Ward rolls through Abraham, into Super
Six finale
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
May 14, 2011
With a Los Angeles Galaxy soccer game
taking place just mere minutes away on the same turf, Saturday
night's Super Six World Boxing Classic semi-final bout between WBA
champion Andre Ward and former middleweight king Arthur Abraham felt
much aligned with the usual pomp and circumstance that accompanies a
game of futbol.
At the end of the day, 2004 United
States Olympic Gold medalist and WBA super middleweight champion
Andre Ward marched to victory after early difficulties, conquering
his Armenian born German foe on the hostile field of the Home Depot
Center in Carson, California where Abraham enjoyed an awkward home
field advantage in front of over 5,000 fans, many of them waving the
red, blue, and gold flag of Armenia.
Ward, who long has been criticized for
having been coddled in the confines of his hometown of Oakland,
California, felt the ire of the crowd for the first time in his
professional career and he responded brilliantly after a rough early
going.
Abraham, the former long-reigning IBF
middleweight champion who moved up a weight class to participate in
the groundbreaking Showtime developed shortened round robin
tournament, came out quickly as he took the fight to Ward and took
him out of his comfort zone, landing a few big shots in the opening
round that helped keep Ward on his laurels for the next couple of
rounds.
Ward, who entered the tournament as a
consensus longshot to make it to this point of the tournament, began
to gain confidence in the fourth round as Abraham reverted to the
style that helped cost him two back to back blemishes in his last two
fights of the tournament. Abraham fell into a shell and Ward kept
coming forward as he attacked the high guard of his powerful foe and
moved out of the way of return fire when Abraham did elect to throw.
Both fighters made for an awkward battle much of the way as they came
together in clinches often and tried to jostle each other around the
ring.
Ward's timing began to appear more
heavily in the fifth round, and from that point on Abraham rarely
pressed the action, making it easy work for the judges to begin
awarding round after round to the undefeated champion. Ward backed up
Abraham with flurries often and rarely was hit clean the entire
second half of the fight.
Ward even turned southpaw a number of
times and found a lot of success doing it, mainly in the championship
rounds. Ward drew boos from the heavily Armenian crowd whenever he
landed, and for the last eight rounds there were plenty of boos.
“It was fun, I had a lot of fun,”
responded Ward on what it was like fighting the crowd as well as his
opponent for once. “I look at one of my favorite fighters, Floyd
Mayweather, Jr. who is 40-0 when he fought in Las Vegas against Ricky
Hatton and he had the whole crowd against him. I looked at his
composure, how he stayed composed even though it was a rugged fight,
a tough fight, and literally everybody was against him, so we found a
way to get it done. I had a job to do.
“I told people before, who said they
thought he might have more fans, 'He might have more fans but it'll
be fun.' That's what it was, because you have to prove you as a
champion that you can win under different circumstances. I know that
I can perform under any circumstnaces but it was good to let the
people know I can perform under any circumstances.”
Abraham, possibly sensing a bit of
urgency, opened up in the twelfth similar to how he began the fight,
but it was too little, too late as Ward was already far ahead on all
three judges' scorecards.
The official verdict rendered was a
unanimous decision victory for the Bay Area, California native, by
way of 120-108, 118-110, and 118-111 scores. The big story in the
leadup to this bout was the perceived unfairness of the selected
officials as drawn attention to by Abraham's promoter Wilfred
Sauerland. It is interesting to note because it was impartial judge
Stanley Christodoulou of South Africa who turned in the shutout
scorecard of 120-108 in favor of Ward, not the German or American
one. Christodoulou was scoring bouts in 1976, when neither Ward or
Abraham had even been born yet. Christodoulou is nearing 70 years of
age.
Now Ward and trainer Virgil Hunter will
look forward to a few weeks from now when the other half of the
semi-finals plays out in Atlantic City, New Jersey between WBC
champion Carl Froch and former Fighter of the Year Glen Johnson. The
winner earns the rights to a fight with Ward in the tournament
finals, tentatively scheduled for the end of the year.
It's quite obvious that to Ward, Froch
is the most desirable opponent. Despite his impressive run through
his recent streak of competition, cases can be made for why Ward has
been successful as well as ways to undermine the opposition it came
against. If Froch is able to get past Johnson, it makes a fight
between the two for real super middleweight legitimacy rather than
Ward possibly getting the throne against a mid-40's opponent who had
toiled at the weight class above for much of the last decade.
“He's been calling for it, we want to
give the fans what they want. It's gonna be an action packed fight,
it'll be a live atmosphere like it was tonight,” said Ward in
accordance to a future Froch fight.
Whomever Ward stares across the ring at
in the finals, the Super Six has made true on at least one of it's
promises: to make at least one star out of it. Ward entered the Super
Six a total question mark, a fighter who had not really faced upper
echelon talent but was perceived as a potential pound-for-pound
talent. So far, Ward has done nothing but back up the claims that he
could be the next Roy Jones, Jr. as he has not lost more than a
handful of rounds since passing his first real test against Edison
Miranda a few fights before the Super Six began. That's the kind of
thing that Jones, Jr. [and Ward favorite Mayweather, Jr.] did for so
long, utterly dominate opponents so easily that it only left fans and
critics able to question his adversaries' credentials rather than
Ward's actual in ring performance.
