Boxing fans can’t believe judge John Latham had Conor Benn’s victory over Chris Eubank Jr level after eight rounds.Benn dominated Eubank Jr in a largely one-sided rematch at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Saturday night.Benn dominated from pretty much start to finish with Eubank Jr showing little in responseMatchroom BoxingRight from the very opening bell, ‘The Destroyer’ was in the ascendency and a lacklustre Eubank Jr has very little in response.Many in the boxing world failed to give Eubank Jr more than three rounds on their scorecards, with the previous victor a shadow of himself in a difficult night at the office.At the final bell, it was declared that Benn was the leader on all three of the judges’ scorecards, with his margin of victory deemed unanimous.But referee Latham’s scorecard was closer than those of his compatriots Howard Foster and Marcus McDonnell.The final scorecards read at 119-107 and 118-108 with Latham seeing the bout closer at 116-110.That in itself angered the boxing world, who were left stunned by the margin he had reached.But it was under closer inspection, that fans really couldn’t believe their eyes.Eubank Jr vs Benn full scorecardsLatham’s scorecard was far different to the masses particularly after eight rounds.He incredibly had the pair having won four rounds apiece, with very little margins between them.For context, the talkSPORT scorecards largely read at 7-1 and 6-2 at the same time, with the likes of Dave Allen and John Rawling giving little success to Eubank Jr.But judge Latham’s scorecard told a very different storyIn the eyes of Latham, Eubank Jr could have quickly reversed the tides with four periods to go and gone on to win the contest on his card.His two other judges had it at 79-73 to Benn, a far wider margin going into the final quarter.Many reacted in shock, with one writing: “How on earth did John Latham have it even going into round 9.”Another added: “This guy was watching another fight. Utter disgrace. Even after eight rounds, what on earth.”A final viewer concluded: “Thank goodness the others saw sense by the end. Could have been one of the biggest robberies of all-time.”What next for Eubank Jr and Benn?For now, Eubank Jr has not committed to any future moves, but is facing widespread calls to retire.GettyBenn can now smell blood back at 147lbs and wants to fight for the WBC title[/caption]He remained defiant at the final bell, and even teased a potential trilogy.But Benn is instead more keen to rule out a third fight.For now, ‘The Destroyer’ is chasing world honours, and will shed 13lbs to move back down to his natural 147lbs weight class.And he and his team including promoter Eddie Hearn already have their sights set on a showdown with WBC welterweight champion Mario Barrios.