Claressa Shields vs. Maricela Cornejo: date, time, how to watch, background

Claressa Shields vs. Maricela Cornejo: date, time, how to watch, background.

Claressa Shields, the undisputed queen of women’s boxing, returns to the ring against Maricela Cornejo on Saturday night in Detroit.

CLARESSA SHIELDS (13-0, 2 KOS)
VS. MARICELA CORNEJO (16-5, 6 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, June 3
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Middleweight (160 pounds)
  • At stake: Shields’ undisputed championship
  • Odds: Shields 34-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Ardreal Holmes vs. Wendy Toussaint, junior middleweights
  • Prediction: Shields UD
  • Background: The queen of women’s boxing returns to the ring after arguably her most important victory, a unanimous decision over the only woman to defeat her – Savannah Marshall – last October. She had been scheduled to fight Hanna Gabriels on Saturday but Gabriels was pulled from the card after she tested positive for a banned substance. Cornejo agreed to step in on Thursday, although she had been on Shields’ list of desired opponents for some time. Shields is considered by many to be the best female fighter pound-for-pound, particularly after rival Katie Taylor’s loss to Chantelle Cameron on May 20. The only flaw in her record is a lack of knockouts, which is something the 28-year-old Michigander said she has worked on in the gym. Cornejo is a 36-year-old who lives and trains in Los Angeles. The WBO’s No. 1 contender has lost decisions in three title challenges, once against 160-pounder Kali Reis and twice to 168-pound champ Franchon Crews Dezurn. Cornejo has won three consecutive fights since losing a decision to Alma Ibarra in March 2021. She has never been stopped.

[lawrence-related id=37536,37527,33430]

Claressa Shields vs. Maricela Cornejo: date, time, how to watch, background

Claressa Shields vs. Maricela Cornejo: date, time, how to watch, background.

Claressa Shields, the undisputed queen of women’s boxing, returns to the ring against Maricela Cornejo on Saturday night in Detroit.

CLARESSA SHIELDS (13-0, 2 KOS)
VS. MARICELA CORNEJO (16-5, 6 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, June 3
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Middleweight (160 pounds)
  • At stake: Shields’ undisputed championship
  • Odds: Shields 34-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Ardreal Holmes vs. Wendy Toussaint, junior middleweights
  • Prediction: Shields UD
  • Background: The queen of women’s boxing returns to the ring after arguably her most important victory, a unanimous decision over the only woman to defeat her – Savannah Marshall – last October. She had been scheduled to fight Hanna Gabriels on Saturday but Gabriels was pulled from the card after she tested positive for a banned substance. Cornejo agreed to step in on Thursday, although she had been on Shields’ list of desired opponents for some time. Shields is considered by many to be the best female fighter pound-for-pound, particularly after rival Katie Taylor’s loss to Chantelle Cameron on May 20. The only flaw in her record is a lack of knockouts, which is something the 28-year-old Michigander said she has worked on in the gym. Cornejo is a 36-year-old who lives and trains in Los Angeles. The WBO’s No. 1 contender has lost decisions in three title challenges, once against 160-pounder Kali Reis and twice to 168-pound champ Franchon Crews Dezurn. Cornejo has won three consecutive fights since losing a decision to Alma Ibarra in March 2021. She has never been stopped.

[lawrence-related id=37536,37527,33430]

NBA Finals Game 1: Miami Heat at Denver Nuggets odds, picks and predictions

Analyzing Thursday’s Miami Heat at Denver Nuggets NBA Finals Game 1 odds and lines, with expert NBA picks, predictions and best bets.

