Marlon Sandro was victimized by the “must decision.” | Photo: Daniel Herbertson/Sherdog.com
9. Marlon Sandro vs. Michihiro Omigawa
Sengoku “Ninth Battle”
Aug. 2, 2009 | Saitama, Japan
Heading into his first-round tournament showdown with Omigawa, Sandro was riding a decent wave of momentum. A 14-fight tear, including highlight-reel finishes in his last two outings, had positioned the Nova Uniao product as a breakout star in the featherweight division. Perhaps the only thing stealing Sandro’s shine was the emergence of teammate and then WEC 145-pound king Jose Aldo.
However, only judge Masanori Ohashi saw it that way, giving the Brazilian a 30-29 nod on his scorecard. Omigawa’s ability to stay in the fight was rewarded by Kenichi Serizawa and Takashi Kobayahsi, as both scored the contest a 30-30 draw. Of course, with this being a tournament, deadlocked scorecards required the judges to render a “must decision.” Somehow, both Serizawa and Kobayashi took the opportunity to side with Omigawa.
In an interview with MMAmania.com, Sandro cried foul, claiming that Omigawa’s coach was a partner with Sengoku. He also believed the “must decision” rule never should have come into play.
“In my mind, I did not lose any round,” Sandro said. “I connected more punches than him and I fight much more aggressive than him.”
As it turned out, Omigawa was unable to capitalize on his good fortune. He dropped a split decision to Masanori Kanehara in the tournament final.
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