Andre Ward on Hand for Team USA vs. Team China at Oracle Arena

Olympic Gold Medalist and Two-Time Boxing World Champion Andre Ward was on hand at Oracle Arena for the USA Basketball Showcase featuring Team USA vs. Team China on Tuesday night.

Ward cheered on fellow Roc Nation athlete and the newest Golden State Warrior Kevin Durant and Team USA as they cruised to victory by a score of 107-57.

A proud Oakland native, the undefeated Ward (29-0, 15 KOs) will return to the ring on Saturday, August 6 at Oracle Arena to continue his conquest of the light heavyweight division when he takes on power-punching Columbian Alexander Brand (25-1, 19 KOs). The event will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing® beginning at 10:35 p.m. ET/PT. Follow the conversation using #WardBrand.

Tickets priced at $250, $120, $90, $40 and $30, not including applicable service charges and taxes, go on sale Tuesday, June 28 at 5:00 p.m. PT and will be available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.

For more information, please visit www.rocnation.com. Follow Roc Nation on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation.

All photos, courtesy of Khristopher “Squint” Sandifer

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May 14, 2011

ANDRE WARD ADVANCES TO

SUPER SIX WORLD BOXING CLASSIC FINAL

WITH DOMINATING DECISION OVER ARTHUR ABRAHAM

Winner of June 4 Semifinal Between Carl Froch-Glen Johnson Up Next
___________________________________________
Saturday, May 14, Live on SHOWTIME®
From The Home Depot Center in Carson, Calif.

Catch Replay On Tuesday, May 17 (10 p.m. ET/PT), On SHOWTIME
CARSON, Calif. (May 14, 2011) – Undefeated World Boxing Association (WBA) champion Andre Ward moved one win away from claiming the ground-breaking inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic Cup with a convincing 12-round unanimous decision over “King” Arthur Abraham at The Home Depot Center Saturday on SHOWTIME®.

Ward (24-0, 13 KOs) will face the winner of the June 4 Super Six Semifinal on SHOWTIME between World Boxing Council (WBC) super middleweight champion Carl “The Cobra” Froch (27-1, 20 KOs) and former world champion Glen “The Road Warrior” Johnson (51-14-2, 35 KOs) of Miami, Fla., for the right to fight for the Super Six title and 168-pound world supremacy sometime in the fall.

Fighting outside the comfortable confines of Oakland, Calif., for the first time in 20 months spanning three fights, Ward defended his WBA belt for the third time in what SHOWTIME expert analyst Al Bernstein called one of Ward’s “most complete wins he’s ever had in his career.”

Judge Stanley Christodoulou scored every round to Ward (120-108) while German judge Ingo Barrabas had it (118-110) and Dr. James Jen Kin had Ward winning, 118-111.

A boisterous crowd cheered both for the Californian Ward and Abraham, backed by hundreds of loud Armenian fans from Southern California. “Arthur Abraham was strong and very determined,” Ward said. “He had passionate fans and he didn’t want to lose in front of them. I’m going to stay humble and keep working hard. I want to be champion for a long time and take the least amount of punishment possible.”

Abraham (32-2, 26 KOs), of Berlin, Germany, by way of Armenia, lost for the third straight time but vowed after the fight that he would remain in the talent-rich super middleweight division.

“I started well and thought I was doing OK for the first three rounds,” said Abraham, the former International Boxing Federation (IBF) middleweight world champion. “He never hurt me and I was blocking all his punches. But then I cramped up when I was trying for the knockout and I couldn’t do it.

“I gave it my all and fought really hard and will stay at super middleweight.”

Ward seemed to get stronger and stronger as the fight went on while Abraham looked visibly tired towards the end of the fight, absorbing Ward’s hard body shots and a variety of assorted jabs and uppercuts.

“My trainer says that I’m the type of fighter to make adjustments and that’s what I did,” said Ward, who threw 289 jabs during the fight, landing 178 of his 444 total punches. “I wish the refs would have let me fight on the inside – that’s what we trained for. But we made adjustments and got the victory. After a hard hit, I would go back to my corner and I would do two things: I would listen to my corner and talk to myself and I would say, ‘Bite down and fight back.’ ”

Ward will be intently watching on June 4 in Atlantic City, N.J. “I’ll fight Johnson or Froch, but I think the public wants to see Froch-Ward,” he said.

