Bernard Hopkins will return to the ring despite suffering a crushing defeat over the weekend to Russian Sergey Kovalev, the 49-year-old former champion told Reuters.

Hopkins, who failed to win a round on any of the three judges’ scorecards in the light-heavyweight title unification bout, ended speculation of his retirement by saying he will fight “one more time.”

“Who will I fight? I don’t know,” Hopkins said during a telephone interview from his Delaware home.

“But it will be somebody I will be an underdog against because I want to be the underdog.

“If this is the last time I’m going into the ring, I will not cheat myself. It will not be a freak show. I will never shortchange myself and my dignity.”

Hopkins, who defended the middleweight title a record 20 times from 1995 to 2005 and has never been knocked out, was floored Saturday in the first round by Kovalev, a fighter 18 years his junior.

But the fighter known as The Executioner was back in the gym this week.

“Physically, if you see me today, you’d think I didn’t have a fight (on Saturday),” he said.

“But inside, trust me, my arms and the back of my head and the top of my head, oh yeah, I was in a fight. I’ve been in the hot tub for the last 48 hours.”

Kovalev, who lives in Los Angeles, retained his WBO championship and captured Hopkins’s International Boxing Federation and World Boxing Association belts. He boosted his record to 26-0-1 with 23 knockouts.

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