principle that landing shots matters less than leaving the judges with the impression that the fighter is producing offense. Phan landed 102 strikes out of 227 thrown; Garcia landed only 64 but threw 282. The air produced by Garcia’s flailing arms might have powered an offshore wind farm, and apparently sustainable energy production served as a valid judging criterion for Adalaide Byrd and Tony Weeks.
Garcia provides an object lesson in how to crack the judging formula in MMA. Looking busy is far more important than actually landing strikes; the more impressive those shots look -- and few would deny that Garcia always seems as though he is trying to finish the fight with a single mighty swing -- the more likely it is that the judges will reward misses with rounds scored in that fighter’s favor. Garcia’s constant and pathological aggressiveness did not hurt, either. The terrible decisions in Garcia’s favor may have been few in number relative to some of the other contestants on this list, but for sheer egregiousness, he stands near the top.
Number 1 » In its own totally screwed up way, each of his recent undeserved victories has a lesson to teach about a problem with MMA judging.
« Previous Sherdog’s Top 10: Fights That Failed to Live Up to Their Hype
Next Sherdog’s Top 10: Most Durable Fighters »
More Top 10s