In a non-televised undercard fight, heavyweight world contender and popular Southern California slugger Chris Arreola turned in an impressive performance against Nagy Aguilera, stopping him in the third round.

The event was co-promoted by Goossen Tutor Promotions, Antonio Leonard Productions and Sauerland Event and sponsored by Corona.

Saturday night’s telecast will re-air as follows:

DAY CHANNEL

Tuesday, May 17 at 10 p.m. ET/PT SHOWTIME Extreme

Also available On-Demand: May17-May 30, 2011

Gus Johnson (blow-by-blow), Bernstein and Antonio Tarver (analysts) called the action with Jim Gray reporting from ringside. The executive producer was David Dinkins, Jr., with Bob Dunphy directing.

For more information on the Super Six World Boxing Classic including exclusive photos, fight highlights and interviews, plus to view all episodes of the acclaimed documentary series FIGHT CAMP 360°: Inside The Super Six World Boxing Classic, please visit the website at www.WorldBoxingClassic.com

ABOUT SUPER SIX WORLD BOXING CLASSIC
The inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic is a ground-breaking, six-fighter tournament from SHOWTIME Sports® featuring the class of the super middleweight (168-pound) division from around the world. All bouts in the Super Six tournament will be contested under the Unified Rules of Boxing. Each boxer fights three bouts against different opponents in the field in the points-based Group Stage of competition (Win – 2 pts with a 1-pt bonus for KO/TKO; Loss – 0 pts; Draw – 1 pt.). After the Group Stage, the four fighters with the highest point totals will advance to the single-elimination Semi-Finals. The winners of the Semifinal bouts will advance to the Finals and fight for the inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic Cup.

About Showtime Networks Inc.
Showtime Networks Inc. (SNI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBS Corporation, owns and operates the premium television networks SHOWTIME®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ and FLIX®, as well as the multiplex channels SHOWTIME 2™, SHOWTIME® SHOWCASE, SHOWTIME EXTREME®, SHOWTIME BEYOND®, SHOWTIME NEXT®, SHOWTIME WOMEN®, SHOWTIME FAMILY ZONE® and THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ XTRA. SNI also offers SHOWTIME HD™, SHOWTIME 2 HD™, THE MOVIE CHANNEL HD™, SHOWTIME ON DEMAND®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL ON DEMAND™ and FLIX ON DEMAND®. SNI also manages Smithsonian Channel™, a joint venture between SNI and the Smithsonian Institution. All SNI feeds provide enhanced sound using Dolby Digital 5.1. SNI markets and distributes sports and entertainment events for exhibition to subscribers on a pay-per-view basis through SHOWTIME PPV®.

Photo credit: Craig Bennett/Goossen Tutor Promotions
Misc photos: Ward, Oakland Raider’s Coach, Ward’s Family, Arreola – Aguilera fight etc…

May 11, 2011

SUPER SIX WORLD BOXING CLASSIC SEMIFINALS

FINAL PRESS CONFERENCE QUOTES & PHOTOS

Ward’s Trainer To Abraham: “Your promoters have lost confidence in you”
Abraham To Ward’s Camp: “Talk Doesn’t Matter – I’m Here To Destroy Him”

Wednesday, May 11 at Arnie Morton’s The Steakhouse in Burbank, Calif.

BURBANK, CALIF. (May 11, 2011) – The final press conference for the kickoff of the Semifinals of the Super Six World Boxing Classic turned tense on Wednesday at Arnie Morton’s The Steakhouse in Burbank, Calif., just three days before tournament favorite Andre Ward defends his WBA super middleweight title against former world champion Arthur Abraham, LIVE on SHOWTIME® (10 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the West Coast) from The Home Depot Center in Carson, Calif.

In a detailed and lengthy speech, Ward’s trainer, Virgil Hunter, told Abraham that his trainer and promoters are displaying a lack of confidence in him to win on Saturday by demanding neutral judges and officials for the Semifinal showdown. Abraham’s promoter responded that they were trying to protect their fighter and claimed that the referee in the Ward-Mikkel Kessler Group Stage 1 bout did not fairly officiate the match.

The Ward-Abraham winner advances to the tournament Final against the winner of the Carl Froch-Glen Johnson Semifinals showdown. The tournament champion earns the inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic Cup and global recognition as the world’s No. 1 168-pound fighter.

