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SHOBOX
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IBF
Light Heavyweight Elimination Bout

September
16, 2004
Kewadin
Casino
Sault
Ste. Marie, Michigan
11
PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
Light
Heavyweight Bout (12 Rds)
Rico
"Suave" Hoye (17-0,
14 KOs) vs. Montell "Ice" Griffin (46-4,
30 KOs)
Super Bantamweight Bout
(8 Rds)
Al
"The Quiet Storm" Seeger
(19-1, 16 KOs)
vs. Eric "Mighty Mouse" Aiken (11-1,
8 KOs)
_____________________________________________________
NEW YORK (September 8, 2004) - The International Boxing Federation's (IBF)
No. 1-ranked light
heavyweight
contender, Rico Hoye, will square off in a 12-round IBF elimination bout
against No. 3
contender,
Montell Griffin, Thursday, Sept. 16, on the SHOWTIME boxing series, "ShoBox:
The New
Generation."
In the eight-round co-feature, Al Seeger will take on fellow once beaten
super bantamweight
contender,
Eric Aiken.
SHOWTIME
will televise the Gary Shaw Productions doubleheader from Kewadin Casino
in Sault Ste. Marie,
Mich.,
at 11 p.m. ET/PT*. The telecast represents the 51st in the popular "ShoBox"
series, which debuted
on
SHOWTIME in July 2001.
Hoye
(17-0, 14 KOs), of Detroit, captured the vacant International Boxing
Association (IBA) Continental
175-pound
crown with a 12-round decision over Prince Badi Ajamu June 5, 2003,
on "ShoBox." Four
months
later on
Oct. 11, 2003, Hoye added the North American Boxing Organization (NABO)
belt by scoring
a
second-round
TKO over Etianne Whitaker in Auburn Hills, Mich.
On
March 18, 2004, Hoye expanded his belt collection by winning both the
North American Boxing
Federation
(NABF) and World Boxing Council (WBC) Continental Americas light
heavyweight crowns with an
opening-round
destruction over Donnell Wiggins on "ShoBox" from Santa
Ynez, Calif.
Less
than two months later on May 15, 2004, Hoye tallied a fourth-round
knockout over Richard Hall in an
IBF
elimination bout on the Roy Jones Jr. - Antonio Tarver
undercard from Las Vegas. One right to the
Hall's
left temple ended the fight.
"Hall
did not stand a chance when I unleashed my right, which I call The Rico
Act," Hoye said. "I call it that
because
it is criminal what that punch does to my opponents: it just rubs them
out."
Born
into a long line of fighters, Hoye literally grew up in a gym, as both his
father and grandfather fought
professionally.
"I
have been around boxing from the time I was born," Hoye said.
"From what I have been told, I was brought
to
the gym in my crib or car seat."
Hoye
made his professional debut at age 26 on June 20, 2001, and scored a
third-round knockout over
Omar
Pucci
in Warren, Mich.
Hoye's
opponent, Griffin (46-4, 30 KOs), of Chicago, was the first man ever to
defeat Roy Jones Jr. as a
professional
boxer.
On
March 21, 1997, Jones, the then-World Boxing Council (WBC) light
heavyweight champion, won the first
round,
but Griffin took command in rounds two-four. Jones battled back and got
credit for a knockdown in the
seventh.
In
the ninth, Griffin went down to one knee to clear his head and Jones
attacked with a grazing right hand.
Griffin
was helplessly looking up to the champion when Jones let loose with a mean
left hook to the jaw.
Griffin
pitched forward face down on the mat. Referee Tony Perez tolled the
count and then conferred with
commissioner
Larry Hazzard before disqualifying Jones. At the time, Jones led
narrowly on two of the
scorecards
76-75, 77-75, while Griffin led on the other (76-75).
Less
than five months later, Griffin lost the rematch against Jones on Aug. 7,
1997.
In
his 15th pro start, Griffin earned a 12-round majority decision over James
Toney to capture the IBF
Intercontinental
175-pound title. Griffin's speed and movement frustrated Toney throughout
and allowed him
to
win by the scores 116-112, 115-113 and 114-114.
Seeger
(19-1, 16 KOs), of Savannah, Ga., won the IBA Americas 122-pound belt with
a seventh-round TKO
over
Marty Robbins on Aug. 30, 2003.
In
the sixth round, Robbins produced his best moments of the bout by coming
forward and attacking Seeger.
However,
Robbins went down for an eight count after a punishing right hand landed
straight between his
gloves.
In the seventh, Seeger's body shots put Robbins on the canvas three more
times before the referee
mercifully
halted matters.
Following
an illustrious amateur career, Seeger turned pro at age 22 on April 27,
2002, with a second-round
KO
over Daniel Amaro. The pride of Georgia has fought all of his 20
pro bouts in Savannah.
Aiken
(11-1, eight KOs), of Forestville, Md., has won 10 consecutive contests
since splitting his initial two
pro
bouts. The 24-year-old slugger, who has taken on seven out of his past
eight opponents in Washington,
D.C.,
has compiled four opening-round knockouts in 12 bouts.
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.
For
information on "ShoBox: The New Generation" and SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecasts,
including
complete fighter bios, records, related stories and more, please go the
SHOWTIME website at
http://www.sho.com/boxing.
*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
(9/10/04)
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