Micky Ward Explained

Micky Ward
Realname:George Michael Ward Jr.
Nickname:"Irish"
Weight:Light welterweight
Height:5 ft 8 in
Reach:70 in
Birth Date:4 October 1965
Birth Place:Lowell, Massachusetts, U.S.
Style:Orthodox
Total:51
Wins:38
Ko:27
Losses:13

George Michael Ward Jr. (born October 4, 1965), often known by his nickname, "Irish" Micky Ward, is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1985 to 2003. He challenged once for the IBF light welterweight title in 1997, and held the WBU light welterweight title in 2000. Ward is widely known for his trilogy of fights with Arturo Gatti, two of which received Fight of the Year awards by The Ring magazine, as well as his relentless pressure fighting style. Ward was portrayed by Mark Wahlberg in the 2010 film The Fighter, which was based on his early career.

Ancestry

His maternal great-grandmother Annie Greenhalge (Carroll) was born in Ireland, the daughter of Michael and Mary (Flood) Carroll. His maternal great-great-great grandparents Peter McMahon and Ann Quinn were from County Tyrone, Ireland. They fled Ireland during the 1850s to escape from poverty and oppression and arrived in Boston, Massachusetts. They settled in the Acre neighborhood of Lowell, Massachusetts and worked as laborers and millworkers.

Career

Ward was a three-time New England Golden Gloves champion boxer who turned pro in 1985, winning his first fourteen fights. However, his career leveled off, and after losing four consecutive fights in 1990/91, Ward took a hiatus from boxing.[1] During Ward's time away from the sport, he used some of the funds from his day job on a road-paving crew to have surgery on his right hand, which had given him problems during several bouts. The surgery used some of the bone from Ward's pelvis to strengthen and fuse the bones in his hand.

Ward was successful in his return, winning his first nine fights, and won the WBU's Light Welterweight Title in a fight against Shea Neary in 2000. He never defended the belt once.

In a 1997 match that would come to typify the exceptional power of Ward's left hook to the body, he scored a 7th-round knockout against the then-undefeated Mexican Alfonso Sanchez in a fight that Ward, up to then, was clearly losing on points. Shortly before the punch, Emanuel Augustus said the fight should be stopped (which referee Mitch Halpern had threatened to do if Ward didn't "show [him] something"); afterwards HBO boxing commentator Larry Merchant called it one of the most extraordinary things he'd ever seen in boxing.[2]

Ward's left hook to the body later resulted in a first-round knockout of Steve Quinonez, and a nine-count knockdown of Arturo Gatti in their first fight.

Ward earned a 1997 IBF Light Welterweight Championship fight against champion Vince Phillips, but did not win the championship, as the fight was stopped in the third round due to cuts, and Phillips was awarded the bout via TKO. One year later, Ward again would come up short in a title fight, as he lost a 12-round decision against Zab Judah.

In 2000, Ward traveled to London to take on the WBU Light Welterweight Champion, Shea Neary, and earned a TKO in the eighth round to win the WBU title. Ward, however, never defended the title, and split his next four fights. His ten-round decision victory over Emanuel Augustus (then known as Emanuel Burton) was voted The Ring magazine's 2001 Fight of the Year.[3]

Ward vs. Gatti trilogy

On May 18, 2002, Ward faced the opponent with whom he became most identified, Arturo Gatti. The fight was a wild one, but a ninth round Ward knockdown of Gatti proved to be the difference, with Ward winning a majority decision. The fight was later named the 2002 Ring magazine fight of the year. Both fighters needed care in a trauma center after the match.

The two agreed to an immediate rematch, and in November, Gatti was able to win the second wild fight, knocking Ward down in the third round, although he survived to finish the fight. Gatti paid tribute to Ward's tenacity after the fight, saying, "I used to wonder what would happen if I fought my twin. Now I know."