The 2004 Olympic Gold Medalist, Ward (23-0, 13 KOs), of Oakland, Calif., has emerged as the tournament favorite after impressive triumphs in Group Stage bouts over Kessler and Allan Green, as well as Sakio Bika.

Abraham (32-2, 26 KOs) entered the Super Six as a favorite alongside Kessler. But after emerging from Group Stage 1 as the points leader with a knockout over Jermain Taylor, he is now trying to bounce back from consecutive tournament losses to Andre Dirrell and Froch in Group Stages 2 and 3, respectively.

In a non-televised undercard fight, heavyweight world contender and popular Southern California slugger Chris Arreola will try to stay on track for another opportunity of a world championship when he takes on Nagy Aguilera.

The event is co-promoted by Goossen Tutor Promotions, Antonio Leonard Productions and Sauerland Event and sponsored by Corona.

What the participants had to say on Wednesday:

ANDRE WARD:

“I’m born and raised here in America and I don’t talk that much. I think everyone in this room understands that. There’s not much else to say. I’ve prepared the way I’m supposed to prepare, the way a champion is supposed to prepare.

“I respect Arthur Abraham, it’s going to be a tough fight. I want to be a great fighter, but I’m not there yet. These are the kind of fights that you have to take and you have to win to be a great fighter.

“I won’t hear the crowd, I won’t hear anybody on Saturday night. I’m locked in. I’m here to defend my belt and to keep my belt right here in America.”

“My first goal is to win and I know winning in this sport takes care of a lot of problems.

“Sugar Ray Leonard came from a totally different time. Fighting on the network that he fought on, having Howard Cosell, it was just a totally different ballgame. Oscar De La Hoya had the Hispanic community and different things like that, so you have to look at those situations because I’m in a different time. It might be a little bit harder to get the exposure and the just due.”

“At the end of the day, the way my father raised me was to put my nose down to the grindstone and keep working and allow God to open those doors in due season. So I’ve never begged for it and I’ve never demanded it. I just have to understand that I have to keep working and it will come. ”

“I appreciate everyone who attends the fights, but it comes down to going home and kissing my wife and kids, keeping my title and moving on with my career. But with that being said, I think I take the risks I’m supposed to take. I think I do what I’m supposed to, but if you get enough people saying one thing, people start to believe it. I think my fight with Kessler was a very entertaining fight but it’s not me taking punishment so people think it’s not entertaining. From a little boy, I was never taught to get the best bout trophy, I was always taught to get the best fighter of the night. That’s the way it is because whoever I am when my career is said and done, nobody’s going home with me.”

“My coach has always taught me from day one, he’s always wanted me to be a master and masters are able to fight into their late 30s and early 40s like Bernard Hopkins and Glen Johnson. I’m just going to continue to naturally evolve and I hope everyone enjoys my fights. But, ultimately, it’s about winning in this sport. ”

ARTHUR ABRAHAM: “I don’t have to speak much. We just want to perform in the ring and we don’t have to do much talking. We’re here to win in the ring.

“Of course my trainer and my promoter respect me. There’s no question of that. In Europe, we don’t talk very much. I’m here to win.

“I have a lot of respect for Andre Ward. He’s a technically sound boxer. But that talk doesn’t matter when we get in the ring on Saturday. I’m here to win and I’m here to destroy him.

“I’m very happy to be part of this tournament. This tournament started well for me and it will end well.

“I had to make some adjustments to my style for moving from middleweight to super middleweight and then we had to make some more after the losses. We’ve made the adjustments and we hope we don’t have to do it again.”

DAN GOOSSEN, Ward’s Promoter:

“I really do believe in the concept of this tournament and think it’s terrific. We’ve had some challenges getting to this point but I really feel it’s the best thing for this sport because you have the best fighters fighting the best on a continual basis. Because of that, there is no need to sit there and think anything other than that it’s great for our sport.”

WILFRIED SAUERLAND, Abraham’s promoter):

“We liked the idea of the tournament when we first heard about it. There have been some issues but it’s still a good idea because it brings together the best in the division. And it’s still not finished.

“There has been a lot of uproar about us asking for a new referee but that was in the contract – a contract is a contract.

“Virgil, we asked for a neutral referee because the referee in the Ward-Kessler fight gave a very bad performance.

“Dan complained that Andre had to travel 500 miles for this fight. Arthur has travelled over 40,000 miles for this tournament.”

