|
Showtime
Championship Boxing
Tszyu vs. Mitchell

November 6, 2004
Glendale
Arena
Phoenix,
Arizona
9
PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
IBF \ WBC Super Lightweight Title Bout - 12 Rds
Champion
Kostya Tszyu (30-1, 24 KOs) vs. Sharmba Mitchell (55-3, 31 KOs)
______________________________________________
NEW YORK (Sept. 27) – Two of boxing’s most talented
pound-for-pound fighters will square off in a highly
anticipated rematch when International Boxing Federation (IBF)/World
Boxing Council (WBC) “Super” 140-
pound
Champion Kostya Tszyu defends his titles against Interim IBF Junior
Welterweight Champion
Sharmba
Mitchell Saturday, Nov. 6, 2004, on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING.
SHOWTIME
will televise the showdown from the Glendale Arena in Phoenix, Ariz., at 9
p.m. ET/PT.*
Millenium
Events, in association with Gary Shaw Productions, LLC, will present the
fight card. A co-featured
bout will
be announced in the near future.
In their
initial meeting on Feb. 3, 2001, Tszyu scored a controversial
seventh-round TKO over Mitchell on
SHOWTIME.
The bout was prematurely halted when a knee injury forced Mitchell to
retire after the seventh
round. At
the time of the stoppage, Tszyu was ahead on two of the scorecards, 68-65
and 68-64, and even
on the
other, 66-66.
“This is
the fight that everyone has been waiting for,’’ said Tszyu (30-1, 24 KOs),
who will make his first start
since
January 2003. The champion was scheduled to defend his crowns against
Mitchell on SHOWTIME
Feb. 7,
2004, but was forced to withdraw after suffering a shoulder injury during
training.
“Mitchell
has done a lot of talking,” Tszyu continued. “It is time to shut him up.
Let’s finish our business. My
shoulder
is fine. I have been testing it and doing heavy work for more than two
months. All I do is train. I am
very
excited about getting in the ring again.’’
Since the
disputed loss to Tszyu, Mitchell (55-3, 31 KOs) has defeated highly
skilled ring veterans such as
Vince
Phillips and Ben Tackie en route to winning eight consecutive
bouts.
“Waiting
for Tszyu has been frustrating, but I understand the politics of the
game,” Mitchell said. “We have
had a
couple of false starts, but I am thrilled that the fight is going to
finally happen.”
“I will
win. I am injury free and very pumped up. I am ready to do my thing.’’
Tszyu, of
Sydney, Australia, by way of Serov, Russia, stamped himself as the world’s
premier 140-pound
boxer and
added the IBF belt to his already-glitzy wardrobe with a scintillating
second-round TKO over
previously
undefeated Zab Judah Nov. 3, 2001, on SHOWTIME.
In a
sensational performance in which he became the first undisputed junior
welterweight champion since
Paul
Fujii in 1968, Tszyu finished Judah off with a single, devastating
right hand in the second round. Six
months
later in his sole 2003 outing, Tszyu retained his titles with a one-sided
12-round decision over then-
BF No. 1
contender Ben Tackie May 18 on SHOWTIME.
Eight
months after defeating Tackie, Tszyu retained his undisputed title by
scoring a sixth-round TKO over
former WBC
titleholder “Jessie” James Leija on Jan. 19, 2003, from Melbourne,
Australia.
The
once-beaten world champion captured the WBA belt on SHOWTIME with a
seventh-round TKO over
Mitchell
on Feb. 3, 2001. Nearly one-and-one-half years earlier, Tszyu won the WBC
140-pound title by
knocking
out Miguel Angel Gonzalez in the 10th round on Aug. 21, 1999.
A winner
of 12 consecutive bouts, including 10 by knockout, Tszyu will make his
16th world title appearance
(plus one
no decision). After going 259-11 as an amateur, “The Thunder From Down
Under” turned pro on
March 1,
1992. He made his initial six starts in Australia, and 17 out of his first
22.
Mitchell
(55-3, 31 KOs), of Takoma Park, Md., captured the Interim IBF 140-pound
crown with a hard-fought,
12-round
unanimous decision over Lovemore N’dou on the day he was scheduled
to face Tszyu - Feb. 7,
2004, on
SHOWTIME.
In his
lone defense nearly two months later, Mitchell registered an impressive
12-round decision over Mike
Stewart
April 3 on SHOWTIME. Mitchell, who scored a second-round KO over Moises
Pedroza in his most
recent
start on Aug. 7, 2004, at Mashantucket, Conn., earned a lopsided 12-round
unanimous decision over
Ben Tackie
on May 17, 2003, to become the IBF No. 1 140-pound contender.
Less than
four months earlier on Jan. 25, Mitchell opened the 2003 campaign by
dropping Carlos Vilches
three
times en route to registering a fourth-round TKO -- his first victory
inside of the distance since February
1998.
The
southpaw boxer-puncher captured the WBA title with a 12-round decision
over Khalid Rahilou on Oct.
10, 1998.
Mitchell made four successful defenses prior to losing to Tszyu. The
defeat ended a six-and-one-
half-year
run in which Mitchell won 16 consecutive contests.
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.
For
information on upcoming SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecasts, including
complete fighter
bios and
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 Championship Boxing (with a little
editing from us - color, highlights).
(10/12/04)
|