Showtime Championship Boxing

Spinks vs. Judah Rematch

 

February 5, 2005

 Savvis Center - 9 PM ET/PT*

 St. Louis, Missouri

 

 

Undisputed Welterweight Title Bout (12 Rds)

Champ Cory The Next GenerationSpinks (34-2, 11 KOs) vs.  ZabSuper Judah (32-2, 1 NC, 23 KOs)

 

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NEW YORK - Pulling no punches, SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING will come out with both fists

blazing on Feb. 5, 2005, when its first telecast of the year will feature a grudge rematch between World

Boxing Association/World Boxing Council/International Boxing Federation (WBA/WBC/IBF) Welterweight

Champion Cory Spinks and former two-time world champion ZabSuperJudah. SHOWTIME will televise

the undisputed welterweight world championship at 9 p.m. ET/PT.* Don King Productions will present the

event, which will take place at the Savvis Center in St. Louis. The co-feature will be announced in the near

future.

Spinks (34-2, 11 KOs), of St. Louis, won the initial battle of world-class southpaws and successfully

defended the undisputed welterweight title by registering a 12-round unanimous decision on April 10, 2004, in

Las Vegas. In one of the most dramatic fights of 2004, which included numerous momentum changes, the

son of Leon and nephew of Michael Spinks scored a knockdown with a short left hand in the 11th, survived

a late knockdown in the 12th and won by the scores 116-111 and 114-112 twice. Spinks captured the

undisputed crown in a shocking 12-round majority decision over then-WBA/WBC champion Ricardo

Mayorga on Dec. 13, 2003.

 

“I give Judah credit,” said Spinks, who came out aggressively and controlled the action during the initial

rounds. “He is a great fighter. I was just a little better the first time. I boxed beautifully. Some people did not

think I could get mean in there but I did. As for me going down, I got a little relaxed. In the last round, I

should have played it cool and just boxed and stayed away, but I got a little careless and he threw a good

shot.”

 

“I learned a lot from that fight and will not make the same mistake in the rematch. I had a big lead and

almost let it get away. I am the best 147-pound boxer in the world and look forward to proving it again against

Judah. Zab likes to talk and will always win a war of words, but the ring is my forum and where I speak

loudest. After I beat him again, maybe I will get the credit I deserve.’’

 

In his last start, Spinks successfully defended his belts with a lopsided 12-round unanimous decision over

former WBC champion and No. 1 contender Miguel Angel Gonzalez Sept. 4, 2004, on SHOWTIME from

Las Vegas. Utilizing his speed, movement and boxing ability to dictate the pace throughout, Spinks earned

the easy victory by the scores 118-109 on all three judges’ scorecards.

 

Spinks, who upset Mayorga by the scores 117-110, 114-112 and 114-114, won the IBF welterweight title in

his second attempt against Michele Piccirillo by garnering a 12-round unanimous decision on March 22,

2003, in Campione D’Italia, Italy. Most felt Spinks got robbed in their first bout, which ended in a disputed

draw.

 

Judah (32-2, 1 NC, 23 KOs), of Brooklyn, N.Y., began to out-quick Spinks and closed the gap in the middle

rounds of their initial bout. He landed a punishing right hand and dropped the welterweight champion with

less than 30 seconds remaining in the 12th round. Spinks was hurt and took a mandatory eight-count.

Judah, who made his 147-pound debut, hurt Spinks again, but the champion managed to survive the rest of

the round.

 

“I did not fight my fight and know I could have done more, especially in the early rounds,” said Judah, who

entered the ring as a slight favorite. “But I still thought I did enough. Spinks did not surprise me at all. I went

down, but it was a ‘B.S.’ knockdown.”

 

“When I dropped Spinks with a beautiful shot, I let him off the hook. I had him hurt and there was still time to

finish him, but instead of going forward I stayed back and stopped. But I have no complaints. I give credit to

Spinks for giving me another chance. Most fighters would not. He is a good fighter, but I will show him who

the real champ is.’’

 

Judah has won two straight since the setback to Spinks. In his last outing, he retained his WBO

Intercontinental welterweight crown with a first-round TKO over Wayne Martell on Oct. 2, 2004, in New

York. He matted Martell five times before the one-sided affair was halted at 2:08. On May 15, 2004, just 35

days after losing to Spinks, Judah won the WBO Intercontinental belt by scoring a 12-round split decision

over Rafael Pineda. He floored Pineda in the seventh en route to winning by the scores 115-112, 114-113

and 112-115.

 

Judah, who won the WBO junior welterweight crown with a 12-round split decision over DeMarcusChop

ChopCorley on July 12, 2003, won the vacant IBF crown with a fourth-round knockout over Jan Bergman

on Feb. 12, 2000. After five successful defenses, he suffered his first defeat and lost his IBF title when

Kostya Tszyu captured the undisputed 140-pound crown with a second-round TKO on Nov. 3, 2001, on

SHOWTIME.

 

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.

 

In 2005, SHOWTIME will continue its fan-friendly scheduling strategy of providing viewers and boxing fans

with the best boxing has to offer on the first Saturday of every month. 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. 

 

* Taped Delayed on the West Coast

 

- Press Release issued by Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)

 

 

  card subject to change

 

 

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(1/9/05)