“Dan is a good host and we have a good understanding. We look after him in Germany and he looks after us here.”

VIRGIL HUNTER, Ward’s Trainer:

“I’ve been appalled as some of the things that have happened to this point. If Andre wasn’t perceived as a threat, I don’t believe we would have ever heard complaints about the referees like we have. Andre Ward still to this point has not gotten the recognition that he deserves.

“Arthur, this is to you: By complaining about the officials, your promoters are saying they have lost confidence in you. Don’t let anyone speak to you about the officials. Your promoters have lost confidence in you. It’s as simple as that.”

JAMES PRINCE, Ward’s Manager:

“We have respect for Arthur Abraham and his accomplishments in boxing, but come Saturday it’s going to get real hot in the ring. You were a great fighter at 160 pounds but I feel like your advisors have tricked you into placing you into a different weight division where you don’t belong. I want to extend my warmest hospitality and welcome you to the States, but that’s where it ends.”

ULLI WEGNER, Abraham’s trainer:

“I’m really looking forward to seeing an exciting fight on Saturday night.

“I know it will be a very difficult fight for us and I’m hoping that the better man will win.

“I hope that we have a fair fight and we put on a good fight for the fans.

“Now we’re done with the talking and we’re ready to get inside the ring.”

CHRIS DeBLASIO, SHOWTIME Director of Communications

“The Super Six World Boxing Classic has been dramatic and competitive as much as it’s been contentious and compelling both inside and outside the ring since this tournament was announced in July of 2009. The results of which have made the Fight Camp 360 program: Inside the Super Six World Boxing Classic can’t-miss television for sports fans. The SHOWTIME sports documentary series has revealed the business of boxing, the personalities in this tournament and of course the tournament fight themselves like no other show has ever done on television before and we’re very proud of that.”

CHRIS ARREOLA:

“I cannot overlook Nagy Aguilera. This man is a tough fighter. I’m in this shape for him, to fight him. Not to look at two or three fights from now. My main motivation right now is him. Every fighter I’ve ever boxed I’ve respected and now I’m respecting boxing, the sport I love.

“I would love to see this type of tournament for the heavyweights. I don’t think it would ever happen but it would be a great thing.

“I’m a Ward guy, always have been. I try to emulate him. Not only his fighting but his training and that he works so hard. I think he’s the best American fighter right now. And I’m No. 2, but I think Ward by far is the best.”

NAGY AGUILERA:

“It’s a difficult opponent for me, especially coming off of a loss. But this time I’m focused and I’m training hard.

“Arreola said that boxing is his wife. Well, boxing is my life. I had a lot of problems in my fight against Antonio (Tarver) and now I’m just focused and ready to win.

“My training went well. We’ve been preparing for eight weeks.”

Tickets are available for as low as $25, with VIP floor seats priced at $200. Other tickets in the 8,000-seat outdoor stadium at The Home Depot Center are available at $50 and $100. Fans can purchase tickets at all Ticketmaster outlets and online at www.Ticketmaster.com as well as The Home Depot Center Box Office (open Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.). Groups of 10 or more can purchase tickets by calling 1-877-234-8425.

For more information on the Super Six World Boxing Classic including exclusive photos, fight highlights and interviews, plus to view all episodes of the acclaimed documentary series FIGHT CAMP 360°: Inside The Super Six World Boxing Classic, please visit the website at www.WorldBoxingClassic.com

PHOTOS:

ABOUT SUPER SIX WORLD BOXING CLASSIC

The inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic is a ground-breaking, six-fighter tournament from SHOWTIME Sports® featuring the class of the super middleweight (168-pound) division from around the world. All bouts in the Super Six tournament will be contested under the Unified Rules of Boxing. Each boxer fights three bouts against different opponents in the field in the points-based Group Stage of competition (Win – 2 pts with a 1-pt bonus for KO/TKO; Loss – 0 pts; Draw – 1 pt.). After the Group Stage, the four fighters with the highest point totals will advance to the single-elimination Semi-Finals. The winners of the Semifinal bouts will advance to the Finals and fight for the inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic Cup.

About Showtime Networks Inc.

