French boxer Hassan N’Dam (left) goes down for the second time in the 4th round during his fight against Canadian David Lemieux for the IBF world middleweight championship in Montreal, Canada. (AFP)

AFP/Montreal, Canada

Canada’s David Lemieux knocked down Frenchman Hassan N’Dam four times en route to a unanimous 12-round decision on Saturday to claim the vacant International Boxing Federation middleweight world title.
Lemieux’s explosive punching power was on full display as he floored N’Dam with a left in the second round, then put him down again twice in the fifth round and again in the seventh. Two ringside judges scored the bout 115-109 while the third saw it 114-110 for Lemieux, who improved to 34-2 with 31 knockouts.
N’Dam fell to 31-2 with 18 wins inside the distance. As in a world title fight loss to Peter Quillin in 2012 — when he was knocked down six times—Cameroon-born N’Dam showed his ability to absorb punishment.
After going down the first time to a hard left hook he bounced up quickly, and although he seemed to be in trouble late in the round he came back strong in the third.
Lemieux dropped N’Dam with another left hook early in the fifth—then floored him again with another left later in the round.
After going down to another left hook in the seventh, N’Dam didn’t again appear to be in trouble. In lifting the title that was stripped from American Jermain Taylor—who is facing a slew of legal issues—Lemieux staked his claim to elite status in one of boxing hottest divisions.
The victory puts the 26-year-old Canadian in the frame for a fight with another explosive slugger—unbeaten World Boxing Association champion Gennady Golovkin of Kazakhstan—or perhaps Puerto Rican star Miguel Cotto.
Cotto, who destroyed Australian Daniel Geale in four rounds on June 6, is expected to take on Mexico’s Saul “Canelo” Alvarez later this year, with Lemieux now a potential foe for the winner of that fight.

Ward dominant in ring return
World Boxing Association super middleweight world champion Andre Ward made a triumphant ring return on Saturday, stopping Britain’s Paul Smith in the ninth round of a non-title bout in Oakland, California.
The 31-year-old Ward improved to 27-0 with 14 wins inside the distance. Ward, a gold medallist at the 2004 Olympics, gained prominence in 2011 with his victory in the Super Six Middleweight professional tournament.
But since then he had fought just twice before Saturday’s bout—most recently 19 months ago when he won a unanimous decision over Edwin Rodriguez in November of 2013. Still, ring rust wasn’t an issue against Smith, who came into the bout after back-to-back defeats to Arthur Abraham in Germany and failed to make the agreed-upon catchweight for the fight of 172 pounds—coming in more than four pounds over the limit.
Ward out-classed Smith, whose corner threw in the towel after the Brit absorbed another punishing blow. In another high-profile non-title bout on a busy night of boxing in north America, Shawn Porter survived a 12th-round knockdown to gain a unanimous 12-round decision over Adrien Broner in a battle of top welterweights in Las Vegas.
Porter improved to 25-1-1 with 16 knockouts while Broner fell to 30-2 with 22 wins inside the distance.