‘A big piss take’: Irate Wilson reflects on 17-second delay that changed his life

‘A big piss take’: Irate Wilson reflects on 17-second delay that changed his life
By Murray Wenzel

Liam Wilson has reflected on the “piss take” that was his attempted world boxing title heist in Phoenix, saying he’d fight Emanuel Navarrete again for the WBO belt if his protest is upheld.

The Australian was nursing a sore head a day after the controversial defeat at Arizona’s Desert Diamond Arena on Friday night.

His team have claimed Wilson was “robbed” after the Mexican favourite was allowed 27 seconds to recover from a trademark left hook that floored him in the fourth round.

Navarrete, unbeaten since 2012 in 31 fights, then roared back to win an 11th world title fight in a third division via a ninth-round stoppage.

Those extra 17 seconds after the knockdown were life-altering for the unheralded Wilson, whose victory on a US debut would have been at least equal to the shock world title upsets by Jeff Horn five years ago and Jeff Harding nearly 30 years before that.

If followed a bizarre weigh-in drama on Thursday, where Wilson was about 2kg lighter than he had expected to be when the combatants stood on the scales.

Liam Wilson lands a punch on Emanuel Navarrete.

Navarrete snuck just under the 59kg super featherweight limit, leading to accusations of cheating and scale tampering to ensure the Top Rank star made weight.

“To me, it was just a big piss take and looked well and truly planned to buy him some time,” Wilson told journalists in Arizona on Saturday (Sunday AEDT) of the delay that saw referee Chris Flores stop the count, pick up Navarrete’s mouthguard and then re-insert it upside down.

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“I knew I was against it. The scales debacle a day before, then the ref’s doing that.

“For us to cause the upset, they would have hated that … it was easy for them to sabotage because they had power in other areas.”

Emanuel Navarrete after being declared the winner.

A protest was immediately lodged by promoter No Limit, one the Arizona Boxing Commission will review on February 15.

Wilson’s team want the bout declared a no-contest, which would strip Navarrete of the belt and wipe the loss off the Queenslander’s record.

“I definitely want a re-match if it’s for the exact same position,” Wilson said, confirming Navarrete hadn’t dismissed the idea of an Australian rematch “if the money was right”.

“It has to be to win a world title; I wouldn’t do a re-match for nothing … [and] I would love to do it in Australia.”

Helping Wilson’s case is support from the wider boxing community, with respected US analysts backing what could otherwise be viewed as spurious claims.

“It was a piss take, but we hate talking like this,” Wilson’s coach Ben Harrington said.

“We’re real boxing people. Saying, ‘We’re robbed’ is not us and it’s not Navarrete’s fault either. The last thing you want to do is cry foul, but it’s just so blatant that you can’t not.

“Unfortunately, it’s pretty common in boxing; judge corruption, long eight counts.”

AAP

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