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"I thought Bradley gave Pacquiao a boxing lesson," Ford said. "I thought a lot of the rounds were close. Pacquiao missed a lot of punches and I thought he was throwing wildly."
Arum believes the decision -- along with the Nevada commission's reluctance to conduct its own investigation -- could provide the impetus for a federal commission to provide oversight for the sport, which has long battled the perception that it is rife with corruption.
"If the commission here in Nevada will be in intransigent, and won't cooperate, we have to have a federal commission," Arum said. "We have to examine who these are on the commission, how they got there, how they operate. Something is broke."
Stats compiled by Compubox showed Pacquiao landing 253 punches to 159 for Bradley, and having a 190-108 edge in power punches. Pacquiao landed at 38.5 percent to 27.7 percent for Bradley.
The decision ended Pacquiao's 15-fight winning streak, but also sets up a potential rematch later this year. There has been talk that it could happen in November.
Perhaps by then, Arum will have the clarity he is seeking from their first fight.
"Any other sport -- football, baseball -- the commissioner's office would investigate," he said. "I'm not saying hang anybody, but let's get clarity here. Let's get a complete report as to what happened. They could say, `Hey, all three judges had a bad night.' That's possible, too. I'm not leaping to conclusions. I want to know as well as anybody else."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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