Comments Thread For: Calzaghe: I Would Have Beaten Andre Ward in Close, Tactical Fight
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if the ref allows low blows and dirty fighting, ward wins, if not paid off ref and normal boxing match, calzage winsComment
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At first, I was like there's no way Calzaghe would win. But then I thought about when they would have fought. The fight would have taken place around the time Ward competed in the Super Six Tournament. Ward came into his own during the tournament...but he was still perfecting his craft. Therefore, he may have been there for the taking....at the hands of Calzaghe. I still would consider Ward a favorite to win though. Ward became a great tactical fighter, equipped with the ability to fight a little dirty, and he has the will to win - everything that makes for a great champion!Last edited by Lefty0616; 06-26-2020, 12:16 AM.Comment
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Andre Ward and Hopkins were two different fighters. Hopkins was an overrated fraud. Ward fought more relentlessly. He fought to win. He never gave up in the ring. The only person Hopkins ever rallied to beat - and still lost against, was Jermaine Taylor. And let's face it, Taylor was far from a sound fighter. Calzaghe beat Hopkins......but let's face it. Hopkins rarely beat the better light heavyweights. Ward came to fight....and never lost. His only disputed win was against Kovalev (who Hopkins also lost against). I actually thought Ward won the first fight on points. He got beat up, but he won on points in my opinion. Ward had the heart to beat anyone in his weight class - to include Calzaghe.Comment
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I just meant that Kov shouldn't enter the equation.
As for Joe quitting to not face the Big Dogs, the only one you could seriously argue at the time was Dawson..... the narrative that he ducked people like Froch was largely put around by Froch himself.
Their careers just didn't overlap. Check the stats... when Calzaghe retired (at the age of 36) Froch was still fighting at British Title Level, and Ward had only had a dozen fights against low-level comp. He was hardly "ducking" two people who were just domestic at that time, and then in a lower division, with neither giving a real clue what they'd achieve... or, in Froch's case, overachieve.
The retirement that actually surprised me was Ward... at 33, he'd just TKO'd Kovalev by some deadly nut shots (I don't know if Joe could have hit Sergei's scrotum as well as Andre did) and was riding high... then he just left. For me, that was "WTF?" He still seemed to have a lot to offer.
Crazy!Comment
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