They then agreed to a third straight fight, and again, the fight was back and forth. Gatti pounded Ward with punch after punch early on, but Ward fought back and managed a sixth round knockdown of Gatti. Before Gatti could get up, or the referee's count could hit ten, the bell sounded to end the round. Gatti was able to come back and win the fight via a unanimous decision. Again, both men needed a trip to the hospital, due to the injuries they suffered. The fight was named the 2003 Ring magazine fight of the year, the third straight for Ward.[4] Ward was the first fighter to achieve this since Rocky Marciano and Carmen Basilio each did so in the 1950s.

Ward made approximately $3 million in earnings for his trilogy with Gatti; the most lucrative fights of his career.[5]

Life after boxing

Ward still lives in Lowell, where he is part owner of both a boxing gym as well as an outdoor hockey rink.[6] Ward is married to Charlene Fleming, his longtime girlfriend, who is also a former athlete. He manages the boxing gym he owns with his half-brother and former trainer, Dicky Eklund, who trains new boxers entering its academy.[7]

In his 2012 autobiography, Ward revealed that he had been sexually abused as a child by a friend of Dicky's, another boxer referred to only by his nickname, "Hammer". The abuse began when Ward was nine years old and continued for approximately three years, until he gained the confidence to confront his attacker. Ward would eventually face off against Hammer in one of his first amateur bouts, winning by unanimous decision.[8]

In popular culture

The story of Ward's comeback and rise to fame was made into a 2010 feature film, The Fighter, starring Mark Wahlberg (who was nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Actor) as Ward. In 2011, Wahlberg confirmed to Spike TV that The Fighter 2 is in the works, which will focus on the legendary fight trilogy between Ward and Arturo Gatti.[9]

Lowell hip hop artist D-Tension released the song, '’One Hit to the Body'’ which Micky used as his ring entrance music for the On May 18, 2002 Ward-Gatti bout.

Philadelphia hip hop group Jedi Mind Tricks released two remixes to their single, Animal Rap from their third album Visions of Gandhi (2003), dubbed the "Micky Ward Mix" and "Arturo Gatti Mix".

The album The Warrior's Code by Dropkick Murphys features Ward on the cover, and he is also the subject of the title song. A live recording of the song is heard in The Fighter.[10] [11]

