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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Three Title Bouts

December 4, 2004
Mandalay
Bay Resort & Casino
Las
Vegas, Nevada
9
PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
WBC
Lightweight Title Bout
Champion
Jose Luis Castillo (50-6-1, 45 KOs) vs. Joel Casamayor
(31-2, 19 KOs)
IBF Super Middleweight
Title Bout
Champion
Jeff Lacy (17-0, 14 KOs) vs. Omar Sheika (26-6, 17 KOs)
NABF Heavyweight Title
Bout (vacant)
Jeremy
Williams (41-4-1, 36 KOs) vs. Samuel Peter (20-0, 17 KOs)
______________________________________________
NEW YORK (Oct. 25, 2004) - Six
fighters with a combined 185 professional boxing victories and 148
knockouts
will fight for three title belts on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING Saturday,
Dec. 4, at 9
p.m.
ET/PT* from Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas. In the main event,
former World Boxing
Association (WBA) Super Featherweight Champion Joel Casamayor will
attempt to win his second world
title when
he steps up in weight to challenge two-time World Boxing Council (WBC)
Lightweight Champion
Jose
Luis Castillo.
In the
evening's second televised bout, International Boxing Federation (IBF)
Super Middleweight Champion
Jeff
Lacy (17-0, 14 KOs) will make his initial title defense against IBF
No. 14 contender Omar Sheika (26-
6, 17
KOs). Opening the SHOWTIME tripleheader will be undefeated heavyweight
contender Samuel Peter
(20-0, 17
KOs) taking on heavyweight contender Jeremy Williams (41-4-1, 36
KOs) for the vacant North
American
Boxing Federation (NABF) heavyweight title. Top Rank, Inc. in association
with Gary Shaw
Productions, LLC and Cedric Kushner Promotions, LTD with Team Freedom and
Duva Boxing will present
the event.
Castillo
(50-6-1, 45 KOs), of Sonora, Mexico, captured the WBC lightweight crown
for the second time by
tallying a
12-round unanimous decision over Juan Lazcano on June 5, 2004, in
Las Vegas. The judges
scored the
contest 117-111, 116-112 and 115-113. Castillo initially won the WBC
135-pound world
championship with a 12-round majority decision over Steve Johnston
on June 17, 2000. Following three
successful
defenses, Castillo lost the title and a subsequent rematch to Floyd
Mayweather in April and
December
of 2002.
After
turning pro at age 16 in May 1990, Castillo knocked out his initial 14
opponents and won three pro titles
before
earning the WBC world crown. The 15-year veteran won the Mexican state
featherweight (Oct. 2,
1992),
Pacific 130-pound (Aug. 15, 1996) and Mexican featherweight (July 4, 1997)
championships during
the early
part of his career.
Born in
Guantanamo, Cuba, Casamayor (31-2, 19 KOs) was perhaps the most prolific
amateur boxer in
history
(380-30). He won a gold medal as a bantamweight at the 1992 Olympic Games
and was a prohibitive
favorite
to repeat in 1996. Prior to the opening ceremonies, however, he walked
away from the Cuban
compound
in Guadalajara, Mexico, and left a five-year-old daughter, a girlfriend
and his parents in
Guantanamo.
"I never
got to say goodbye to anyone," Casamayor said. "But I wanted to be free. I
have experienced a lot of
success in
boxing, but the greatest feeling in my life was coming to America."
One reason
Casamayor defected was that he felt slighted by Fidel Castro, who
presented him with a bicycle
as his
reward for bringing home the gold. The boxer sold the bicycle for a pig to
feed his family.
Still, Casamayor agonized over what would be the most difficult decision
of his life - to leave or stay.
"When I
had doubts (in Guadalajara), I thought of the pressure they put on me to
make 119 pounds," the
sensational southpaw said. "It was very difficult to make that weight, but
they threatened me. 'If you do not
make
weight, we will send you back to Cuba.' That stayed in my head. That made
me strong.
"People
knew I was supposed to win a gold medal in '96. But, I made a decision.
You cannot eat off of gold
medals. I
missed my daughter so much. I did not want to leave her, but I had to."
So, one
day, Casamayor told his chaperone that he was going to walk down the
street to buy a bottle of
water and
would be right back. "He is still waiting for me, I think," Casamayor
cracked.