Showtime Networks Inc. (SNI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBS Corporation, owns and operates the premium television networks SHOWTIME®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ and FLIX®, as well as the multiplex channels SHOWTIME 2™, SHOWTIME® SHOWCASE, SHOWTIME EXTREME®, SHOWTIME BEYOND®, SHOWTIME NEXT®, SHOWTIME WOMEN®, SHOWTIME FAMILY ZONE® and THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ XTRA. SNI also offers SHOWTIME HD™, SHOWTIME 2 HD™, THE MOVIE CHANNEL HD™, SHOWTIME ON DEMAND®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL ON DEMAND™ and FLIX ON DEMAND®. SNI also manages Smithsonian Channel™, a joint venture between SNI and the Smithsonian Institution. All SNI feeds provide enhanced sound using Dolby Digital 5.1. SNI markets and distributes sports and entertainment events for exhibition to subscribers on a pay-per-view basis through SHOWTIME PPV®.

Photo credits: Craig Burnett

April 29, 2011

SUPER SIX WORLD BOXING CLASSIC SEMIFINALISTS& WBA WORLD CHAMP ANDRE WARD

OAKLAND MEDIA DAY QUOTES & PHOTOS

 

Thursday, April 28 at King’s Boxing Gym in Oakland, Calif.

OAKLAND, CALIF. (April 28, 2011) – Super Six World Boxing Classic Semifinalists and WBA 168-pound champion Andre Ward hosted a media day and workout with his trainer Virgil Hunter and promoter Dan Goossen on Thursday in Ward’s hometown of Oakland as he gets ready for his Semifinals showdown against Arthur Abraham on Saturday, May 14 at The Home Depot Center in Carson, Calif., live on SHOWTIME®. Ward will defend his WBA Super Middleweight title against the European superstar and former world champion to kick off the Semifinals of the groundbreaking tournament.  The Ward-Abraham winner advances to the tournament Finals against the winner of the Carl Froch-Glen Johnson Semifinals showdown.  The winner earns instant bragging rights as the world’s No. 1 168-pound fighter.

 The talented Ward (23-0, 13 KOs), of Oakland, Calif., has emerged as the tournament favorite after impressive triumphs in Group Stage bouts over Mikkel Kessler and Allan Green, as well as Sakio Bika.

 The event is co-promoted by Goossen Tutor Promotions, Antonio Leonard Productions and Sauerland Event and sponsored by Corona.

 Tickets are available for as low as $25, with VIP floor seats priced at $200. Other tickets in the 8,000-seat outdoor stadium at The Home Depot Center are available at $50 and $100. Fans can purchase tickets at all Ticketmaster outlets and online at www.Ticketmaster.com as well as The Home Depot Center Box Office (open Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.).  Groups of 10 or more can purchase tickets by calling 1-877-234-8425.

 In a non-televised undercard bout, heavyweight world contender and popular Southern California slugger Chris Arreola will try to stay on track for another opportunity of a world championship when he takes on Nagy Aguilera.

 
What Ward and Goossen had to say on Thursday:
 
In reference to Sauerland’s statement that the Ward-Abraham fight is in jeopardy:  WARD:  “It’s news to me yesterday.  That’s why I have my promoter with me today and I am sure that it is all going to get worked out.  There will be a fight.  There’s definitely going to be a fight.    No fight, nobody makes any money.  So I think they’ll get it worked out.”

On his belief that the original plan of neutral officials and judges will take place:
WARD: “Absolutely.  “Dan has said it many times and I have said many times.  I know people think that I have some dealing behind the scenes, setting everything up where it’s just right for Andre Ward but I have nothing to say about that, I have no say in that.  That is why I have a promoter.  That’s the promoter’s job to negotiate and deal and do whatever they are going to do.  There should be fair judges, they’ll get it worked out.”
 
DAN GOOSSEN:
“If there were no California Officials Andre wouldn’t say anything.  All we want is to get out there and fight.  Even fighting at home, it’s never been a situation where Andre has said we have to fight at home.  After the Kessler fight Green wanted to fight out here because he made a lot of money.  Bika was the same situation, he made a lot of money fighting out here.  These other guys didn’t have any homes so it wasn’t to protect Andre Ward and keep him at close quarters; it was just the way the situation evolved.
 
“In other words, we have done everything that we are supposed to do and lived up to and that is what we will continue to do.  Now it’s just up to Sauerland and the Commission to work it out and that’s final.”

