Photo: James Hirth
Johil de Oliveira (above, file photo)
was the beneficiary of curious scoring.
International Vale Tudo Championship 5 “The Warriors”
April 28, 1998 | Sao Paulo, Brazil
Gholar picked a rough place to make his professional mixed martial arts debut. Fighting a Brazilian on his home soil is never an easy task, as evidenced by the record of foreigners competing against athletes from the South American nation since the UFC began holding cards there on a regular basis. However, the situation was likely far worse for Gholar, who hoped to garner a road win under the International Vale Tudo Championship banner in 1998, years before MMA went mainstream.
By landing the occasional jab and leg kick, Oliveira probably got the better of the standup encounters, but he landed nothing that truly resonated. Gholar put his stamp on the bout in the final five minutes, landing his last takedown and spending the remainder of the encounter on top. When Oliveira sought refuge in the netting under the bottom rope of the IVC ring, Gholar was undeterred, as he continued to land strikes until time expired.
A bleeding Oliveira looked unconvincing as he raised his hands in triumph at the bout’s conclusion, but perhaps he had an inkling of the heaping helping of Brazilian home cooking that was to come. All three ringside judges revealed scores in favor of Oliveira, a ruling that to this day has a cult of supporters on forums and message boards who view it as one of the sport’s most overlooked bad decisions.
Those who believe in karma can take solace in this: Oliveira lost nine fights in a row after his fortuitous verdict over Gholar.
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