World’s first artificial-intelligence boxing judge unveiled for Fury-Usyk fight

“I analyze every round, every move, and every decisive moment during the fight,” the AI judge said. (The Ring)
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Updated 20 December 2024
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World’s first artificial-intelligence boxing judge unveiled for Fury-Usyk fight

RIYADH: An artificial-intelligence judge will score the much-anticipated rematch between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk here on Saturday, according to the organizers.

In a video posted early on Friday by General Entertainment Authority Chairman Turki Alalshikh, the AI judge explains how it will score the bout.

“I am the first-ever AI boxing judge,” the humanoid figure announces in the 38-second clip. “And I am here to bring fairness to the ring.”

The AI judge, powered by The Ring, the well-known boxing magazine, is just an “experiment” and will not decide the fight, according to Alalshikh.

Boxing fights are usually scored by three judges, who use the 10-point system each round to choose a winner in case there is no knockout.

“I analyze every round, every move, and every decisive moment during the fight,” it said.




Landed punches, effective aggression and defense will be monitored. (The Ring)

Like human judges, the bot will try to track landed punches, effective aggression and defense, collecting real-time metrics to calculate a score and decide who has won.

In the past, human judges have been accused of not scoring correctly, being biased, or more seriously, corrupt.

It is unclear what the long-term impact of the experiment will be, but other sports including football and cricket use similar technologies to support referees and umpires to make accurate decisions more quickly, which have led to fairer results.

Excitement continues to build for the fight. Fury, who exercised a clause in his contract for a rematch after his May defeat to the undefeated Ukrainian, is out for revenge.

The fighters faced-off for media photos on Thursday night ahead of the official weigh-in on Friday.




The two fighters faced off for photos in Riyadh on Thursday. (X/@Turki_alalshikh)

 


Forever Young to defend Saudi Cup crown from stall 6

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Forever Young to defend Saudi Cup crown from stall 6

  • Trainer Yoshito Yahagi happy with position for 2025 hero at King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Saturday

RIYADH: Forever Young (JPN) will emerge from gate six when bidding to defend his group one $20-million Saudi Cup crown at King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Saturday.

The reigning champion was the penultimate horse to be given a barrier and only five or six remained when Japanese trainer Yoshito Yahagi picked out the starting berth.

“I think six is a good number,” Yahagi said. “We don’t have to change anything with tactics. Honestly, I feel a lot of pressure on my shoulders bringing a defending champion but Forever Young doesn’t feel any pressure at all.”

American Hall of Famer Bob Baffert is in Riyadh and Flavien Prat will guide Nysos (US) from gate 12, while Irad Ortiz Jr. and Nevada Beach (US) have drawn gate seven.

“I’d rather be on the outside than the inside,” Baffert said after drawing the wide gate for Nysos.

“As long as the horse shows up that is more important. I think he is a really good horse and has always shown brilliance, he’s a trier and knows where the wire is. From the outside he will have a clear run.”

“Gate seven is good for Nevada Beach too. We just didn’t want to be in the one-hole,” Baffert added.

Last year’s fifth-place finisher Rattle N Roll (US) raced from seven on that occasion but this time around Joel Rosario will steer Kenny McPeek’s 6-year-old from stall 11.

Kyoko Maekawa drew stall one for Sunrise Zipangu (JPN) who will be ridden by Oisin Murphy. The Japan Racing Association’s first female trainer was Yahagi’s assistant in Saudi Arabia when Panthalassa (JPN) won The Saudi Cup from stall one in 2023.

Noriyuki Hori’s Luxor Cafe (US) has a wider starting point in barrier 10.

Leading local contender Mhally (GB) will break from stall 13. “We are very happy with that draw, we wanted something on the outside,” said Sheikh Faisal Al-Sabah, son of owner Sheikh Abdullah Homoud Almalek Al-Sabah.

“Hopefully he proves himself on Saturday.”

Banishing (US) was described as a horse with “a heart of gold” by trainer David Jacobson’s son, Zachary, and the American raider will break from stall three, while the Brad Cox-trained Bishops Bay (US) will come from nine.

The Saad Aljenade-trained Star Of Wonder (US) will start from the same stall five that Emblem Road (US) won the race, while his stable companion Haqeet (US) is inside that in box two under Mickael Barzalona.

Ryan Moore is a notable jockey booking for the Sami Alharabi-trained Ameerat Alzamaan (GB) who breaks from four.

Thundersquall (GB) will start from the widest draw of all in 14 for trainer Muteb Almulawah and jockey Danny Tudhope, while Tumbarumba (US) and James Doyle will begin the richest race in the world from eight for Hamad Al-Jehani and Wathnan Racing.