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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Corrales vs. Castillo
Marquez
vs. Polo

May 7, 2005
Mandalay
Bay Resort & Casino
Las
Vegas, Nevada
*9
PM ET/PT
Lightweight Unification Title Bout (12 Rds)
Diego
"Chico'' Corrales (39-2, 32 KOs) vs. Jose Luis Castillo
(52-6-1, 46 KOs)
IBF/WBA
Featherweight Title Bout (12 Rds)
Champ
Juan
Manuel Marquez (43-2-1, 33 KOs) vs.
Victor Polo (34-4-3, 24 KOs)
__________________________________________
Showtime Championship
Boxing Presents Castillo-Corrales Lightweight Title Unification Bout,
Marquez-Polo
IBF/WBA Featherweight Championship
NEW YORK - In a highly
anticipated matchup, the two best 135-pound boxers in the world will
square off
when
two-time World Boxing Council (WBC) Lightweight Champion Jose Luis
Castillo takes on World
Boxing
Organization (WBO) Champion Diego "Chico'' Corrales
in a world title unification bout Saturday,
May 7,
2005, on SHOWTIME at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the West Coast).
In the
excellent SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING co-feature, International Boxing
Federation/World
Boxing
Association (IBF/WBA) Featherweight Champion Juan Manuel Marquez
will defend his titles
against
WBA No. 5 contender, Victor Polo. The world championship
doubleheader at Mandalay Bay Resort
& Casino
in Las Vegas will be co-promoted by Top Rank, Inc., Gary Shaw Productions,
LLC, and Banner
Promotions.
"Fights
like this do not come about often or easily," said Jay Larkin,
Senior Vice President, Showtime
Sports &
Events Programming. "Castillo and Corrales are without a doubt the two
best lightweights in the
world and
both have earned their reputations by fighting the best in the division.
This fight has 'Fight of the
Year'
promise and is the last step in deciding who really is number one in the
world."
Castillo
(52-6-1, 46 KOs), of Sonora, Mexico, will make the third title defense in
his second stint as WBC
lightweight champion. In his last start, the hard-hitting Mexican recorded
his sixth consecutive win with an
impressive
10th-round TKO over former IBF 135-pound champion Julio Diaz March
5 on SHOWTIME,
completing
an impressive hat trick of consecutive wins over Joel Casamayor and
Juan Lazcano.
"I am very
excited that my wait is over and that I finally get a shot at Corrales,"
said Castillo, who had hoped
to face
Corrales last December and in March. "He is a very strong fighter, but he
stands right in front of you.
Corrales
cannot take a punch. It will be a knockout fight, and I will win.
Castillo
dominated the outclassed Diaz, who went down twice in the 10th round. The
defending champion
decked the
game youngster the first time with a left hook at the 1:40 mark. Shortly
after a left-right
combination put Diaz down again, the bout was stopped at 2:23. Castillo
was ahead by the scores 88-83 on
each of
the scorecards going into the 10th.
In a much
tougher fight, Castillo rallied to retain his belt with a 12-round split
decision over former 130-pound
world
champion Joel Casamayor Dec. 4, 2004, on SHOWTIME. In a classic puncher
versus boxer matchup
that had
the fans on their feet cheering wildly during the final nine minutes,
Castillo took the last three rounds
on the
scorecards to triumph 117-111, 116-112 and 113-115.
Castillo won the WBC 135-pound belt the first time with a 12-round
majority decision over Steve Johnston
on June
17, 2000. Following three successful defenses, he lost the title and a
subsequent rematch to
unbeaten
Floyd Mayweather in April and December of 2002. Castillo regained the
WBC belt with a 12-
round
unanimous decision over Juan Lazcano on June 5, 2004.
Corrales
(39-2, 32 KOs), of Sacramento, Calif., will make his first appearance
since he captured the WBO
135-pound
crown on Aug. 7, 2004, with a 10th-round TKO over defending champion
Acelino Freitas on
SHOWTIME.
Corrales spotted the previously undefeated Freitas a huge early lead
before rallying to register
three
knockdowns and win his third world title belt.
The
California resident, who entered the ring against Freitas as the WBO
130-pound titleholder, scored one
knockdown
in the eighth, ninth and 10th rounds. Entering the 10th, Corrales had
edged in front on two of the
three
scorecards, 85-83 and 85-84, but was behind, 83-85, on the other.
