Vladimir, the younger brother of former WBC champion Vitali Klitschko, dominated
the fight, which took place in Mannheim, Germany, from round one. In round
three Byrd dropped his hands for a moment and took a pair of hard left-right
combinations the bigger and stronger man (6 foot 6 or 2.0 metres, 110 kg).
Byrd was knocked down in round five, but survived the barrage of shots that
followed. After pounding him for more than a minute Klitschko backed away,
but Byrd waved his gloves at him, indicating his opponent should continue coming
at him.

Vladimir Klitschko in the fight against Chris Byrd (Photo Reuters/Klitschko)
In the seventh round, finally, Klitschko finished the bout with a flurry of
punches that sent Byrd down for the second time. The fight was terminated as
a TKO. Byrd was the longest-reigning heavyweight champion, having held the
title since 2001.

Two Vlads, two champions: IBF world champion Vladimir Klitschko and classical
chess world champion Vladimir Kramnik immediately after the fight

Chatting backstage with brother Vitaly: Kramnik, Vitaly Klitschko,
Carsten Hensel, Kramnik's manager
The Klitschko brothers are great chess fans and will try to attend the world
championship match Kramnik vs Topalov in Elista, Kalmykia, if their schedule
permits. Since they live in Germany a visit to the Man
vs Machine duel Kramnik vs Deep Fritz in Bonn this November is virtually
certain.

Chess and boxing professionals play a game of tandem chess

Vitali Klitschko, Vladimir Kramnik, Peter Leko and Wladimir Klitschko before
the Dannemann World Championship match in Brisago, 2004

The Klitschko brother in the ChessBase office

Vladimir Klitschko plays a friendly game on Playchess.com against fellow Ukrainian
Sergey Karjakin
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