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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Elder
vs. Burton
Arnaoutis vs. Gallardo

December 17, 2004
Chumash Casino
Santa Ynez, California
11:00 PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
NABO Lightweight
Title Bout (12 Rds)
Champion
Ebo Elder (21-1, 13 KOs) vs. Courtney Burton (21-2, 11 KOs)
Jr. Welterweight Bout (10 Rds)
"Mighty" Mike Arnaoutis (11-0-1, 5 KOs) vs. Juaquin "Killer"
Gallardo (16-2-1, 5 KOs)
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"SHOBOX: THE NEW GENERATION" TO FEATURE NABO LIGHTWEIGHT TITLE
AND JUNIOR WELTERWEIGHT SHOWDOWN
NEW YORK
(Dec 8, 2004) - Multi-talented boxer and musician, Ebo Elder,
will put down his drum sticks
and pick
up the gloves when he defends his North American Boxing Organization (NABO)
lightweight crown
against
former NABO champion Courtney Burton, Friday, Dec. 17, on the
SHOWTIME boxing series,
"ShoBox:
The New Generation." In the 10-round co-feature, unbeaten World Boxing
Organization (WBO) No.
15 junior
welterweight contender "Mighty" Mike Arnaoutis will make his
third SHOWTIME and "ShoBox"
appearances as he takes on Juaquin "Killer" Gallardo.
SHOWTIME
will televise the Gary Shaw Productions doubleheader from the Chumash
Casino Resort in
Santa Ynez,
Calif., at 11 p.m. ET/PT (tape delayed on west coast). The telecast
represents the 54th in the
popular "ShoBox"
series, which debuted on SHOWTIME in July 2001. This marks the fifth time
this year
"ShoBox"
has been to Chumash.
Elder
(21-1, 13 KOs), of Newnan, Ga., captured the vacant NABO lightweight title
on Oct. 9, 2004, by
scoring a
sixth-round technical knockout over Ricardo Fuentes in Gainesville,
Ga. The referee halted the
contest
following the fifth round due to facial injuries. In addition to suffering
several cuts on both eyelids,
Fuentes'
right eye turned purple and was nearly swollen shut at the time of the
stoppage.
After
opening his career with 16 consecutive victories, 10 knockouts and two pro
titles, Elder traded in his
pugilistic
skills to become the drummer of a rock band and construction worker. The
career change was
spurred on
by a devastating opening-round TKO loss to Ubaldo Hernandez in a
bout for the North American
Boxing
Association (NABA) 140-pound belt on Nov. 10, 2001.
Due to
burnout caused by fighting 17 times in 17 months, and having undergone
intense internal conflict with
his
father/manager/trainer, Greg, Elder would not enter the ring for more than
two years.
Following
a 26-month layoff, Elder returned with a renewed commitment to boxing and
an improved
relationship with his father.
"Everything is completely different and I have the confidence to know that
it is going to stay that way," Elder
told
Fightnews.com in July 2004. "This is how things should have been all of
those other years before. The
only thing
that can stop us now is if God says, 'that's enough.'"
Since his
return in January 2004, Elder has gone 5-0 with three knockouts and
appeared twice before a
national
television audience on ESPN's "Friday Night Fights." The Georgia native
currently is the World
Boxing
Council (WBC) No. 6/WBO No. 13/International Boxing Federation (IBF) and
World Boxing
Association (WBA) No. 14 lightweight contender.
Prior to
the layoff, Elder captured the vacant International Boxing Association (IBA)
Continental 140-pound
crown by
registering a 12-round unanimous decision over Jaime Morales on
July 28, 2001, in Savannah,
Ga. Two
months later on "ShoBox," Elder added the vacant WBO Intercontinental
super lightweight title to
his resume
with a sixth-round technical win over Dagoberto Najera on Sept. 29,
2001.
Burton
(21-2, 11 KOs), of Benton Harbor, Mich., secured the NABO lightweight
championship with a 12-
round
split decision over Francisco Lorenzo on Dec. 5, 2003, from St.
Thomas, Virgin Islands. Two judges
had Burton
winning 115-114 and 116-113, while the third judge gave the nod to
Lorenzo, 115-113.
After
turning pro at age 18 in July 1996, the three-time Silver Gloves United
States champion and a two-time
Junior
Olympic U.S. National champion defeated his initial 16 opponents. In his
17th outing and pro title
debut,
Burton lost for the first time when Eleazar Contreras scored a
fifth-round knockout and won the
WBC
Continental Americas lightweight title on Nov. 7, 2002, in New Orleans.
An unfazed
Burton rebounded in 2003 to defeat former world champions Gabriel
Ruelas and Angel
Manfredy, as well as Lorenzo en route to compiling a 4-0 record with
three KOs. Following a hard-fought
11th-round
TKO loss to Julio Diaz in an IBF 135-pound elimination bout on
March 19, 2004, Burton tallied a
10-round
split decision over Emanuel Augustus on July 6, 2004. The Michigan
native currently is the World
Boxing
Association (WBA) No. 5 and IBF No. 6 lightweight contender.
Arnaoutis
(11-0-1, 5 KOs), of Athens, Greece, floored Jesse Feliciano three
times in the initial three
minutes to
nab the vacant NABO junior welterweight title with an opening-round
knockout Oct. 22, 2004, on
"ShoBox"
from Chumash Casino Resort.
The
unbeaten champion sent Feliciano to the canvas for the first time midway
through the first round by
landing a
punishing uppercut to the chin. Less than one minute later, Feliciano hit
the turf once again after
absorbing
brutal body shots to the midsection. After Feliciano stumbled while
regaining his feet, Arnaoutis
ended
matters when a crushing left to the head sent the beaten fighter down for
a third time. Referee Dr.
James
Jen Kin stopped the carnage at 2:49 of the opening stanza.
In his "ShoBox"
and SHOWTIME debuts, Arnaoutis fought to an electrifying 12-round majority
draw against
Juan
Urango for the vacant NABO junior welterweight crown on Aug. 5, 2004,
from Hollywood, Fla.
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.
Gallardo
(16-2-1, 5 KOs), of San Diego, Calif., native compiled a 173-11 amateur
record and captured
numerous
titles, including the National Silver Gloves title from 1989-93. A
National P.A.L. champion,
Gallardo
also won the National Junior Olympic silver medal in '92, the National
Junior Olympic gold in '93 and
the U.S.
Olympic Festival gold in '94. Gallardo began his professional boxing
career at age 20 on Sept. 19,
1997, with
a four-round victory over Alphonso Meza in Tacoma, Wash.
"Killer"
has won his last two bouts entering his "ShoBox" debut: a brilliant
eighth-round knockout over
Sergio
de la Torre in San Francisco Dec. 13, 2003 and a 10-round decision
over Arturo Morua in
Temecula,
Calif. April 17, 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).
(12/9/04)
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