The Miami Heat and the Denver Nuggets meet for Game 1 of their best-of-7 NBA Finals series Thursday at Ball Arena. Tip is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. ET (ABC). Below, we analyze BetMGM Sportsbook’s lines around the Heat vs. Nuggets odds, and make our expert NBA picks and predictions

The Heat averted a disaster of historic proportions on Monday, routing the Boston Celtics 103-84 in Game 7 at TD Garden as 7.5-point underdogs. Miami had a comfortable 3-0 series lead, but blew chances in closeout games at home in both Games 4 and 6 to fall into an untenable position. However, like the 150 series before it, no team has ever blown a 3-0 series lead.

The Nuggets didn’t have to work nearly as hard in the Western Conference Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers. Denver won 113-111 in Game 4 back on May 22 at Crypto.com Arena in Southern California to complete the series sweep. Denver has won 6 in a row overall, going 4-2 against the spread (ATS) in that run.

Denver won in 4 against the Lakers, in 6 against the Phoenix Suns and in 5 against the Minnesota Timberwolves, going 9-6 ATS in these playoffs. The Under is 4-2 in the last 6 outings. At home, the Nuggets are 8-0 straight up (SU) and 5-3 ATS in the postseason, while splitting the Over-Under 4-4.

Miami started out in the play-in tournament, splitting a pair of games at home while also going 1-1 ATS. They stunned the No. 1 seed Milwaukee Bucks in 5 games, topped the New York Knicks in 6 games, and then the C’s in 7. On the road, the Heat are 6-4 SU and 7-3 ATS, with the Over going 7-3.

Denver won 112-108 in Miami on Feb. 3 as a 1-point favorite as the Over (217.5) cashed, while the Nuggets won 124-119 as a 4-point favorite on Dec. 30 in the Mile High City, also cashing the Over (224.5).

The good news is that both teams are healthy at this time of the series, listing no meaningful players on the injury report.

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3011″ ]

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3012″ ]

Heat at Nuggets odds

Provided by BetMGM Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday at 11:45 p.m. ET.

  • Moneyline (ML): Heat +290 (bet $100 to win $290) | Nuggets -375 (bet $375 to win $100)
  • Against the spread (ATS): Heat +8.5 (-105) | Nuggets -8.5 (-115)
  • Over/Under (O/U): 219.5 (O: -110 | U: -110)

Play our free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

Heat at Nuggets key injuries

Heat

  • None

Nuggets

  • None

For most recent updates: Official NBA injury report.

Heat at Nuggets picks and predictions

Prediction

Nuggets 115, Heat 106

Moneyline

The Nuggets (-375) will cost you over 3 1/2 times your potential return, and that’s just way too much for any kind of standalone wager. Plus, there is concern with rust, as Denver has been off for 9 days since sweeping the Lakers, while the Heat (+290) played the full 7 games to dispatch the Celtics.

PASS.

Against the spread

NUGGETS -8.5 (-115) is the lean, but go really, really lightly, and expect them to get off to a slower start early on.

Denver has had a full 9 days off, which is a curse, and a blessing. At this time of the season, any R&R is good news to heal the bumps and bruises of the grueling NBA regular season and postseason. However, there could also be some continuity problems early on, as it’s difficult to just flip a switch and get back to competitive mode.

The Heat +8.5 (-105) will not have a problem, because there is no switch. They just played Monday night in Boston, in front of a hostile crowd, so the competitive juices are still flowing and fresh.

I like the HEAT +5.5 (-110) – 1ST HALF LINE, as I think Miami is able to hang around, and perhaps even lead most of the 1st half. However, C Nikola Jokic has been on a mission, and not sure anyone on Miami can slow him down in the 2nd half once he gets cranked back up.

Over/Under

OVER 219.5 (-110) is the lean, but I’d go lightly on all counts, as these teams feel each other out.

Not only was Denver 2-0 SU/ATS in the regular season series against Miami, but the Over cashed in each outing, too. The Over has connected in 4 straight meetings in the Mile High City, while hitting in 5 straight meetings in the series, too.