The cool
and classy southpaw boxer-puncher has had few missteps since turning pro
and remains at the
peak of
his game. Both his losses came on disputed 12-round split decisions in
world title fights.
"I know I
won those two fights," said Casamayor, who will make his second start
since getting narrowly
outpointed
by Diego Corrales in a rematch for the WBO 130-pound title March 6,
2004, on SHOWTIME.
Casamayor,
who fights out of Luis DeCubas' Miami-based Team Freedom boxing stable,
won the first
meeting
when the brawl was stopped at the end of the sixth round with Corrales
bleeding badly from the
mouth. He
spotted Corrales a big early lead in their return encounter, but rallied
strongly to floor Corrales in
the 10th.
It was too little, too late, however, as he fell short by the scores
114-113 and 112-115 twice.
During
their first bout on Oct. 3, 2003, Casamayor twice knocked Corrales down
and hit the canvas once in a
drama-filled slugfest that drew cheers when the boxers went at it and
"boos" when it was stopped. Despite
losing a
point for a foul, Casamayor was ahead on each of the judges' scorecards at
the finish.
Casamayor
won the WBA interim 130-pound crown with an easy decision over Antonio
Hernandez on June
19, 1999.
In his 21st start, he became the first U.S.-based Cuban defector to
capture a world title when he
won the
WBA belt with a devastating fifth-round TKO over Jongkwon Baek on
May 21, 2000. He made four
successful
defenses before the controversial points loss to Freitas Jan. 12, 2002, on
SHOWTIME.
In his last outing on July 3, 2004, the former world champion registered a
10-round unanimous decision over
former
North American Boxing Organization (NABO) featherweight titleholder
Daniel Seda on SHOWTIME.
Lacy, of
Tampa, Fla. 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 Oct.
2, 2004, on SHOWTIME in
Las Vegas.
Lacy 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 leading 67-66 (twice) and 68-65 on the
scorecards.
In his
previous outing on June 5, 2004, Lacy retained his 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/WBA International
titleholder Vitali Tsypko
ended in a
no-decision after the second round.
Sheika, of Patterson, N.J. accomplished something Roy Jones Jr.
could not: he beat Glen Johnson on
June 2,
2000, in Philadelphia. Sheika fought at a more controlled pace,
selectively distributing his bombs
with
prudence over the long haul. Finally getting inside Johnson's jab in the
fourth round, Sheika began to
hammer
away with right uppercuts on the inside. As Johnson stepped in to follow
up, Sheika suddenly
flashed
his powerful right to the chin and floored Johnson. After 10 rounds,
Sheika took the decision by the
scores
96-93 (twice) and 95-95.
Sheika is
on a three fight win streak, including a 10-round decision over James
Butler on Aug. 10, 2004, in
Newark,
N.J.
Williams
(41-4-1, 36 KOs), of Fort Dodge, Iowa, scored an impressive eighth-round
TKO over Attila "The
Hun''
Levin Thursday on SHOWTIME April 15, 2004. Williams used his
experience and ring savvy to dictate
the pace
and dominate Levin, who was cut around both eyes and unable to see clearly
when the ring
physician
stopped the fight at 2:48 of the eighth round. Williams, who was cut
around the left eye, was
ahead by
the scores 69-63 and 68-64 twice after seven completed rounds.
The
veteran fighter captured the WBC Continental Americas heavyweight crown
with a 12th-round TKO over
Garing
Lane on Dec. 7, 1993. On March 19, 1996, Williams recorded the fastest
knockout in California
history
when he floored Arthur "Stormy" Weathers at 0:10 of the first
round. Prior to turning pro at age 20
on Oct.
14, 1992, Williams won countless amateur titles, defeated all but four of
his 172 opponents and
made it to
the finals of the 1992 Olympic trials as a light heavyweight.
Peter, of
Akwaibom, Nigeria, made his SHOWTIME debut as the main event on "ShoBox:
The New
Generation," Aug. 5, 2004, from Hollywood, Fla. In front of a sold-out
crowd, Peter put on a boxing clinic and
bloodied
Jovo Pudar's nose en route to registering a 10-round unanimous
decision.
The young Nigerian made his pro debut at age 20 on Feb. 6, 2001, in Almaty,
Kazakhstan, and scored a
first-round knockout over Gueorgui Christov. During his initial
year punching for pay, Peter went 7-0 with
seven
knockouts, including six KOs within the opening stanza.
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).
(11/5/04)
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