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

October
2, 2004
Caesars
Palace
Las
Vegas, Nevada
9
PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
Heavyweight
Bout - 10 Rds
Wladimir Klitschko (42-3,
39 KOs)
vs. DaVarryl Williamson (20-2,
17 KOs)
IBF Junior Middleweight
Title Bout - 12 Rds
Champion
Verno Phillips (38-9-1,
20 KOs)
vs. Kassim Ouma (19-1-1,
13 KOs)
IBF Super Middleweight
Title Bout (vacant) - 12 Rds
Syd
Vanderpool (35-2,
23 KOs) vs.
Jeff Lacy (16-0,
13 KOs)
______________________________________________
NEW
YORK (Sept. 10, 2004) - Showtime’s spectacular tripleheader on Saturday,
October 2, will be the first
boxing
event to take place in the new outdoor Amphitheatre at Caesars Palace,
recalling an era of legendary
nights
of boxing including Sugar Ray Leonard vs. Thomas Hearns, Larry
Holmes vs. Gerry Cooney,
Muhammad
Ali vs. Larry Holmes and Leonard vs. Marvelous Marvin
Hagler at the famed Las Vegas
resort.
It was
also the scene of the Hagler vs. John “The Beast” Mugabi,
Showtime’s first boxing event on
March
10, 1986.
The telecast will begin at 9PM ET/PT.
In the main event, former World Boxing Organization (WBO) heavyweight
champion and current WBO No. 6
contender,
Klitschko (42-3, 39 KOs), will make his SHOWTIME debut and first start
since losing to Lamon
Brewster,
when he takes on North American Boxing Federation (NABF) Heavyweight
Champion DaVarryl
Williamson
(20-2, 17 KOs) in a 10-round heavyweight battle.
Prior to Klitschko-Williamson, SHOWTIME will feature a pair of world
championship battles. In the evening’s
second
televised bout, International Boxing Federation (IBF) Junior Middleweight
Champion Verno Phillips
(38-9-1,
20 KOs) will make his initial title defense in a rematch against IBF No. 1
contender Kassim Ouma
(19-1-1,
13 KOs). Opening the SHOWTIME tripleheader will be IBF No. 1 contender Syd
Vanderpool (35-2,
23
KOs) taking on IBF No. 4 contender Jeff Lacy (16-0, 13 KOs) for the
vacant IBF super middleweight belt.
Gary
Shaw Productions, LLC, in association with Caesars Palace will present the
event.
Tickets
for reserved seats are priced from $50 to $325, and are on sale now at the
Caesars Palace Box
Office,
online through ticketmaster.com and at all Ticketmaster outlets. To order
tickets by phone, call (702)
474-4000.
Price excludes tax and a handling fee.
Klitschko,
of Kiev, Ukraine, avenged his older brother, Vitali’s, loss to Chris
Byrd to capture the WBO
heavyweight
crown on Oct. 14, 2000. The 1996 Olympic Gold Medallist held the title for
more than 28
months
and made five successful defenses before being dethroned by Corrie
Sanders on March 8, 2003.
The
6-foot-6-inch Klitschko has knocked out two out of his past three
opponents. On Aug. 30, 2003,
Klitschko
scored an opening-round KO over Fabio Moli.
Less
than four months later on Dec. 20, 2003, the former world champion stopped
Danell Nicholson in the
fourth
round. In his last outing, Klitschko lost the vacant WBO crown to Brewster
via fifth-round TKO despite
dominating
for much of the April 10, 2004, contest.
Williamson,
of Washington, D.C., 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.
The
well-educated father of two, who has a master’s degree in administrative
services, has knocked out more
than
77 percent of his opponents, including six in the opening round.
Prior
to turning pro at age 31 in 2000, Williamson was a three-time United
States national champion and
compiled
a 120-17-11 amateur record with 103 knockouts. Nicknamed “Touch of
Sleep,” the hard-hitting
heavyweight
will make his seventh Las Vegas appearance.
Phillips, of Troy, N.Y., 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. Since falling
short
to Ouma on Sept. 7, 2001, Phillips has won seven consecutive bouts. Game
throughout, Phillips
landed
the more explosive punches, including many hard left hooks and clubbing
right hands that kept Ouma
honest.
However, a 14-month layoff took its toll, and Phillips tired late.
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 13 starts, Phillips owns victories over former world
champions Julian
Jackson,
Gianfranco Rosi, Aquino and Julio Cesar Vasquez.
Ouma,
of Palm Beach, Fla., is coming off of a scintillating 10th-round TKO over Juan
Carlos Candelo in an
IBF
elimination bout Jan. 3, 2004, on SHOWTIME. A promising young star, Ouma
is on an 11-bout unbeaten
streak
(10-0-1) since suffering his lone defeat on Nov. 20, 1999. Ouma recorded a
10-round unanimous
decision
over Phillips in a memorable slugfest in which neither fighter conceded an
inch from start to finish.
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
97-93.
The
pride of Palm Beach won the vacant USBA junior middleweight crown and
became the IBF’s top
154-pound
contender by winning a 12-round split decision over Angel Hernandez on
May 30, 2003. Ouma
previously
won the vacant USBA junior middleweight crown on May 10, 2002, by scoring
an eighth-round
TKO
over Jason Papillion. Ouma successfully defended the USBA title
with an 11th-round TKO over
Darrell
Woods on Oct. 4, 2002. However, the outcome was changed to a no
decision and Ouma was
stripped
of the title when he failed a post-fight test. After reclaiming the USBA
crown with the victory over
Hernandez,
Ouma stopped Bojorquez in the eighth round on Aug. 22, 2003.
Lacy,
of St. Petersburg, Fla., will attempt to become the first 2000 United
States Olympian to capture a
world
championship when he makes his 10th SHOWTIME appearance. 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.
On
Dec. 13, 2003, Lacy retained his WBC/CA/USBA/NABA belts with an
eighth-round TKO over NABF light
heavyweight
champion Donnell Wiggins Dec. 13, 2003, on SHOWTIME. The
flourishing Floridian retained
his
WBC/CA and USBA titles, and added the vacant NABA super middleweight crown
with a 12-round
decision
over Richard Grant on July 15, 2003. Prior to turning pro, Lacy
went 209-12 in the amateurs, won
numerous
competitions and made it to the second round of the 2000 Olympics.
Vanderpool,
of Kitchener, Canada, captured the North American Boxing Organization (NABO)
middleweight
crown
on Sept. 12, 1997, in his 23rd bout and made one successful defense.
Currently riding a seven-bout
winning
streak, 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. After defeating his next six opponents, Vanderpool
registered a 12-round unanimous
decision
over Tito Mendoza in an IBF super middleweight elimination bout on
April 17, 2004, from Tampa,
Fla.
Located
near the mid-Strip corner of Las Vegas Boulevard and Flamingo Road, the
new Caesars Palace
Amphitheatre
is the centerpiece of a five-acre, open-air Roman Plaza, which opened July
1, 2004. Situated in
front
of the resort, the arena will be configured with more than 4,000 seats for
the tripleheader, offering an
incomparable
broadcast and event location, surrounded by the famed lights of the resort
city.
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).
(9/21/04)
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