While the Under hit in the last 4 games for Miami, the Over is 4-0 in its last 4 when working on 2 or more days of rest. The Over is also 10-3 in the last 13 games on the road. The Over is 10-1 in the last 11 for the Nuggets when facing winning teams, and 6-1 in the last 7 when playing on 3 or more days of rest.

Check out: Game 1’s best prop bets and predictions

[gambcom-standard rankid=”5″ ]

For more sports betting picks and tips, check out SportsbookWire.com and BetFTW.

Follow Kevin J. Erickson on Twitter. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Access more NBA coverage:
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2023 Lakers draft prospect profile: Maxwell Lewis

A look at Maxwell Lewis, a wing from Pepperdine University.

Early in the season, when the Los Angeles Lakers were mired in a horrible 2-10 start, there was fear they would end up giving a very high draft pick this summer to the New Orleans Pelicans.

Per the terms of 2019’s Anthony Davis trade, the Pelicans had the right to swap first-round picks with L.A. this year. When the Purple and Gold struggled in October and November, there was even a bit of fear the pick the team might give up the No. 1 pick overall, meaning it would’ve surrendered the rights to French phenom Victor Wembanyama.

Instead, the Lakers turned things around, starting in February, and kept their pick (No. 17).

They recently worked out a very intriguing prospect who could be taken with that No. 17 pick, and his name is Maxwell Lewis.

Bengals will host Packers for joint practice

The Bengals and Packers will link up for practice.

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The Cincinnati Bengals regular season only comes nearer with each day that passes, and now there are only a little over two months to go until preseason games begin.

The Green Bay Packers will be in Cincinnati for Week 1 of the preseason, but Zac Taylor said in a press conference that the two teams will participate in a joint practice together before they face off August 11.

Taylor said the joint practice will be the Wednesday before the game, they will take a day to rest on Thursday, then the game is Friday.

Taylor is taking an extra opportunity to be able to compete against another team before the season begins September 10 against the Browns in Cleveland.

Taylor and Packers head coach Matt Lafleur coached together in 2017 with the Los Angeles Rams and have remained close since, so they will be somewhat familiar with each other’s coaching styles when they meet up for practice and the preseason game.

“I feel good about how we’ll practice together and the communication with the other team’s coaching staff,” Taylor said.

Taylor also joked that while last year when tempers flared and Aaron Donald swung his helmet at multiple Bengals players didn’t sour his decision to have a joint practice this season, they will only be doing one this year.

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Bengals TE Irv Smith Jr.’s contract incentives revealed

New details on the contract for Bengals TE Irv Smith Jr.

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Irv Smith Jr. is the latest tight end to get a shot at a big payday and more while standing as the No. 1 tight end on the depth chart for the Cincinnati Bengals.

But Smith can certainly do well for himself in 2023 by hitting a few contract incentives.

The 33rd Team’s Ari Meirov tracked down contract incentives for a lot of the new signings around the league recently and Smith has two built into his deal:

  • 700 or more yards receiving $125,000
  • 9 or more receiving touchdowns $125,000

Smith’s deal with the Bengals was previously reported as a one-year contract worth $1.75 million.

A year ago, Hayden Hurst had 414 yards and two touchdowns in 13 games as Joe Burrow’s top option at tight end. Smith could surpass those numbers though, provided the offense shifts more to include the position in the attack or the targets suddenly open up for other reasons such as due to injuries.

Not bad for Smith either way — even Hurst’s numbers didn’t stop him from going and getting a three-year deal worth $21.75 million with the Carolina Panthers.

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The leading scorer in the Big Ten is back for another year

The leading scorer in the Big Ten is back for another year

The reigning National Player of the Year is back in the Big Ten. Zach Edey is returning to the Purdue Boilermakers after withdrawing his name from the NBA draft pool.

Edey averaged a Big Ten-leading 22.3 points per game last season, and grabbed a conference-leading 12.8 rebounds. He was the most dominant force in the country all season long before Purdue’s shocking 63-58 first-round loss to Farleigh Dickinson.

