Robbery Review: Daniel Rodriguez vs. Li Jingliang at UFC 279

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Few things infuriate MMA fans more than a fight being scored incorrectly, though the term “robbery” tends to be thrown around carelessly and is often steeped in bias. With Robbery Review, we’ll take a look back at controversial fights and determine whether the judges were rightly criticized for their decision or if pundits need to examine their own knee-jerk reactions

Li Jingliang’s UFC 279 fight week couldn’t have gone much worse.

“The Leech” had been scheduled to face UFC legend Tony Ferguson at Saturday’s co main event. However, he was unable to take on his opponent due to the lineup shuffle that Khamzat Chimiaev caused. Li was not able to present a new suit to the media and talk to journalists at Thursday’s press conference. This was cancelled because Nate Diaz and Chimaev were in an altercation backstage.

Then Li stepped into the cage to face Daniel Rodriguez, a fellow welterweight contender who entered the bout with a huge weight advantage after initially weighing in for a 180-pound catchweight bout. The fight ended in a close loss for Li.

Several Li peers protested the decision of judges immediately.

Li himself appears to be taking the loss in stride, but for his sake and the many fans who felt that he won he fight, we are obligated to take this one to the Robbery Review lab for a closer look.

What was the official result?

Daniel Rodriguez def. Li Jingliang via split decision.

How did the fight go?

Normally we’re able to focus on a round or a key moment in a fight to help us figure out why a verdict is controversial, but as you’ll see from the scorecards in the next section, every round in this fight was a toss-up according to the judges so we’re going to have to dig in deep here.

One broad note we can make is that Li was the busier-looking fighter through all three rounds. His ability to move and keep up with Rodriguez’s larger size was impressive. This could have made him a significant factor in the outcome.

Rodriguez got his offense going first in Round 1, wading through Li low kicks to land a few clean punches to the head. Li was doing well with his kicks, but his punches were falling short, which wasn’t surprising given Rodriguez’s excellent jab. It took half a round for Li to land his first solid combination, a clean 1-2 that backed Rodriguez up. About 45 seconds later, there was another good 1-2 by Li and you start to see how narrow the gap is between these two. Rodriguez kept the jab going, not looking to bite on Li’s numerous feints, then he took advantage of a sloppy kick from Li by cracking him with a left across the jaw, possibly the best strike of the round. Rodriguez was tripped by a low kick, but he was otherwise unharmed and sprung back to his feet.

Heading into Round 2, you can see how Li’s athleticism might give Rodriguez problems, but it was actually Rodriguez who held the center of the octagon for the most part. They exchanged glancing punches early and Li started to get adventurous, throwing with power with mixed results. Rodriguez continued to eat a steady diet consisting of counter-rights, jabs, and low kicks which were also matched by Li. More punches from Li fell just short despite his best efforts. Li connected with a nice low kick, but then ate a hard jab on a Superman punch attempt. A huge moment was had by Li when Rodriguez caught him with a quick left and hammer right.

Li had good counter work going early in Round 3, though neither fighter landed with much impact in the opening exchange. Rodriguez caught Li coming in with another counter. Li’s aggression started to work against him as Rodriguez clipped him with a 1-2. They traded leg kicks before Rodriguez went back to the jab. Li was still looking to land big shots, but with the benefit of replay it’s easy to see that few of those shots landed outside of the occasional looping right. Rodriguez kept landing jab after jab throughout the fight, making him a consistent weapon.

What did the judges say?

Mike Bell scored it 29-28 Rodriguez.

Douglas Crosby scored it 29-28 Rodriguez.

Ron McCarthy scored it 29-28 Li.

*] Bell scored rounds 1 for Rodriguez, while Crosby was credited with round [*********************************************************************************************************************************************************] and rounds [************************************************************************************************************************************************] for Rod. McCarthy got rounds of [******************************************************************************************************************************************** ************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************ Bell scored rounds 2 and 3 for Rodriguez, Crosby scored rounds 1 and 2 for Rodriguez, and McCarthy scored rounds 2 and 3 for Li.

What did the numbers say?