Ward on the Sauerland situation:
WARD: “They made a comment saying that King Arthur has no problem with coming into my backyard, and they should know that my backyard is about 5 to 6 hours away from Carson, California.  Let’s not make Arthur Abraham out to be the hero where he is doing us the favor because he is coming here.  They are allowing Arthur Abraham to come to this venue for a specific reason and I think we all know what that is – the Armenian population.  They feel like they will have the advantage there and then it’s about the money.  So they are not doing us the favor.  This is a co-promotion; this is something that they’ve agreed to.  There were other venues available on the east coast.   I was excited about going there to Atlantic City, possibly Portland and a few others.  So it didn’t have to be California, they wanted it to be here just as much as my side did.”

On Andre’s apparent willingness to fight globally  judging from his Olympic days and his past fight record)
WARD: “People have to talk about something on the website and blogs.  Me fighting at home is something that people continue to talk about , it’s not something I really pay a lot of attention to because I know how I got to this point and it certainly wasn’t fighting in Oakland.  I have only had 4 fights out in Oakland and let’s not even talk about my amateur career.  I am well schooled with fighting on the road, but again I think it was an awesome thing to be able to fight at home and we are looking to come back home and even make it bigger than it has been.”

On not changing his gameplan and the expectations for him to succeed:
WARD: “Absolutely.  I have to stay like that because there is a lot of talk about what Arthur has left.  Either they say his back is against the wall and he’s hungry so look out or they say this is going to be just a fight where that Ward is going to walk through him.  I can’t believe that, I can’t believe either way.  I have to prepare for each fight the same way, very methodically, mentally.  I am expecting the best out of Abraham come May 14.”

On what Arthur Abraham will look like on May 14 and the problems he represents:  WARD:  “The problems he represents remains to be seen, but his strengths are he believes in his punching power.  They call him a puncher, they say that he hits hard and that he is physically very strong, but I believe that my physical strength is right up there with the best ever and I think he will see and notice that I hit a lot harder than what people perceive me to be.  With that being said, it’s going to be the same Arthur Abraham, in terms of stylistically – he’s going to cover up and maybe open up a little bit earlier, but he is going to look for that one big shot, that’s what he does.”

On whether Arthur Abraham is similar to any other opponent that Ward has faced:
WARD:  “Not really, but in terms of just being a big puncher and believing in his power, I can liken him to Edison Miranda.  Not defensively, but in terms of looking for that one big shot all night long.  Miranda is probably the main guy that I can compare him to.”
 
On how Ward plans to approach Abraham knowing that he is waiting for an opening: 
WARD:
  “We do what we gotta do.  We don’t get caught up in his game.  I know that if he lands a shot on me, I believe that I can take it.

“Also, we have been working for the last several months to not let him land anything, so we don’t change anything.  We got the right sparring partners in here who fight as similar as they possibly can to Arthur Abrahams’ style.  They’re wild, strong and coming and I am doing what I got to do to prepare for this kind of fight.”

On the probability of Ward not fighting the same way he fought his fights against Bika and Green:
WARD:  “I don’t know.  I think that you are going to see a little bit of everything.  I have said that the last two fights because that is just my style.  My style is adapting and doing what the other opponent doesn’t believe that I am going to do.  We don’t have a fear factor in our camp where we’re going to be running away from Arthur Abraham, that’s not the case.  He’s a 168 pound man and so am I.  He’s a former world champion and I am the current world champion.  He wants to get a world title again and I want to defend my title.  I am going to conduct myself accordingly.  So, in other worlds, I am going to be myself and do what I gotta do.”

Upon being asked if he is just as hungry to keep his championship status: 
WARD:  “I believe so.  It’s just kind of the way I am wired.  I love to win and I know that you just can’t love to win; you have to do what it takes in preparation to win.  Unless I have done all that I can do, leaving my family, sacrificing, putting in the physical work and doing the mental work exercises – just everything that it takes to get ready for a championship fight.  When we get out there we do what we do and we have fun and we let the chips fall where they fall.”

On his champion status and putting in the work to stay a champion: 
WARD:  “We don’t really have a championship training camp,  I am not the center of attention here.  My coach doesn’t pat me on the back everyday that I come in and tell me how great I am.  You would think that I was still a young guy coming up in terms of preparation.  Mentally and physically, if you listen to some of the things we talk about while doing the mitts and the drill you would think, ‘man, give this guy a little credit.’  But my coach is always asking for more and pushing me because he knows and he wants me to be a great fighter someday and in order to do that I can’t settle for just being good.  This is always a camp where we are pushing, reaching and trying to do better.”

