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Showtime
Championship Boxing Results
Klitschko
vs. Williamson
Phillips
vs. Ouma
Vanderpool
vs. Lacy

October
2, 2004
Caesars
Palace
Las
Vegas, Nevada
Exciting Tripleheader
To Be Replayed On SHO2 Tuesday, Oct. 5, At 11 P.M. ET/PT
LAS VEGAS (Oct. 2, 2004) -
Former World Boxing Organization (WBO) heavyweight champion Wladimir
Klitschko survived a fourth-round knockdown and a nasty cut to escape
with a fifth-round technical split
decision
over former North American Boxing Federation (NABF) heavyweight
titleholder DaVarryl
Williamson Saturday on SHOWTIME. The fight went to the scorecards
after Klitschko was unable to
continue
after the fifth round due to a deep gash over his right eye that was
caused by an accidental head
butt.
In the
first of two SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING co-features from Caesars Palace
in Las Vegas,
International Boxing Federation (IBF) No. 1 contender Kassim Ouma
won the final two rounds on each of the
judges'
scorecards to capture the IBF junior middleweight championship with a
12-round unanimous decision
over
champion Verno Phillips. Leading off the SHOWTIME tripleheader, IBF
No. 4 contender and 2000
United
States Olympian Jeff Lacy captured his first pro title by scoring
an eighth-round technical knockout
over IBF
No. 1 contender Syd Vanderpool to win the vacant IBF super
middleweight belt. Gary Shaw
Productions, LLC, in association with Caesars Palace presented the event,
which aired at 10 p.m. ET/PT
(delayed
on West Coast).
Klitschko
(43-3, 39 KOs), of Kiev, Ukraine, sustained cuts over both eyes in his
SHOWTIME debut, but
racked up
enough points to gain the nod on two of the three scorecards. Judges
Chuck Giampa and Jerry
Roth
scored it 49-46 for Klitschko, while Doug Tucker ruled in favor of
Williamson, 48-47. The former world
champion
avenged his older brother, Vitali's, loss to Chris Byrd to capture
the WBO heavyweight crown on
Oct. 14,
2000. The 1996 Olympic Gold Medalist held the title for more than 28
months and made five
successful
defenses before being dethroned by Corrie Sanders on March 8, 2003.
Williamson
(20-3, 17 KOs), of Washington, D.C., landed a straight right hand to the
chin that floored an off-
alance
Klitschko during the opening minute of the fourth round. Despite the
knockdown and opening a cut
over his
opponent's left eye, "Touch of Sleep" suffered his second loss in his past
four fights. The
Washington, D.C., native rallied from an eighth-round knockdown to win the
NABF and WBO Latino
heavyweight titles with a 12-round majority decision over Eliecer
Castillo on April 17, 2004, in Tampa, Fla.
Williamson
vacated the NABF belt on Aug. 27, 2004. The well-educated father of two,
who has a master's
degree in
administrative services, was a three-time United States national champion
and compiled a 120-17-
1 amateur
record with 103 knockouts.
Ouma (20-1-1, 13 KOs) of Palm Beach, Fla., rallied to score a 10-8 round
in the 11th and win the 12th on
each of
the scorecards to defeat Phillips again, this time by the scores 114-113
twice and 117-110. Ouma is
coming off
of a scintillating 10th-round TKO over Juan Carlos Candelo in an
IBF elimination bout Jan. 3,
2004, on
SHOWTIME. Since suffering his lone defeat on Nov. 20, 1999, the pride of
Palm Beach is on a 12-
out
unbeaten streak (11-0-1). Ouma recorded a 10-round unanimous decision over
Phillips in a memorable
slugfest
on Sept. 7, 2001. Possessing the faster hands, Ouma rattled his opponent
on several occasions,
got credit
for a knockdown in the ninth and won the hard-fought slugfest by the
scores 95-94, 96-93 and 97-
3.
Phillips (38-10-1, 20 KOs), of Troy, N.Y., saw his seven-bout winning
streak and brief reign as champion
come to an
end when he fell to Ouma for the second consecutive time by unanimous
decision. Phillips
registered
a sixth-round TKO over late substitute and IBF No. 15 contender, Carlos
Bojorquez, to capture
the vacant
IBF junior middleweight title June 5, 2004, on SHOWTIME. The hard-working
Phillips captured the
WBO
154-pound title by scoring a seventh-round TKO over Lupe Aquino on
Oct. 30, 1993, and made three
successful
defenses. A seasoned boxer-puncher, who has been victorious in 12 out of
his past 14 starts,
Phillips
owns victories over former world champions Julian Jackson,
Gianfranco Rosi, Aquino and Julio
Cesar
Vasquez.
Lacy
(17-0, 14 KOs), of St. Petersburg, Fla., shook off a sluggish start to
stop Vanderpool at 1:37 of the
eighth
round and become the first 2000 U.S. Olympian to win a pro title. The
aggressor from the outset, Lacy
took the
wind out of his opponent's sails by landing a punishing uppercut to the
jaw in the fourth round. At
the time
of the stoppage, Lacy, in his 10th SHOWTIME appearance, was ahead 67-66
(twice) and 68-65 on
the
scorecards. In his most recent outing on June 5, 2004, Lacy retained his
World Boxing Council (WBC)
Continental Americas/North American Boxing Association (NABA) and United
States Boxing Association
(USBA)
super middleweight crowns when his IBF elimination bout on SHOWTIME
against fellow unbeaten
IBF/World
Boxing Association (WBA) International titleholder Vitali Tsypko
ended in a no-decision after the
second
round.
Vanderpool (35-3, 23 KOs), of Kitchener, Canada, saw his seven-bout
winning streak come to an abrupt halt
despite
the vociferous support from the majority of the crowd and the appearance
of fellow countryman,
Wayne
Gretzky. Vanderpool captured the North American Boxing Organization (NABO)
middleweight crown
on Sept.
12, 1997, in his 23rd bout and made one successful defense. The
well-traveled boxer has fought in
14
different states and four Canadian cities since entering the pro ranks as
a 20-year-old middleweight in
March
1993. In his lone world title appearance, Vanderpool went the distance and
held his own against
longtime
IBF Middleweight Champion Bernard Hopkins before dropping a
12-round unanimous decision on
May 13,
2000, from Indianapolis, Ind.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's Steve Albert and Al Bernstein
called Saturday's action from
ringside
with Jim Gray serving as roving reporter. The executive producer of
the SHOWTIME telecast was
Jay
Larkin, with David Dinkins, Jr. producing and Bob
Dunphy directing.
For
information on upcoming SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING and "ShoBox: The New
Generation"
telecasts,
including complete fighter bios and records, related stories and more,
please go the SHOWTIME
website at
http://www.sho.com/boxing.
- Post-Fight Press Release
issued by Showtime (with a little editing from us - highlights, etc...)
(10/5/04)
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