LOS ANGELES — Andre Ward wrote out his retirement speech a few times in the last two years. With his usual fastidious style, the super middleweight champion laid out every reason he felt he had to end his unblemished boxing career in his prime.
Yet every time Ward was pushed to the brink in his long-running dispute with his promoter, friends and colleagues talked him out of retirement. He never spoke or emailed the words he had written.
"I saved them, just to be able to reflect on those raw emotions one day," Ward told The Associated Press. "But somebody would always call me and say, 'Listen, man. It's not time. You've got a lot left. This is going to pass. Get back. Just hold on until you can get back. This is not going to last forever.' That's what helped me."
When Ward finally got through the drama, Jay Z was on the other side.
After fighting just twice in the past three-plus years, Ward (27-0, 14 KOs) is ready to get back to work. He has signed with Roc Nation Sports, becoming the centerpiece of the fledgling boxing promotion backed by the hip-hop mogul.
Ward, who turns 31 next month, filled his inactive months with an HBO commentary job and ample family time with his wife and four children. He had several legal setbacks in his attempts to break up with the promoter who had backed him since his gold-medal run at the Athens Olympics, and the unpleasant dispute made him dread going out in Oakland, California, his hometown.
"You can only tell people, 'Just be patient, just hang on, I'm going to have some good news soon,' so many times," Ward said. "It got to the point where you almost don't want to see the fans, because you don't have anything positive to talk about."
Ward feels the ordeal educated his oldest sons about perseverance through adversity, even when their friends at school wondered why their dad wasn't fighting anymore.