"I am not
worried about the layoff," Corrales said. "I give Castillo a lot of
respect. He is one of the best
fighters
in boxing and at the top of the game. But I am on a mission to prove that
I am the best lightweight in
the world.
I do not care how he chooses to fight me. I am going to do whatever I want
to him.
The lanky
Corrales won the vacant WBO 130-pound belt with a 12-round split decision
over Casamayor
March 6,
2004, on SHOWTIME. Corrales outpointed his opponent 115-112 twice and
113-114. In their initial
meeting on
Oct. 4, 2003, Casamayor recorded a disputed sixth-round TKO.
Corrales
won his first world title with a seventh-round TKO over defending IBF
130-pound champion Robert
Garcia
Oct. 23, 1999, on SHOWTIME. Corrales made three successful defenses
before losing to fellow
unbeaten
and then-WBC titleholder, Mayweather, on Jan. 20, 2001.
Marquez (43-2-1, 33 KOs), of Mexico City, Mexico, captured the IBF
126-pound crown with a seventh-round
TKO over
Manuel Medina on Feb. 1, 2003. He added the IBF belt nine months
later by recording a seventh-
round
technical decision over Derrick Gainer. Marquez retained his titles
in his last start when he took a
12-round
decision over Orlando Salido on Sept. 18, 2004.
Unbeaten
in his last 15 starts (14-0-1), Marquez rallied from three first-round
knockdowns and a broken nose
to earn a
disputed draw against Manny Pacquiao on May 8, 2004. At the end of
the epic battle, one judge
scored it
for Marquez (115-110), one had it for Pacquiao (115-110) and the other had
it 113-apiece.
"I was
disoriented after the first round, but you do not win the fight in one
round. He did win that round big,
but I
thought I controlled the rest of the fight. "The most important thing was
avoiding his left hand. After I did
that, I
was able to counterpunch him. I feel good because I thought I won."
For years,
Marquez had been known as the world's most talented fighter without a
title. When he finally got
his shot,
however, he lost a 12-round decision to then-WBA 126-pound champion,
Freddie Norwood, on
Sept. 11,
1999. Until getting the match against Medina, the popular boxer-puncher
was avoided by the
division's
elite. Norwood refused a rematch and Naseem Hamed ducked him
despite Marquez being his
mandatory
contender. Marco Antonio Barrera never considered him.
"I knew
that as long as I kept winning the opportunity would come sooner or
later," said Marquez, who will
make his
SHOWTIME debut. I was ready for my second chance when it came."
Polo
(34-4-3, 24 KOs), of Bolivar, Colombia, will make his first SHOWTIME
appearance since losing a
controversial 12-round split decision to then-WBO featherweight champion,
Julio Pablo Chacon on Jan. 19,
2002. Polo
dropped Chacon late in the second and cut him above his nose and right
eye. The defending
titleholder got credit for a disputed knockdown in the ninth, however, and
that was the difference in a tight
fight
scored 114-113 twice and 113-114.
The rangy,
aggressive southpaw prefers to press forward and maintain a fast pace.
Polo has a wealth of
experience
in a career that has seen him challenge unsuccessfully (0-3-1) for
different versions of the world
featherweight title on four occasions.
"I never
get the benefit of the doubt," Polo said. "I should have been a world
champion years ago. I
appreciate
Marquez giving me this opportunity. Most of the champions are afraid of
me.''
In his
last outing, Polo boxed to a 12-round draw against WBO featherweight
champion Scott Harrison on
Jan. 28,
2005, in Glasgow, Scotland. As usual, Polo entered the ring as the
underdog, but he gave the local
favorite a
huge scare. The judges scored it 115-113 for Polo, 116-113 for Harrison
and 114-114.
Polo's
previous attempts at world titles came against then-WBA champion Gainer on
Feb. 24, 2001, and
then-IBF
titleholder Medina on April 16, 1999. Polo dropped a split 12-round
decision to Gainer and lost on a
ninth-round technical decision to Medina.
A
perennial contender who has fought at or around 126 pounds during his
16-year career, Polo has won
several
minor titles, including the North American Boxing Association (NABA), the
IBF International, the IBF
and WBA
Latin Americas and FECARBOX.
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 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.
*
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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(3/17/05)
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