Edey’s return immediately makes Purdue one of the favorites in the Big Ten for the 2023-24 campaign. Edey announced the news himself via Twitter on Wednesday afternoon. He had previously been going through the draft process in hopes of being selected this June.

A top Wisconsin basketball target to visit the Badgers this summer

A top Wisconsin basketball target to visit the Badgers this summer

One of Wisconsin’s top targets in the class of 2024 is set to take a pair of unofficial visits to in-state schools this June.

According to Mark Miller of the Wisconsin Basketball Yearbook, junior Wisconsin Lutheran star Kon Knueppel is headed on a pair of visits. He will head to Marquette on June 15 and then Wisconsin on June 21. Both are unofficial visits.

The Phenom University star also plans to take official visits to Louisville and Ohio State in June.

He is a four-star prospect according to 247Sports’ composite rankings, and the No. 1 player in the state of Wisconsin for the class of 2024.

Andre Ward: Faith in God, himself lifted him from dark side to greatness

Andre Ward used faith in God and himself, as well as good advice, to rise from a harrowing childhood to greatness in boxing.

Editor’s note: “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward” documentary premieres Friday on Showtime.

***

Andre Ward is as much a survivor as he is a champion.

That couldn’t have been more clear in the Showtime documentary “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward,” which chronicles his journey from a harrowing life on the streets of Oakland, California, to recognition as one of the best fighters of all time.

He came from a home in which both parents battled drug addiction. And he ended up on a similar path for a time, dealing narcotics while he was an amateur. He could’ve gone in one of two directions: toward life that statistics say wouldn’t end well or back to the gym, to which his father brought him as a child.

He chose the latter because he had positive voices in his life (including longtime trainer Virgil Hunter and a devoted wife, Tiffiney), faith in God and faith in himself. The rest is history.

“I always had drive,” Ward told Boxing Junkie. “I just always wanted to be good at things, I was always competitive. Doing things right always mattered to me. And just having Virg there and my dad while he was alive, different people along my journey who spoke truth to me when I didn’t want to hear it.

“My pastor at a certain point. Just two or three voices in my life that helped me make the right decisions. And then, of course, my faith. I needed a higher power to connect me with things I wanted to do.”

God was good to Ward, giving him once-in-a-generation talent and the willpower to make the most of it.

S.O.G., the son of God, remains the last American to win an Olympic gold medal. He turned the elusive trick in 2004 Athens Games by upsetting the favored Utkirbek Haydarov of Uzbekistan in the semifinals and beating Mahamed Aripgadzhiev of Belarus in the final.

And he was just getting started.

He was only 25 and relatively unproven as a professional in 2009 when he was entered in the Super Six World Boxing Classic, a six-man tournament that featured six of the best 168-pounders from around the world.

The favorites to win the championship were celebrated Europeans Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and Carl Froch. Ward was an afterthought, at least until his first-round fight.

Ward opened against Kessler, a fight in which the young American stunned many in the boxing world by outclassing his more-experienced Danish opponent for 10-plus rounds. The fight was stopped in Round 11 after an accidental head butt caused a gash above Kessler’s left eye but Ward had plenty of time to prove he was the better man, winning a wide technical decision.

As Dan Rafael wrote for ESPN at the time, “Although Kessler complained about the head butts and refereeing, the fact is that Ward simply kicked his butt.”

He never stopped kicking butt. He went on to beat replacement Allan Green, Abraham and Froch decisively to win the tournament and establish himself as the best super middleweight and a major figure in the sport seemingly overnight.

He had cleared a significant hurdle again.

“It was huge,” he said. “For me, a competitive person, to come out on top of that … I have the trophy right here in my office now. Every now and again I glance and it, look at the names on there and it just kind of feeds you. I think, ‘Man, we did that.’

“It was also a very scary moment in my career if you’re one of my handlers because that’s a sink or swim moment. I could’ve drowned in that tournament. I hadn’t beaten anybody up until that point.