Despite the win, there will still be a
handful of “haters” in the boxing media who will try and say Ward
fought “a shot Mikkel Kessler, a never-was Allan Green, a money
chasing Sakio Bika, an out of his weight Arthur Abraham”, and if
Glen Johnson finds his way in the finals, “a 40-something loser of
double digit fights that had no business being a participant in the
first place”. When measured against the credentials of IBF champion
Lucian Bute, its hard not to side with Ward as the best in the
division no matter how you try and slice up his resume.
Ward is on the fast track to
superstardom and has one more road block to a potential windfall of
cash in a unification showdown with Showtime fighter Bute, who has
been disposing of his opposition just as easy as Ward. What Showtime
has done with a division that had largely been dominated by fighters
outside the United States and rarely featured meaningful contests has
been underrated. By the end of things, through this tournament alone
the winner will be able to make the claim that their legacy holds
more weight than that of the undefeated Joe Calzaghe, who dominated
the 168-pound weight class for nearly a decade. If Ward can continue
making it look easy, it won't be long before he passes up the
Welshman and doesn't look back.
--------
In a back and forth heavyweight affair,
local favorite Chris Arreola [31-2, 27 KOs] of Riverside, California
stopped the gutsy Nagy Aguilera [16-6, 11 KOs] of Newburgh, New York
in the third round of their scheduled ten round co-feature. Arreola,
who came in at his lightest weight since July of 2007, brought the
fight to Aguilera who surprisingly was able to weather much of the
storm and fire back when Arreola seemed to gas a bit. It is unclear
if it was a strategy of the Aguilera corner to counter off the ropes
but he did so pretty well until the third round when he failed to
fire back enough before referee Raul Caiz, Jr. halted it at 1:58 of
the third.
“I wasn't worried about my stamina,”
exclaimed Arreola following the win. “I'm gonna be back in the gym
on Tuesday. I'd like to get a title shot and bring back the title to
America.”
2008 U.S. Olympian Javier Molina [6-0,
4 KOs] of Norwalk, California kept his perfect record intact as he
outboxed Hastings, Minnesota's Danny Figueroa [3-2, 2 KOs] over four
competitive but clear rounds en route to a unanimous decision
victory. Molina controlled the distance with his jab and outfought
Figueroa on the inside to control each stanza.
In a heavyweight walkout bout, Bowie
Tupou [21-1, 16 KOs] of Los Angeles, California scored an abrupt
stoppage of former world ranked heavyweight Manuel Quezada [29-7, 18
KOs] in round seven of a scheduled ten-round heavyweight contest.
Quezada was controlling the fight the whole way until the end of the
sixth when Tupou landed a hard enough series to stun the former #3
WBC heavyweight. Quezada had his nose busted in round seven and was
dropped, not reaching his feet before the count of ten. The fight was
halted at 53 seconds of the round.
Fellow 2008 U.S. Olympian Shawn Estrada
[12-0, 11 KOs] of East Los Angeles, California stopped the
overmatched Joseph Gardner [7-3-1, KO] of Woonsocket, Rhode Island
with a right-left hook combination at 1:27 of the first round.
Estrada came into the bout wildly overweight, showing a lack of
integrity for the sport by not giving it his full focus. Estrada came
in close to the light heavyweight limit while his opponent was below
the super middleweight one. This comes after Estrada looked to be on
the right track following a couple incidents that were reported by
low brow boxing journalists.
Van Nuys, California based junior
welterweight Andrey Klimov [11-0, 6 KOs] scored a third round
technical knockout of former Peterson brothers sparring partner Ty
Barnett [18-2-1, 12 KOs] of Washington, D.C. in a scheduled six-round
bout.
Fellow Van Nuys prospect Matt
Villanueva [6-0, 5 KOs] earned a four-round nod over the gamer than
his record would indicate Frank Gutierrez [2-10-2, KO] of Highland,
California in a bantamweight bout. Villanueva's class was clearly
higher than his opposition's but Gutierrez showed tremendous heart as
he kept going despite being outgunned in every sense of the word.
Junior middleweight Armenian Armen
Ovesepyan [11-0, 9 KOs] ended things early, stopping Guadalajara,
Mexico based Arturo Brambilla [9-15, 4 KOs] in their four-round
scheduled bout. The finishing punches were a left-right combination
upstairs that dropped Brambilla to the canvas. Referee Raul Caiz, Jr.
waved it off at 2:44 of the opening round.
In a prolonged beating, Dominik Britsch
[22-0, 8 KOs] of Bad Friedrichshall, Germany battered late substitute
Delray Raines [18-10-1, 13 KOs] of Paris, Arkansas for five rounds
before referee Ray Balowicz finally called a halt to the contest at
2:21 of the round in the six-round middleweight bout. Raines tasted
the canvas in each round from the second stanza onwards, with each
knockdown looking more brutal than the last. To his credit, Raines
earned his paycheck on this night as he kept making it back to his
feet to take more punishment until Balowicz saved him from himself.
The nine bout card was promoted by
Goossen-Tutor Promotions in association with Sauerland Event and
Antonio Leonard Productions and was sponsored by Corona.
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