Former WBA and WBC super middleweight champion Mikkel Kessler tells BT that he´s done. There will be no comeback and the 39-year old is now officially retired again.
Ekstrabladet revealed that the comeback would take place November 11 in Herning with Roamer Alexis Angulo would be the opponent. But then it all turned quiet, but then it was revealed that Kessler was suffering from borrelia and he was out with illness for a few months.
More silence followed but now it is official: Mikkel Kessler is retired. - "I just can´t find the motivation to go through with it all," says Kessler to BT.
He last fought 2013 losing to Carl Froch in a rematch and announced his retirement early 2015.
Mikkel Kessler Rules Out Comeback Plans, Will Remain Retired
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
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Re: Mikkel Kessler Rules Out Comeback Plans, Will Remain Retired
Good news this. I always liked watching Kessler ever since his fight with Calzaghe, it was a cracker. Wasn’t very excited to hear he was coming out of retirement, hate seeing old champs losing to people that they would have wiped the floor with in their primes. Smart move.
Re: Mikkel Kessler Rules Out Comeback Plans, Will Remain Retired
Smart move. It's too dangerous to attempt a comeback if your heart isn't in it. Hope he enjoys his retirement he deserves it 
Re: Mikkel Kessler Rules Out Comeback Plans, Will Remain Retired
If anything, right now is the best time for an aging fighter to come back. Kessler is so severely past prime, though.
Just saying that SMW is horrific at the moment. I'd wager Calzaghe or Kessler could've cleaned out the landscape right now.
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Enlightened-One
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Re: Mikkel Kessler Rules Out Comeback Plans, Will Remain Retired
post-Cobra'd Groves is currently either #1 or #2, depending on your ranking, best SMW at the moment. Do you think he'd be there when Kessler, Ward, and Froch were at the top?Enlightened-One wrote: ↑12 Feb 2018, 21:16I think you're embellishing the severity of the situation somewhat.
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Enlightened-One
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Re: Mikkel Kessler Rules Out Comeback Plans, Will Remain Retired
I’m not claiming the super-middleweight division is currently in the midst of its finest era, but it shouldn’t be deemed to be in a “horrific” state either, because it isn’t.Mexi-Box wrote: ↑12 Feb 2018, 21:27post-Cobra'd Groves is currently either #1 or #2, depending on your ranking, best SMW at the moment. Do you think he'd be there when Kessler, Ward, and Froch were at the top?Enlightened-One wrote: ↑12 Feb 2018, 21:16I think you're embellishing the severity of the situation somewhat.
To be fair, just before George Groves engaged in his rematch against Carl Froch (as of the 31st May, 2014), many people would have considered the Brit as being (at least) a top-three 168lb-er, for the following reasons:
• Mikkel Kessler – hadn’t fought for a year, lost his previous fight against Froch by a comfortable margin & never fought again
• Arthur Abraham – got absolutely dominated by Froch five years prior & around the same time had monumental struggles against lesser opponents, like Paul Smith
• Robert Stieglitz – lost to Abraham three times
We also need to remember that the following fighters, who at this time were rated above Groves, also never again competed in a 168lbs contest:
• Carl Froch – Never stepped foot inside the ring after his rematch against Groves
• Andre Ward – Was in the midst of a prolonged period of inactivity & had already participated in his final bout against a 168lbs opponent 20th months prior
So George Groves has always been considered as one of the top-dogs at 168lbs during recent years, since there’s no disgrace in him having only dropped a split-decision loss against a fine fighter like Badou Jack since his epic stoppage defeats to Carl Froch.
For the record, 2008 was a truly “horrific” year for the super-middleweight division, because two of the main titles were held by the likes of Denis Inkin (WBO) and Alejandro Berrio (IBF), with both the WBA & WBC versions being vacant for much of that timeframe.
To be fair, it disappoints me to see people ridicule the 168lbs division, which has historically been one of the very few where the best consistently competes against each other, inevitably resulting in the top dogs suffering one or two losses along the way.
It’s an unwinnable situation, because the alternative is for fighters “ducking” their big name rivals and cherry-picking certain opponents in order protect their unbeaten records and also “marinate” particular contests against their biggest rivals for purely commercial gain.
Like I said before though, I’m not claiming that the 168lbs division is one of the very best the sport currently has to offer, but it shouldn’t be deemed as “horrific” either.