“[Previous opponent] Edison Miranda was obviously a dangerous and tough contender but not at that level. Careers got ruined in the Super Six. I could’ve been one of them. So to come out on the other side just confirmed that I was the truth and that I was going to be there for a very long time.”

Ward’s next obstacle was outside the ring.

He entered into a protracted legal battle to extricate himself from his contract with promoter Dan Goossen over a co-promoter who Ward believed had a right to be part of his team. That’s the main reason he fought only twice between September 2012 and March 2016.

And before the dispute ran its course Goossen died as a result of liver cancer, in September 2014.

Ward had a positive takeaway from his relative inactivity during that period – most notably giving his body time to heal after so many years in the ring – but the loss of a man for whom he had affection still saddens him.

“[The inactivity] was a shame from the standpoint that it wasn’t ideal,” he said. “I don’t look at it the way everybody looks at it, though. People say, ‘Oh, you lost two years of your prime.’ I look at it like I got two years back because I was able to rest. … I think I extended my career two years by not fighting.

“And I learned a lot as a businessman going through that, being hands on with everything. It was painstaking, stressful work, but I learned a lot.”

Goossen’s death affected him more than many realize.

“It was a loss to me regardless of what people think or write,” he said. “Dan and I were family. Sometimes family fight. Unfortunately our fight was in public. Then to have a man die in the middle of the dispute. That was a very, very difficult thing to overcome and deal with.

“The worst part of it wasn’t the layoff, wasn’t not fighting. It was that I had no closure to this. I couldn’t even pay my respects.”

Ward fought only seven times after he won the Super Six tournament, the last five as a 175-pounder.

The biggest bout and most stirring drama of his career came in November 2016, when he challenged feared unified champion Sergey Kovalev in Las Vegas. Kovalev was a polished boxer with one-punch knockout power, which is why no one was in a hurry to tangle with him.

Ward could match the skill level of anyone but this was a significant challenge. And he had a problem going into that fight that wasn’t publicized: a knee injury that required drainage the day of the fight.

Then things got really hairy. Kovalev came out for the opening bell on fire, landing one hard shot after another until finally a right hand put Ward down on all fours.

Ward wasn’t hurt badly but he was in trouble nonetheless, as Kovalev had a 10-8 round and all the momentum. Would the fierce Russian build on his success and blow Ward away? That seemed to be where the fight was headed. Or would Ward find a way to regroup and turn the tide?

We know now what Ward is made of. He maintained his poise, made necessary adjustments and ended up winning a close, but unanimous decision to become a two-division titleholder.

Then, seven months later in the same town, he knocked out Kovalev in the eighth round to remove doubt about his superiority over his rival. Ward never fought again.

“Man, it was tough,” said Ward, referring to his sore knee and what followed. “It was tough, it was tough. Not just physically but emotionally and mentally. I found myself in those situations before in my life. It was the biggest moment in my life, the biggest moment of my career and things weren’t ideal.

“How are you going to respond now? Where is your faith now? It’s one thing to have faith when things are but when the wind picks up and starts to blow where is your faith now? It was a faith check for sure.

“I was really in disbelief. I was two hours away from the biggest fight of my life in Las Vegas and I have to have the doctor come to my house and drain my knee. … I learned from that that I can overcome [anything] even though things aren’t ideal.

“And I took that momentum into the second fight. I knew Kovalev had no shot. And we showed that.”

Ward thought about returning to the ring only once, after Canelo Alvarez knocked out Kovalez in November 2019. Had the Mexican star called him out, he said, he would’ve returned. Alvarez never mentioned his name, which in effect put Ward’s career to rest.

Now he’s remembered as one of the greatest fighters of his generation, an Olympic champion who went on to have a perfect professional career. And our admiration for him only grows as a result of the Showtime documentary, which lays out the imposing obstacles he had to overcome to accomplish what he did.

