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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Lamont Peterson vs.
Matthew Strode
Anthony Peterson vs.
Jermaine White

April 28, 2006
4 Bears Casino & Lodge
New Town, North Dakota
11:00 PM ET/PT
Line-up:
Jr. Welterweight Bout
Lamont Peterson (16-0,
7 KOs) vs. "Mayhem'' Matthew Strode (20-1, 9 KOs)
Jr. Welterweight Bout
Anthony Peterson (16-0,
13 KOs) vs. Jermaine "Two Sweet" White (12-0, 7 KOs)
__________________________________
"Shobox:
The New Generation" To feature
Undefeated Peterson Brothers In Tough Junior Welterweight Bouts
NEW YORK - Brothers Lamont
and Anthony Peterson of Washington, D.C., grew up homeless, but
they
feel right at home in the
ring. The up-and-coming, unbeaten junior welterweights are a combined 32-0
with
20 knockouts.
Lamont, who at 22 is 14 months
older than Anthony, is 16-0 with seven KOs. Anthony is 16-0 with 13 KOs.
In their SHOWTIME debuts, the
talented three-year pros will co-headline an excellent fight card Friday,
April
28, 2006, on "ShoBox: The New
Generation'' (11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the west coast). The bouts will
represent the 11th time that
the Petersons have appeared on the same fight card.
Both Petersons have been
matched tough. Lamont will face Matthew Strode (20-1, 9 KOs) of
Greensboro,
N.C. by way of Philadelphia,
in a 10-round bout. Anthony will meet Jermaine White (12-0, 7 KOs),
of Gary,
Ind., in an eight rounder. The
card will originate from the 4 Bears Casino & Lodge in New Town, North
Dakota, and will be promoted
by Brian Young's Prizefight Boxing.
Two of 12 children, Lamont and
Anthony are well-acquainted with the trials and tribulations of inner-city
strife.
By the age of 10, the brothers
were left to fend for themselves on the mean streets of D.C. With their
biological father in prison
and their mother battling personal demons, the Petersons spent days
washing
windows of cars at
intersections and nights sleeping in bus stations or breaking into a
basement to find
shelter. For two years, they
bounced between foster homes and lived in cars. Forced to survive on a
day-to-day, meal-to-meal
basis, their youth was effectively stolen.
"We lived in a big house we
owned," Lamont said. "There were seven of us kids living with my mother
and
father. Then my father started
getting into drugs. He got caught and went to jail. He wound up coming
home
to take the rent money. First
the lights went out, then the water. So, we ended up living in a house
without
lights or water.
"Eventually we got kicked out.
The seven of us had to sleep in the station wagon for two or three days
before
we could get into a shelter
home. After we lived there for two years, we ended up back on the streets.
Some
nights we walked the streets,
some nights we stayed in greyhound stations. We did whatever we could to
survive.''
Fortunately, the brothers now
have a roof over their heads - they share an apartment - and their father
is back
in their life.
Much of the credit for the
Petersons making it through the most turbulent of times and getting to
this point in
their lives and careers goes
to Barry Hunter, a trainer and confidant who met Lamont when he was 10 and
Anthony was eight.
Hunter treated the Petersons
as his own sons. Both blossomed under Hunter's watchful eye and today are
well-spoken, humble, and
joyous young men who also happen to be terrific fighters.
"One look at the Peterson
brothers brings a single word to mind: class," ShoBox analyst Steve
Farhood
said. "Their boxing skills are
superb, and they are technically sound. Lamont is so dominant as a boxer
that he can dig his toes into
the canvas to improve his power without leaving himself vulnerable. All
that is
missing is fight-ending power.
"Being brothers might work
against these guys because the public initially will have trouble
separating them.
Their styles are similar, they
have been fighting on the same cards, and, at most, they are one weight
class
apart.
"That aside, they belong on 'ShoBox'
because any talk of sizzling prospects has to include the Peterson
brothers.''
Lamont has been fighting for
nearly half of his life.
