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Showtime
Championship Boxing Recap
Brewster
vs. Meehan
Spinks
vs. Gonzalez

September
4, 2004
Mandalay
Bay Resort & Casino
Las
Vegas, Nevada
LAS VEGAS (Sept. 5, 2004) – “Relentless” Lamon Brewster won
the 12th and final round on two of the
three
judges’ scorecards to eke out an extremely close 12-round split decision
over Kali “Checkmate’’
Meehan
and retain his World Boxing Organization (WBO) heavyweight title Saturday
on SHOWTIME. If
Brewster
does not win the last round, Meehan gets the upset victory and becomes the
first New
Zealand-born
boxer to capture the heavyweight crown in 107 years. There were no
knockdowns.
In
the SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING co-feature from Mandalay Bay Resort &
Casino, Undisputed
Welterweight
Champion Cory (Spinks) retained his International Boxing
Federation/World Boxing
Association/World
Boxing Council (IBF/WBA/WBC) titles with a lopsided 12-round unanimous
decision over
former
WBC champion and current No. 1 contender, Miguel Angel Gonzalez.
Don King Productions
presented
the world championship doubleheader, which aired at 10 p.m. ET/PT (delayed
on West Coast).
Brewster
(30-2, 26 KOs), of Los Angeles, by way of Indianapolis, got the nod by the
scores of 115-113,
114-113
and 113-114. Brewster, who appeared to be out on his feet in the eighth
round, won the last four
rounds
on one of the scorecards, and the last three on another. He was making the
first defense of the WBO
title
he won with a stunning fifth-round TKO over favored Wladimir Klitschko
in Las Vegas on April 10, 2004.
The
hard-hitting Brewster had a five-fight knockout winning streak end.
Meehan
(29-2, 23 KOs), of Wyongah, Australia, by way of Auckland, New Zealand,
nearly became the first
Kiwi
to hold a world heavyweight title in 107 years – the last was New
Zealand boxing legend Bob Ruby
Fitzsimmons,
who captured the heavyweight crown by defeating James J. Corbett in
1897. Meehan had a
six-fight
winning streak end, but many feel he deserved a better fate.
Spinks
(33-2, 11 KOs) of St. Louis, earned the victory by the scores of 118-109
on all three judges’
scorecards.
Spinks, who was coming off 12-round decision victory over former world
junior welterweight
champion
Zab Judah on April 10, 2004, utilized his speed, movement and
boxing ability to dictate the pace
throughout.
The son of Leon and nephew of Michael Spinks shocked the boxing
world by upsetting
then-World
Boxing Association (WBA) and WBC champion Ricardo “El Matador”
Mayorga via split
decision
on Dec. 13, 2003. Spinks won the International Boxing Federation (IBF)
welterweight title in his
second
attempt against Michele Piccirillo by registering a 12-round
unanimous decision on March 22,
2003.
Gonzalez
(50-4-1, 40 KOs), of Mexico City, gave his best and never quit trying to
come forward. But, at 32,
the
proud, former WBC lightweight titleholder was no match for the younger,
naturally bigger Spinks.
Gonzalez,
who has fought some of the best in the world in his career, including Oscar
De La Hoya, Julio
Cesar
Chavez and Kostya Tszyu, had a five-fight winning streak
snapped.
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.
The
next SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecast is Saturday, Oct. 2. Headlining
the tripleheader is
Wladimir
Klitschko. The younger brother of WBC Heavyweight Champion Vitali
Klitschko, Wladimir (42-3,
39
KOs) will make his SHOWTIME debut and first start since suffering a
shocking upset loss to Brewster
when
he faces streaking, dangerous North American Boxing Federation (NABF)
Heavyweight Champion
DaVarryl
Williamson (20-2, 17 KOs) in a 10-round bout.
There
will also be two potentially explosive world title bouts on Oct. 2. Verno
Phillips (38-9-1, 20 KOs)
defends
his IBF junior middleweight crown against No. 1 IBF contender Kassim
Ouma (19-1-1, 13 KOs) in a
highly
anticipated rematch, and undefeated IBF No. 4 contender Jeff Lacy
(16-0, 13 KOs) gets his first shot
at
a world title and tries to become the first 2000 United States Olympian to
capture a world title when he
faces
IBF No. 1 contender Syd Vanderpool (35-2, 23 KOs) for the vacant
IBF super middleweight belt
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Post-Fight Release issued by Showtime (with a little editing from us,
color, highlights, etc...)
(9/9/04)
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