Ward was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2021. It was boxing’s way of saying, “We know what you did. And it was special.”

“That was just more for me,” he said. “… I’ve gotten to a place in my life where I don’t need validation. I know outside validation is fickle … so I don’t put a lot of stock in that. It’s good to see things and read things and hear things positive about my career.

“The Hall of Fame was more for me, though. I remember thinking, ‘I need this call. I want to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer so I can finally rest.”

Andre Ward: Faith in God, himself lifted him from dark side to greatness

Andre Ward used faith in God and himself, as well as good advice, to rise from a harrowing childhood to greatness in boxing.

Editor’s note: “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward” documentary premieres Friday on Showtime.

***

Andre Ward is as much a survivor as he is a champion.

That couldn’t have been more clear in the Showtime documentary “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward,” which chronicles his journey from a harrowing life on the streets of Oakland, California, to recognition as one of the best fighters of all time.

He came from a home in which both parents battled drug addiction. And he ended up on a similar path for a time, dealing narcotics while he was an amateur. He could’ve gone in one of two directions: toward life that statistics say wouldn’t end well or back to the gym, to which his father brought him as a child.

He chose the latter because he had positive voices in his life (including longtime trainer Virgil Hunter and a devoted wife, Tiffiney), faith in God and faith in himself. The rest is history.

“I always had drive,” Ward told Boxing Junkie. “I just always wanted to be good at things, I was always competitive. Doing things right always mattered to me. And just having Virg there and my dad while he was alive, different people along my journey who spoke truth to me when I didn’t want to hear it.

“My pastor at a certain point. Just two or three voices in my life that helped me make the right decisions. And then, of course, my faith. I needed a higher power to connect me with things I wanted to do.”

God was good to Ward, giving him once-in-a-generation talent and the willpower to make the most of it.

S.O.G., the son of God, remains the last American to win an Olympic gold medal. He turned the elusive trick in 2004 Athens Games by upsetting the favored Utkirbek Haydarov of Uzbekistan in the semifinals and beating Mahamed Aripgadzhiev of Belarus in the final.

And he was just getting started.

He was only 25 and relatively unproven as a professional in 2009 when he was entered in the Super Six World Boxing Classic, a six-man tournament that featured six of the best 168-pounders from around the world.

The favorites to win the championship were celebrated Europeans Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and Carl Froch. Ward was an afterthought, at least until his first-round fight.

Ward opened against Kessler, a fight in which the young American stunned many in the boxing world by outclassing his more-experienced Danish opponent for 10-plus rounds. The fight was stopped in Round 11 after an accidental head butt caused a gash above Kessler’s left eye but Ward had plenty of time to prove he was the better man, winning a wide technical decision.

As Dan Rafael wrote for ESPN at the time, “Although Kessler complained about the head butts and refereeing, the fact is that Ward simply kicked his butt.”

He never stopped kicking butt. He went on to beat replacement Allan Green, Abraham and Froch decisively to win the tournament and establish himself as the best super middleweight and a major figure in the sport seemingly overnight.

He had cleared a significant hurdle again.

“It was huge,” he said. “For me, a competitive person, to come out on top of that … I have the trophy right here in my office now. Every now and again I glance and it, look at the names on there and it just kind of feeds you. I think, ‘Man, we did that.’

“It was also a very scary moment in my career if you’re one of my handlers because that’s a sink or swim moment. I could’ve drowned in that tournament. I hadn’t beaten anybody up until that point.

“[Previous opponent] Edison Miranda was obviously a dangerous and tough contender but not at that level. Careers got ruined in the Super Six. I could’ve been one of them. So to come out on the other side just confirmed that I was the truth and that I was going to be there for a very long time.”

Ward’s next obstacle was outside the ring.

