exceptional cases vs the exceptional cases

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White Hat

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"Most of the bouts went the distance. Exceptional cases included FIGHTER X VS FIGHTER Y and FIGHTER A VS FIGHTER B."

Is 'exceptional cases included' or 'the exceptional cases included' correct here?
 
It's correct as it is. You can read it as [There were] Exceptional cases [which] included... if that makes it easier.

Adding "the" wouldn't make it ungrammatical however, but it isn't necessary.

Please tell us your source.

I think "Exceptions" would have been a better choice than "Exceptional cases" (if I've understood what the writer meant correctly). "Exceptional" can refer to an exception but it's more often used to mean "out of the ordinary".
 
I appreciate it, Barque. I ran into this in a piece of writing I was translating into English. I think I'll go with 'there were exceptional cases that included'. Can I use 'that' instead of 'which' here?
 
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OK. Will it be OK to say 'There were exceptional cases, which included'? Can I place a comma before 'which' here? Or should I just say 'Exceptional cases included'? The meaning is the same, isn't it?
 
OK. Would it be OK to say 'There were exceptional cases, which included'? Can I place a comma before 'which' here? Or should I just say 'Exceptional cases included'? The meaning is the same, isn't it?
 
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