On ways he can improve:
WARD:  “It’s hard to pinpoint one thing.  I don’t like to pinpoint one thing because there are people reading these articles that I could possibly fight one day, but there is always something to work on whether it’s small, big, maybe something mental.  There is just always something and that is something that Virg (trainer Virgil Hunter) is awesome at – he pinpoints it, he sees it, and he knows how to push that button to get me motivated in that area.” 

On not getting complacent:
“That is the least of my worries.  If anything, Virg is always pulling me back saying, ‘That’s enough.  We still got three weeks left, we still got two weeks left.  Hey, we’re not going to leave it all in the road or we’re not going to leave it all in the gym.’  He just wants me to continue to grow and not settle being a good fighter.  I don’t feel like I am at my best, I feel like I am approaching my prime.”

On Abraham’s last two losses being a blue print for Ward:
WARD:
 
“I think it is going to be similar in some ways but I think it’s going to have my own flair and my own special touch to it.  I think Froch did an awesome job, I think Dirrell did an awesome job and believe that I am going to do an awesome job, but I am just going to do it my way.  The way Froch and Dirrell did it is definitely a foundation and something to look at, study it and say this is somewhere to start.”
 

On the expectation of Arthur Abraham coming out blazing:
“The only problem with that is that it’s a 12 round fight.  If he tries that we have to have an answer, if he lays back and waits we have to have an answer, so when you have seven or eight weeks to sit down and prepare you’re supposed to go over every possibly scenario.  But then it comes to a point where it’s not about what he’s going to do, it’s about what we’re going to do.  That’s when the mind set shifts and two-and-a-half weeks before the fight is where I am at right now.  It’s not about what Arthur is going to do or how many fans will be there in the arena.  I am going to be mentally locked in.  I wont hear anything that night.  That’s all I am focused on.”

When asked if he is winding down since it is two weeks before the fight:
WARD:“Not quite yet, we’re still working hard.  We have to be careful not to just leave it on the road and want to push harder when you run or push harder in the gym.  You just have to really be sensitive and that’s why it’s awesome to have a coach that not only knows boxing but knows you, and Virg knows me extremely well.  You know, there are days I get up mad and I am ready to push and he says we’re not doing that this morning, just meet me at the gym at this time.  And those are the types of things that he brings to the camp and really allows me to peak at the right time.”

On the Andre Ward-Sugar Ray Leonard comparison:
WARD:  “I appreciate the comparison but I feel that I got a lot of work to do to be in that company.  I got a lot of work to do but I appreciate even the smallest comparison.”

On being able to adjust during a fight:
WARD:  “That’s something that’s really evolving in my game is adjusting on the fly.  We like game plans, but I am not really a game plan type of guy.  We’ll have a general game plan but at the same time things happen so fast in a fight and you have to make split-second decisions and Virg allows me to make those decisions.  I can give you an example: the Allen Green fight.  We weren’t going to fight that type of fight that soon, it just happened.  That was a fight that was going to happen on the other side of six but it happened starting in the second round.  I thought, ‘Man, he’s letting me do this to him inside.’ So I stayed there and Virg adjusted and said, ‘If you are going to be there, this is what I need you to do.’  So, yeah that is something that is evolving as well is the ability to adjust.”

On the heavy Armenian population and the possibility of being the one that is booed on May 14:  WARD:  “Just buy a ticket and tune in.  It’s all good.  Just buy a ticket.  Tune in, that’s all we are concerned about.  I could be but I feel like there will be a lot of Bay Area people in the house.  I got fans in Southern California.  I think it could be even.  His fans could be there but I am going to be mentally locked in.”

About Virgil not taking it soft on Andre:  WARD:  “It’s never been like that.  I don’t think he knows how to do that and sometimes it can get to you.   You know, we have our moments but that’s to be expected.  At the end of the day it’s always love and we always understand each other, but you know, trust me, we have our moments in there where I am saying, ‘Hey Man, listen. What now? and Virgil will tell me, “you can be one of the greatest fighters who ever did this and I am going to get that out of you.’ So I have to respect that and honor that.”   

