McCarthy: Dvalishvili stoppage was ‘right outcome’

The longtime former UFC referee and current Bellator commentator gave some additional perspective to the strange ending to Merab Dvalishvili’s fight with Ricky Simon in Atlantic City. Add another voice to those that think referee Liam Kerr…

The longtime former UFC referee and current Bellator commentator gave some additional perspective to the strange ending to Merab Dvalishvili’s fight with Ricky Simon in Atlantic City.

Add another voice to those that think referee Liam Kerrigan made the right call, Saturday night in Atlantic City, when he awarded Ricky Simon the victory over Merab Dvalishvili. The two bantamweights were engaged in a back and fourth war for 14 minutes at UFC Fight Night: Barboza vs. Lee (largely won by Team Serra-Longo’s Dvalishvili), when Simon defended a late takedown with a guillotine. And although Dvalishvili made it to the final bell, Simon was awarded a TKO victory.

Referee Marc Goddard – who was working with the commission that night – backed up Kerrigan’s decision to award Simon the win, saying, “He was actually out. And in that instance, it’s like any other instance if you pick up a rear-naked choke or guillotine.” Now longtime UFC referee, and current voice-in-the-booth for Bellator MMA, ‘Big’ John McCarthy is making it known that he agrees… at least with Simon winning. Maybe not so much with the TKO part.

McCarthy took to Twitter over the weekend to give his thoughts and respond to various questions about the decision.

He also gave his thoughts on a couple of similar situations; reflecting on Anderson Silva’s fight with Michael Bisping, where Silva appeared to knock Bisping out at the end of the third round, but the fight continued regardless. And there’s his take from January of last year, when Celine Haga lost a unanimous decision to Amy Montenegro, despite rendering Montenegro unconscious via rear naked choke as the final bell was sounding. Haga appealed the loss, but to no success.

It may be in those other two examples that the real problem with Kerrigan’s decision to award Dvalishvili the win lies. Not that he made the wrong move, but in past, similar situations the fight has continued on to the judges scorecards, even when it shouldn’t have.

Dvalishvili likely won’t have any better case to challenge the decision than Haga, either, despite being on the opposite end of the referee’s ruling. Commissions tend to defer to the judgement of their referees in these scenarios. So while eventually, the right man may very well have won last weekend, MMA officiating and rule enforcement is none the clearer for it.