A former Olympic gold medalist, super middleweight Andre Ward knew that he was well-respected as a boxer.But in lifting the 168-pound WBA crown from Denmark's Mikkel Kessler before his hometown crowd at Oracle Arena on Saturday night, the 25-year-old demonstrated his skills as a fighter.
Ward rose to 21-0 with 13 knockouts by defeating Kessler (42-2, 32 KOs), a man nicknamed "The Viking Warrior" and who was known for winning bouts on the road.
After their fight was stopped in the 11th round due to Kessler's bleeding cuts around both eyes -- ruled to have been caused by accidental head-butts -- Ward was declared the winner of a unanimous, 11th-round technical decision.
The matchup was the third in Group Stage One of Showtime's Super Six Super Middleweight World Boxing Classic, which is comprised of the premier athletes in the 168-pound division.
The two earlier Group Stage One matchups were won by Germany's Arthur Abraham and England's Carl Froch, respectively, over Arkansas' Jermain Taylor and Michigan's Andre Dirrell.
So the Europeans led 2-0 entering Ward's matchup, which he talked about with FanHouse during this Q&A on Monday.
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