If Andre is trying to get Abraham on the defensive?  WARD:  “Absolutely.  The key is to remind him of all those fights that he had and all the ways that he felt after.  He really didn’t believe that he put on a bad performance against Dirrell because of the way that it ended.  He felt that that he was coming on and that Dirrell quit.  Carl Froch, he couldn’t deny that.  My job is to remind him of the Carl Froch fight as soon as possible.  We’re gonna set the tone.  We’re going to be smart about it and set the tone.”

On his power:
WARD:  “Some guys talk about my power or lack of power before the fight but if you look at the top guys that I fought from Miranda on out, none of these guys have said anything after the fight and I think that is key because they were able to get in there and feel it for themselves.”

On his inclusion in the top 10 pound-for-pound Ring list:
WARD:  “Unbelievable.  I don’t have time to get caught up in it at the moment, but that’s just unbelievable.  I’ve looked at that list for years and years and years and years and wanted to be at the very top of it.  To be No. 10 is awesome and I thank everyone for their votes.  Some people think that I shouldn’t be on there, some people believe I should.  I just want to continue to work hard and show that I am worthy to be on there.  It’s about putting in the work.  It always goes back to Kobe, Kobe Bryant.”
    
WARD:  “I love sports but what I watch, I like to watch the best and I like to watch their mindset when they’re winning, when they’re down.  I just wan to follow these guys, I want to watch them and I want to read them.  I have watched Kobe for many, many years.  People say what they want to about him but the guy is a beast.  He’s a competitor.  The only time you see him smile is when his team has secured a victory and there’s about two or three minutes left or maybe a minute left and they’re up by 15 and the game is over.  This guy has plenty of credentials, he’s got plenty of honor, plenty of rings, but he’s still got something to prove and I liken myself to him in that respect.
 
“It’s just something that, I don’t know if you’re born with it, I don’t know if you can teach it but I have always been like this.  I want to win.  I like to win.  That’s my mind set.  I don’t know if you can teach it, it’s just in me.  I don’t believe that I am the most talented guy.  Although, I have been boxing since I was 9 years old and there are thing that I can do in my sleep.  Personally, I don’t feel like I am a Floyd Mayweather type that could do certain things without even trying.  I feel like I work hard to accomplish certain things and I am always working on the basics.   I just don’t want to be out worked.  I do know that God has given me some internal attributes and I just want to tell him thank you by working hard everyday and giving it all I got.”    
 
For more information on the Super Six World Boxing Classic including exclusive photos, fight highlights and interviews, plus to view all episodes of the acclaimed documentary series FIGHT CAMP 360°: Inside The Super Six World Boxing Classic, please visit the website at www.WorldBoxingClassic.com
 
ABOUT SUPER SIX WORLD BOXING CLASSIC
The inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic is a ground-breaking, six-fighter tournament from SHOWTIME Sports® featuring the class of the super middleweight (168-pound) division from around the world. All bouts in the Super Six tournament will be contested under the Unified Rules of Boxing. Each boxer fights three bouts against different opponents in the field in the points-based Group Stage of competition (Win – 2 pts with a 1-pt bonus for KO/TKO; Loss – 0 pts; Draw – 1 pt.). After the Group Stage, the four fighters with the highest point totals will advance to the single-elimination Semi-Finals. The winners of the Semifinal bouts will advance to the Finals and fight for the inaugural Super Six World Boxing Classic Cup.
 
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Showtime Networks Inc. (SNI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBS Corporation, owns and operates the premium television networks SHOWTIME®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ and FLIX®, as well as the multiplex channels SHOWTIME 2™, SHOWTIME® SHOWCASE, SHOWTIME EXTREME®, SHOWTIME BEYOND®, SHOWTIME NEXT®, SHOWTIME WOMEN®, SHOWTIME FAMILY ZONE® and THE MOVIE CHANNEL™  XTRA.  SNI also offers SHOWTIME HD™, SHOWTIME 2 HD™, THE MOVIE CHANNEL HD™, SHOWTIME ON DEMAND®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL ON DEMAND™ and FLIX ON DEMAND®.  SNI also manages Smithsonian Channel™, a joint venture between SNI and the Smithsonian Institution.  All SNI feeds provide enhanced sound using Dolby Digital 5.1. SNI markets and distributes sports and entertainment events for exhibition to subscribers on a pay-per-view basis through SHOWTIME PPV®.

 

Workout Photos
Photo Credits: Laura de la Torre / Goossen Tutor Promotions