|
Showtime
Championship Boxing
Freitas
vs. Corrales

August
7, 2004
Foxwoods
Resort Casino
Mashantucket,
Connecticut
9
PM ET/PT*
WBO
Lightweight Title Bout (12 Rds)
Champ
Acelino "Popo'' Freitas (35-0,
31 KO's) vs.
Diego "Chico'' Corrales (38-2,
31 KO's)
---------------------------------------------
NEW YORK (June 2, 2004)
- SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING will turn up the heat in August when it
features
two of boxing's finest pound-for-pound champions battling it out for the
World Boxing Organization
(WBO)
135-pound title.
In
one of the most eagerly anticipated match-ups of 2004, Acelino "Popo"
Freitas (35-0, 31 KOs) will put
his
undefeated record and WBO lightweight crown on the line against WBO Junior
Lightweight Champion
Diego
Corrales (38-2, 31 KOs) Saturday, Aug. 7, 2004, at 9 p.m. ET/PT* on
SHOWTIME. Banner
Promotions
will present the event from Foxwoods Resort Casino in Mashantucket, Conn.
A second televised
bout
will be announced soon.
Freitas
will make his seventh SHOWTIME appearance while defending his WBO
lightweight crown for the
initial
time. The Salvador, Brazil, native won the WBO 135-pound belt with a
dominant 12-round unanimous
decision
over previously undefeated Artur Grigorian Jan. 3, 2004, on
SHOWTIME. In the battle of unbeaten
world
champions, Freitas, then the WBO and WBA 130-pound titleholder, floored
Grigorian four times and
was
in total control throughout while triumphing 116-107 twice and 115-108.
The
popular, aggressive, hard-punching Freitas captured the WBO 130-pound
title with an eighth-round TKO
over
Anatoly Alexandrov on Aug. 7, 1999. He added the WBA belt to his
wardrobe by outpointing Joel
Casamayor
on Jan. 12, 2002. Freitas made three successful WBO/WBA title defenses,
the last coming on
an
exciting 12th-round TKO over Jorge Rodrigo Barrios Aug. 9, 2003, on
SHOWTIME.
The
undefeated champion is recognized as Brazil's most significant title
claimant in the past quarter century.
Freitas'
fights have broken attendance records and generate the same kind of mania
as a World Cup soccer
game.
More than 52,000 hometown fans turned out in Sao Paolo to watch the
knockout artist destroy
Anthony
Martinez via second-round TKO in his first WBO title defense on Oct. 26,
1999. His wedding was
nationally
televised in Brazil and drew record ratings.
The
critics all agree that Diego Corrales presents Freitas with his toughest
challenge yet. Poised to end
Freitas'
nine-year string of victories, Corrales will move up in weight in an
attempt to capture his third world
title.
Perhaps
the most feared pure puncher in the lighter weight classes, the lanky,
popular Corrales fought a
tactically
brilliant fight against Casamayor in their rematch on March 6, 2004, and
won the vacant 130-pound
title
with a 12-round split decision at Foxwoods. In addition to being the
aggressor, Corrales showed the
SHOWTIME
audience that he could box well from the outside, and perform with poise
and patience. The
judges
scored the contest 115-112 twice for Corrales and 114-113 for Casamayor.
Prior
to his disputed sixth-round stoppage at the hands of Casamayor on Oct. 4,
2003, Corrales had won
four
consecutive fights by knockout. After capturing the IBF belt with a
seventh-round TKO over Roberto
Garcia
on Oct. 23, 1999, on SHOWTIME and successfully defending it three times,
Corrales lost a battle of
unbeatens
when World Boxing Council (WBC) titleholder Floyd Mayweather
defeated him on Jan. 20,
2001.
Following
a two-year ring absence, Corrales made a triumphant return by stopping Michael
Davis on Jan.
25,
2003. The Sacramento Calif., native then needed only seven rounds to
defeat his next three opponents
over
the course of four months.
During an outstanding amateur career, Corrales compiled a 105-12 record
while capturing numerous titles,
including
the 1991 National P.A.L. Championship at 112 pounds and a bronze medal at
the 1995 Pan Am
Games
in Argentina.
His
greatest, earliest highlight, however, was earning a berth on the United
States National team in 1993.
Corrales started boxing at age nine after getting into a series of
scuffles in the Sacramento streets. His
father
strongly suggested he go to a boxing club.
"I
will never forget the first Nationals I went to," Corrales said.
"It was in Newark, N.J., and I went there with a
guy
who was director of P.A.L. in Sacramento. He was a police officer, who now
works for the FBI. He took
good
care of me. I was a silver medalist (at 95 pounds) and won five fights. I
think I fought every day. I lost a
decision
in the final, but I got a trophy -- they gave it to me for the Sportsman
of the Tournament.''
While
growing up in Sacramento, Corrales lost loved family members to domestic
violence and suicide.
While
in high school Corrales, who had been in a street gang since he was 13,
witnessed the drive-by
murder
of his best friend. Then, after becoming a teenage father, he gave up
boxing to take a job as a truck
driver
for Montgomery Ward and work as a line cook at Bennigans in
Amarillo, Texas.
Unable
to shake the fighting bug, he returned to the gym. He made his pro debut
at age 18 on March 19,
1996,
and registered a third-round TKO over Everett Berry. After winning
two out of his initial four bouts by
decision,
Corrales reeled off 14 consecutive knockouts (June 1996 - October 1997),
12 of which lasted four
rounds
or less.
SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's Steve Albert and Al Bernstein will call the action
from ringside with
Jim
Gray serving as roving reporter. The executive producer of the
SHOWTIME telecast will be Jay Larkin,
with
David Dinkins Jr. producing and Bob Dunphy directing.
*Tape
delayed on the West Coast
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Championship Boxing (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights).
Card
subject to change
(7/14/04)
|