I think Lee's loss has made him very cautious. Lee has the tools to keep David off him. If there's one thing I notice, David shells up a bit and freezes when his opponent comes forward. If Lee could apply the what the Klitschko's do, he could have it in the bag. Stick from the outside with straight, hard shots, and occasionally throw a quick and hard combination, even against the gloves, to feel his power and keep him weary about coming in. Basically keep him at bay.
Both of them are unproven still. What has impressed me most about Lemieux so far though is how he can react or create openings himself. The power thing is not much unless a fighter can deliver it. He seems to know how to create openings very well and also has good timing to react. That added with his power makes him a risky go for anyone.
I see it like this. Lemieux seems to have a bit of that "it" factor. Lee has looked vulnerable at times and not just in his one loss.
Lemieux reads opponents well, gets deeper inside with each round, and breaks down his target with precision and power. Guerrero, Lee, McEwan and any other southpaws in the division (except for Martinez) are in great danger.
Andy Lee will easily outpoint the canadian. He is tall for a middleweight, and his outside style of fighting is PERFECT to ball all over David. David only has "fundamental" basic skills. He doesn't know how to "read and react". he is programmed, and just fights like a robot. Lee will pick him apart from the outside with his jab, and straight left all night. 118-110 UD for Lee.
lee will get dragged into a fight and lee's short compact power shots will blast lee out.