(Statistics per UFC Stats)

Looking at the official stats only further muddies up the waters.

Going by significant strike count, Li won Round 1 (27-20), while Rodriguez took Round 2 (34-24) and Round 3 (34-27). Rodriguez also won the head strike battle in every round (R1: 10-7, R2: 19-8, R3: 25-10), which shouldn’t discount the advantage Li had in body and leg strikes, but head strikes are generally considered to be more significant indicators of immediate impact (though tell that to Irene Aldana).

No knockdowns were scored in the fight.

Li was credited with a takedown in Round 1 that led to zero offense.

What did the media say?

The media was nearly unanimous in scoring the fight for Li, with 20 of 23 scores submitted to MMA Decisions in favor of “The Leech.”

Two media members (including the esteemed Jed Meshew) had it 29-28 for Rodriguez, while MMA Mania’s Drake Riggs had it 30-27 Li.

What did the people say?

(Data derived from MMA Decisions and Verdict MMA)

Fans scoring the bout on MMA Decisions also saw this as a clear win for Li, with 68. 2 percent voting for a 29-28 Li score and another 21. 5 percent voting 30-27 Li.

Going round by round, 81. 8 percent scored Round 1 10-9 for Li and 87. 4 percent scored Round 2 10-9 for Li. A 10-9 score for Rodriguez in Round 3 was the leading choice, but even then only received 57 percent of the vote.

Voters on the Verdict MMA app scored the fight for Li by a wide margin.

That scoring system takes the cumulative total of every submitted fan score (filtering out aberrant scores like random 10-7s if they comprise less than one percent of the total) in every round and divides by the amount of submitted scores to determine the winner of each round and also in totality.

Verdict scorers gave every round to Li, the first two by over 50 points. That led to a final margin of victory of 142 points for Li, well over the threshold of 100 that I consider to be indicative of a convincing win according to the Verdict scoring system.

How did I score it?

* First, the people who booed that fight should stop acting so ridiculous. We’re not seeing tactical, high-level striking anymore.

Secondly, I scored this one for Rodriguez in the moment, so I had a bias going into this review.

As I watched the fight over again, my attention shifted to whether Rodriguez’s head hits were as powerful as I remember and whether I was paying enough attention Li’s leg and body work. It was clear that Rodriguez’s leg and body work was better than I thought. Li also managed to land a few great head shots.

Initially, I felt confident Round 1 was Rodriguez’s and Round 2 was Li’s, but now I can see how Round 1 could be Li’s and Round 2 could be Rodriguez’s! It was a wonderful trip.

Getting granular with it, I noticed (with the benefit of multiple replays) that several of Li’s power shots that had Rodriguez off-balance didn’t actually connect, though I imagine it’s these moments that played well for Li in the eyes of the live viewer. Several exchanges happened in a flash and were easy to miss. But, I have no doubt that Rodriguez consistently got better head shots than Li and that Li was the winner in that area of fight.

So I’m standing by my 29-28 score for Rodriguez, with Round 3 being his best frame and the first two being incredibly difficult to score.

Was it a robbery?

I believe that a lot of support for Li comes from people who want to see him win. He fought through the last week as a champion, but I don’t mind reading so I will just say that I wanted Li to win. After all that he endured. So I understand how one would want to see him rewarded not just for being a company man, but for putting on a strong performance against a bigger fighter and a tough stylistic matchup.

It also doesn’t help that Rodriguez was at his most methodical, which didn’t necessarily make for a barnburner, though keep in mind that neither fighter trained for the other so they were essentially figuring it out on the fly out there. Fans were not given the best of Rodriguez nor Li and the fighters still delivered an entertaining and competitive contest.

Competitive is the key word in this Robbery Review discussion, because this was unquestionably a back-and-forth fight where both fighters had their moments without either convincingly pulling away. If you thought Rodriguez’s jab defused Li, fine; if you thought Li earned the nod with his timely aggression, that’s fine too.

Here’s the point: It doesn’t matter if you scored it for Rodriguez or Li. You don’t have to believe that either of these men won the fight.

The final verdict

Not a robbery.

Rating