He entered into a protracted legal battle to extricate himself from his contract with promoter Dan Goossen over a co-promoter who Ward believed had a right to be part of his team. That’s the main reason he fought only twice between September 2012 and March 2016.

And before the dispute ran its course Goossen died as a result of liver cancer, in September 2014.

Ward had a positive takeaway from his relative inactivity during that period – most notably giving his body time to heal after so many years in the ring – but the loss of a man for whom he had affection still saddens him.

“[The inactivity] was a shame from the standpoint that it wasn’t ideal,” he said. “I don’t look at it the way everybody looks at it, though. People say, ‘Oh, you lost two years of your prime.’ I look at it like I got two years back because I was able to rest. … I think I extended my career two years by not fighting.

“And I learned a lot as a businessman going through that, being hands on with everything. It was painstaking, stressful work, but I learned a lot.”

Goossen’s death affected him more than many realize.

“It was a loss to me regardless of what people think or write,” he said. “Dan and I were family. Sometimes family fight. Unfortunately our fight was in public. Then to have a man die in the middle of the dispute. That was a very, very difficult thing to overcome and deal with.

“The worst part of it wasn’t the layoff, wasn’t not fighting. It was that I had no closure to this. I couldn’t even pay my respects.”

Ward fought only seven times after he won the Super Six tournament, the last five as a 175-pounder.

The biggest bout and most stirring drama of his career came in November 2016, when he challenged feared unified champion Sergey Kovalev in Las Vegas. Kovalev was a polished boxer with one-punch knockout power, which is why no one was in a hurry to tangle with him.

Ward could match the skill level of anyone but this was a significant challenge. And he had a problem going into that fight that wasn’t publicized: a knee injury that required drainage the day of the fight.

Then things got really hairy. Kovalev came out for the opening bell on fire, landing one hard shot after another until finally a right hand put Ward down on all fours.

Ward wasn’t hurt badly but he was in trouble nonetheless, as Kovalev had a 10-8 round and all the momentum. Would the fierce Russian build on his success and blow Ward away? That seemed to be where the fight was headed. Or would Ward find a way to regroup and turn the tide?

We know now what Ward is made of. He maintained his poise, made necessary adjustments and ended up winning a close, but unanimous decision to become a two-division titleholder.

Then, seven months later in the same town, he knocked out Kovalev in the eighth round to remove doubt about his superiority over his rival. Ward never fought again.

“Man, it was tough,” said Ward, referring to his sore knee and what followed. “It was tough, it was tough. Not just physically but emotionally and mentally. I found myself in those situations before in my life. It was the biggest moment in my life, the biggest moment of my career and things weren’t ideal.

“How are you going to respond now? Where is your faith now? It’s one thing to have faith when things are but when the wind picks up and starts to blow where is your faith now? It was a faith check for sure.

“I was really in disbelief. I was two hours away from the biggest fight of my life in Las Vegas and I have to have the doctor come to my house and drain my knee. … I learned from that that I can overcome [anything] even though things aren’t ideal.

“And I took that momentum into the second fight. I knew Kovalev had no shot. And we showed that.”

Ward thought about returning to the ring only once, after Canelo Alvarez knocked out Kovalez in November 2019. Had the Mexican star called him out, he said, he would’ve returned. Alvarez never mentioned his name, which in effect put Ward’s career to rest.

Now he’s remembered as one of the greatest fighters of his generation, an Olympic champion who went on to have a perfect professional career. And our admiration for him only grows as a result of the Showtime documentary, which lays out the imposing obstacles he had to overcome to accomplish what he did.

Ward was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2021. It was boxing’s way of saying, “We know what you did. And it was special.”

“That was just more for me,” he said. “… I’ve gotten to a place in my life where I don’t need validation. I know outside validation is fickle … so I don’t put a lot of stock in that. It’s good to see things and read things and hear things positive about my career.

“The Hall of Fame was more for me, though. I remember thinking, ‘I need this call. I want to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer so I can finally rest.”