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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Arnaoutis vs. Feliciano
Rosales vs. TBA

October 22, 2004
Chumash Casino
Santa Ynez, CA
11
PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
NABO Jr.
Welterweight Title Bout - vacant (12 Rds)
“Mighty” Mike Arnaoutis (10-0-1, 4 KOs) vs. Jesse Feliciano
(12-2-2, 7 KOs)
Jr. Lightweight Bout (8 Rds)
Champ
Guadalupe “Bronco” Rosales (11-1, 8 KOs) vs. TBA
___________________________________________________
NEW YORK (Oct. 6, 2004) –
“ShoBox: The New Generation” will now appear on a different night when the
SHOWTIME boxing series moves to Friday nights beginning on Oct. 22, 2004.
In the main event, unbeaten
Mike Arnaoutis will help fight fans ease into the weekend when he
squares off against Jesse Feliciano in a
12-round battle for the vacant North American Boxing Organization (NABO)
junior welterweight title. Opening
the telecast will be World Boxing Council (WBC) Latin Americas 130-pound
Champion Guadalupe Rosales
taking on an opponent to be named in an eight-round junior lightweight
rumble.
SHOWTIME will televise the Gary Shaw Productions doubleheader from Chumash
Casino Resort in Santa
Ynez, Calif., at 11 p.m. ET/PT*. The telecast represents the 52nd in the
popular “ShoBox” series, which
debuted on SHOWTIME in July 2001. This marks the fourth time this year
“ShoBox” has been to Chumash
Casino Resort.
Arnaoutis (10-0-1, 4 KOs), of Athens, Greece, fought to an electrifying
12-round majority draw against Juan
Urango for the vacant NABO junior welterweight crown on “ShoBox”
Aug. 5, 2004, from Hollywood, Fla. The
judges scored the slugfest 115-113 for Urango and 114-114 (twice).
Despite Urango having landed his powerful cross to Arnaoutis’ face,
opening a cut over his opponent’s left
eye in the third round. However, the charismatic Arnaoutis moved fluidly
through the ring, landed his jab
effectively and left the crowd chanting his name at the end of the bout.
Arnaoutis, 25, went 103-7 with 68 knockouts in the amateurs and won
numerous Greek titles. He turned pro
at age 21 on April 30, 2001, with a four-round decision over Sergiy
Dolmatov.
Currently training at the Vineland PAL Boxing Gym in Vineland, N.J.,
Arnaoutis is a stablemate of promising
unbeaten prospects Koba Gogoladze and Ramaz Palyani. The
youngsters were recruited by Mike
Michael, who brought them to live, train and compete in the United
States.
“We have been stepping up the opposition with every fight,’’ Arnaoutis’
manager Gina Iacovou said.
“Arnaoutis has performed like a champion every single time. He is a great
kid and a great fighter. He has so
much fun in the ring that he never wants the fights to end.’’
Feliciano (12-2-2, 7 KOs) of Los Angeles is a volume puncher that
frustrates his opponents with punches in
bunches. The crowd-pleaser made his professional debut at age 19 on Dec.
1, 2001 with a four-round
decision over Juan Montes de Oca in Las Vegas. Since entering the
pro ranks, Feliciano’s seven out of 12
wins have come by way knock out.
“All that I know is that I am trying to make each fight as exciting as I
can,” Feliciano said. “I am going to try
to put on a good show.”
In his last outing and pro title debut, Feliciano took a resounding lead
in the sixth round before WBO Junior
Welterweight Champion and former sparring partner, Muhammad Abdullaev,
rallied for an eighth-round
TKO to defend his crown on April 10, 2004, in Las Vegas.
Rosales (11-1, 8 KOs), of San Luis Potosi, Mexico, captured the WBC Latin
Americas super featherweight
title with an eighth-round TKO over Armando Hernandez on June 19,
2004, in San Luis Potosi. He has
successfully defended his title twice, including a third-round TKO in his
last outing over Erick Perez on Aug.
20, 2004, in Monterrey, Mexico.
The hard-hitting Mexican opened his pro career three days after his 20th
birthday and tallied a fourth-round
knockout over Teron Glasgow in Freeport, N.Y. Following six
consecutive victories, Rosales suffered his
only loss when James Baker registered an eight-round split decision
on May 9, 2002.
Rebounding from the setback, Rosales has won his last four contests,
including three consecutive
knockouts in 2004.
Nick Charles will call the action from ringside, with Steve
Farhood serving as expert analyst. The executive
producer of the telecast is Gordon Hall, with Richard Gaughan
producing.
*Tape
Delayed on the West Coast
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights).
Card
subject to change
(10/7/04)
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