The game Fight Night Round 3 (2006) features Ward and Gatti on the cover (PS2 and Xbox versions only).[12]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
51Loss38–13 Arturo GattiUD10Jun 7, 2003
50Loss38–12 Arturo GattiUD10Nov 23, 2002
49Win38–11 Arturo Gatti10May 18, 2002
48Loss37–11 Jesse James Leija5 (10), Jan 5, 2002
47Win37–10 Emanuel AugustusUD10Jul 13, 2001
46Win36–10 Steve QuinonezKO1 (10), May 18, 2001
45Loss35–10 Antonio DíazUD10Aug 19, 2000
44Win35–9 Shea NearyTKO8 (12), Mar 11, 2000
43Win34–9 Reggie GreenTKO10 (10), Oct 1, 1999
42Win33–9 Jermal Corbin5 (10), Jul 16, 1999
41Win32–9 Jose Luis MendezTKO3 (8)Mar 17, 1999
40Loss31–9 Zab JudahUD12Jun 7, 1998
39Win31–8 Mark FernandezKO3 (8), Apr 14, 1998
38Loss30–8 Vince PhillipsTKO3 (12), Aug 9, 1997
37Win30–7 Alfonso SanchezKO7 (10), Apr 12, 1997
36Win29–7 Manny CastilloSD10Dec 6, 1996
35Win28–7 Louis VeaderUD12Jul 28, 1996
34Win27–7 Louis VeaderTKO9 (12), Apr 13, 1996
33Win26–7 Alex OrtizTKO1 (6)Mar 15, 1996
32Win25–7 Alberto AliceaTKO3 (8)Jan 26, 1996
31Win24–7 Edgardo RosarioTKO1 (4)Dec 30, 1995
30Win23–7 Genaro AndujarKO3 (10)Sep 10, 1994
29Win22–7 Luis CastilloTKO5 (10)Jun 17, 1994
28Loss21–7 Ricky MeyersUD10Oct 15, 1991
27Loss21–6 Tony MartinUD10May 2, 1991
26Loss21–5 Charles MurrayUD12Oct 18, 1990
25Loss21–4 Harold BrazierUD12Apr 26, 1990
24Win21–3 David RivelloSD10Feb 3, 1990
23Win20–3 Clarence ColemanTKO5 (10), May 23, 1989
22Loss19–3 Frankie WarrenUD12Jan 15, 1989
21Win19–2 Francisco Tomas da CruzTKO3 (10), Dec 13, 1988
20Loss18–2 Mike MunginUD10Sep 9, 1988
19Win18–1 Marvin GarrisTKO2 (10)Jul 9, 1988
18Win17–1 David SilvaUD10May 19, 1988
17Win16–1 Joey OliveraUD10Feb 19, 1988
16Win15–1 Joey FerrellTKO1 (10), Jan 15, 1988
15Loss14–1 Edwin CuretSD10Sep 25, 1987
14Win14–0 Derrick McGuireTKO4 (8), Aug 25, 1987
13Win13–0 Kelly KobleTKO4 (8), Apr 6, 1987
12Win12–0 Hilario Mercedes8Feb 24, 1987
11Win11–0 Carlos BrandiKO2 (10), Oct 24, 1986
10Win10–0 John RafuseUD8Aug 29, 1986
9Win9–0 Rafael TerreroTKO2 (6), Jul 4, 1986
8Win8–0 Ken Willis6Jun 15, 1986
7Win7–0 Luis PizarroTKO3 (6), May 30, 1986
6Win6–0 Darrell CurtisTKO5 (6), Apr 18, 1986
5Win5–0 Jesus Carlos Velez6 (6), Feb 21, 1986
4Win4–0 Mike Peoples4Jan 24, 1986
3Win3–0 Chris BajorTKO3 (4), Jan 10, 1986
2Win2–0 Greg YoungTKO4 (4), Aug 27, 1985
1Win1–0 David Morin1 (4), Jun 13, 1985

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lidz, Franz. "Uncommon Valor", Sports Illustrated, June 16, 2003
  2. Web site: Micky Ward vs Alfonso Sanchez Amazing Knock Out Body Punching. sweetfights. YouTube.
  3. Quinones, Rafael Garcia. "Revisiting the Fight of the Year for 2001: Micky Ward vs. Emanuel Burton", BleacherReport.com, January 9, 2010
  4. Boehm, Mike."Arturo Gatti: Remembering Ultimate Blood and Guts Warrior", ProBoxing-Fans.com, n.d.
  5. Aranda, Ramon. "Micky Ward to Attend Martinez-Dzinziruk Card", 3MoreRounds.com, February 24, 2011
  6. Web site: Lem Satterfield, provided by . Surprised Micky Ward's 'Honesty And Integrity' Recognized . Sfgate.com . 2011-01-07 . 2011-01-28.
  7. Web site: The Fighter. www.imdb.com.
  8. Book: Ward . Micky . A Warrior's Heart . 2012 . Berkley Books . 9780425247556 . 47–55 .
  9. Aranda, Ramon. "Mark Wahlberg Confirms The Fighter 2 in the Works" on 1/14/2022, 3MoreRounds.com, June 10, 2011
  10. Web site: The Warrior's Code. Dropkick Murphys . Dropkickmurphys.com . 2011-01-28.
  11. Web site: Epitaph Records. Dropkick Murphys . Epitaph.com . 2011-01-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120928062729/http://www.epitaph.com/artists/album/435 . 2012-09-28 .
  12. Adams, David. "Ward, Gatti for Fight Night Round 3 Cover" Xbox.IGN.com, December 12, 2005