"I used to fight in the
streets a lot." Lamont said. "My brother-in-law took me to the gym when I
was 10 or 11
years old after my brother and
I got out of foster care. I wanted to start boxing when I was eight, but
we went
into foster care for two
years. They did not let us box there."
Both Lamont and Anthony, who
are co-managed by Shelly Finkel and Brian Young, made it to
the finals
at the 2004 United States
Olympic Trials before losing to the eventual U.S. representatives at 132
and 141
pounds. In a classy move,
Lamont had elected to vacate his spot at 132 and move up to 141, freeing
up a
slot for his younger brother
on the Olympic team.
Lamont, the nation's top
amateur boxer heading into the Trials, lost a disputed decision to Rock
Allen. A
five-time national Golden
Gloves champion who compiled a 168-20 amateur record, Peterson was forced
to
be an alternate.
While the Petersons excelled
in the amateurs, their styles seem more suited for the pro ranks. Behind a
stiff jab and solid body work,
both dole out punishment in a methodical, workman-like fashion.
"When Lamont and Anthony first
came into the gym, I never trained them like a regular junior or amateur,"
Hunter said. "They used to get
into trouble when they were younger fighting in the juniors because they
fought so much like pros."
While a championship remains
the ultimate goal, a higher ideal appears to resonate in each step the
Petersons take.
"We are not in this for the
money'' Anthony insisted, "or even the history books. We are doing it for
the kids
from where we come from.
Because we come from nothing, we can show the kids there is a way out. You
can do it if we can do it.''
The drive to succeed on
multiple levels fuels both fighters. It is this willingness to give back
which may serve
as inspiration when the
Petersons face adversity on the championship level.
"My brother and I always knew
that we should never give up," Lamont said. "No matter how hard it is --
we
went through harder things. So
we will never give up''
The Petersons turned pro on
Sept. 25, 2004, in Memphis. Lamont scored a first-round TKO over
Nicholas
Dean and Anthony
stopped Toris Smith in the second. In his last outing, Lamont
captured the World
Boxing Council United States (WBC/US)
140-pound belt with a 10-round decision over Jose Morena on
Feb. 17, 2006, in Memphis. In
his most recent start, Anthony registered a third-round TKO over Steven
Verdin on Match 11,
2006, in Tunica, Miss.
Strode, who resides in
Greensboro, N.C., will make his first start outside of the Carolinas. A
winner of 10
consecutive bouts, the
23-year-old spent some of his career campaigning as a welterweight.
However,
Strode weighed 137 pounds for
his last start when he scored an eight-round decision over Ruben Galvan
on Jan. 19, 2006, in
Charlotte, N.C.
White, who will make his 2006
debut after fighting six times in '04 and '05, does not think the long
layoff will
affect him.
"I have been doing a lot of
sparring against guys preparing for fights, so they held nothing back,"
White said.
"I am ready to go. I will not
back down from anybody in the junior welterweight division.''
A speedy sort known for
excellent boxing skills, White has won his last two inside of the
distance, including
a third-round TKO over Ike
Ezeji on Nov. 3, 2005, in Hammond, Ind.
"I am an all-around fighter,"
White said. "I do what I have to do to win. Because of my speed, I get on
my
toes and box. I have been
fighting since I was 12 years old. Fighting on "ShoBox'' is a great
opportunity. I
am in top shape. Fight fans
will see all of my talent.''
The telecast represents the
75th in the "ShoBox" series, which debuted on SHOWTIME in July 2001.
"ShoBox" features
up-and-coming prospects determined to make a mark and eventually fight for
a chance
at a world title. A number of
fighters who have appeared on the series have gone on to become world
champions, including Jeff
Lacy, Ricky Hatton, Juan Diaz, Leonard Dorin,
Joan Guzman and Scott
Harrison.
Nick Charles will call
the action from ringside, with Steve Farhood serving as expert analyst.
The executive
producer of the telecast is
Gordon Hall, with Richard Gaughan producing.
For information on "ShoBox:
The New Generation" and SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecasts,
including complete fighter
bios, records, related stories and more, please go the SHOWTIME website at
http://www.sho.com/boxing.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights).
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(4/16/06)
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