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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Travis Walker vs.
George Garcia

April 6, 2007
The Target Center
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Featured Bouts:
IBA Americas Heavyweight Title
Bout (vacant)
Travis Walker (22-0-1,
17 KOs) vs. George Garcia (13-0, 4 KOs)
Heavyweight Bout
Raphael Butler (25-3, 1
ND, 20 KOs) vs. Teke Oruh (13-0-1, 6 KOs)
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Travis Walker To Square Off
Against George Garcia
In Battle Of Unbeaten
Heavyweights
Raphael Butler to Take on
Teke Oruh in Co-Feature
At The Target Center,
Minneapolis, Minn., Friday, April 6, 2007 at 11 p.m. ET/PT
NEW YORK - Fresh off of an
impressive decision over Jason Estrada on "ShoBox: The New
Generation" in
November 2006, the undefeated
Walker (22-0-1, 17 KOs) will make a triumphant return to SHOWTIME when
he faces fellow unbeaten
George "El Torito" Garcia (13-0, 4 KOs) in the 10-round
heavyweight main event
on "ShoBox" Friday, April 6,
2007.
Opening the telecast will be
an eight-round heavyweight battle pitting Raphael Butler (25-3, 1
ND, 20 KOs)
against Teke Oruh
(13-0-1, 6 KOs). Goossen Tutor Promotions will promote the event from The
Target
Center in Minneapolis, Minn.
Both bouts will air on SHOWTIME at 11 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west
coast).
Walker, of Colorado Springs,
Colo. by way of Tallahassee, Fla., is coming off of his most important pro
victory. On Nov. 17, 2006, he
handed longtime amateur nemesis Estrada his first pro loss in an
eight-round
bout on "ShoBox" from San
Jacinto, Calif. Although the bout went into the books as a majority
decision,
many felt Walker had done
enough to win unanimously.
"I have seen myself at my best
and that was not close to my best," Walker said. "You have yet to see me
at my best.''
Prior to their "ShoBox'
meeting, Walker had gone winless in three amateur starts against Estrada.
The last
defeat cost Walker a shot at
making the 2004 United States Olympic team.
This time around it was a
different story as the big, strong and willing 27-year-old performed with
great heart
and determination. Game and
well-conditioned, Walker entered the ring weighing a career-low 235 pounds
and landed the more effective
punches throughout.
"It did not really insult me
that Estrada beat me three times before," said Walker after winning a
hard-fought
affair by the scores 78-74,
76-75 and 76 apiece. "In the amateurs, I did not have a lot of experience
and was
very raw. I knew the pro game
would be a different story.
"Still, it feels great to
finally beat Estrada. All of the hard work finally paid off. I know I am
at another level,
and all my fights are going to
get tougher and tougher, so I have to work harder and harder.
"It was the hunger that drove
me to finally get to the top.''
The six-foot-four-inch Walker
only had 32 amateur fights, but has made up for lost time since turning
professional in July 2004.
Despite being brought along slowly, he fought eight times in 2006 and
sparred
against International Boxing
Federation (IBF) Heavyweight Champion Wladimir Klitschko.
"I am truly ready to step up
and fight a lot harder," Walker said. "I am the new look at heavyweight,
and I am
going to make it look like
that. Anyone that has been watching my career since I turned pro knows
that I
have advanced a lot in a short
amount of time."
Despite a high-profile victory
on SHOWTIME, Walker will continue to take it a step at a time.
"I have a lot of things I need
to work on," said Walker, whose lone blemish on his record came when he
boxed to an eight-round draw
against once-beaten Jason Gavern on Sept. 30, 2005 in Brooks,
Calif. "I am
still very green. I need to
work on my technique, get behind my jab more."
Trying to derail "The Freight
Train" is Garcia, of Salinas, Calif., by way of Glendale, Ariz. The
five-foot-nine-
and-one-half inch boxer is not
built like a stereotypical boxer. However, Garcia has proven time and
again
that he is a tricky, creative
heavyweight who is rarely hit by clean punches or hurt by his opponents.
Garcia, who also possesses
tremendous determination, a fine chin, craftiness and a knack for
effective
counterpunching, has won eight
straight contests by decision.
A terrific amateur who once
was ranked No. 1 in the United States, Garcia was a member of the USA
Boxing team from 2001-04.
However, Garcia's options were not limited to this country. After applying
for
dual citizenship, he made the
Mexican national team and came within points of going to the Olympics due
to qualifiers.
Garcia, who turned pro at age
22 on July 30, 2004, won his initial three starts by first-round TKO.
"They see this fat kid (and
think) this is not what a boxer is supposed to look like," Garcia said.
"It has
probably hindered me from
making any extra money besides fight purses because promoters don't want
to
take any chances because they
think I am out of shape.''
Garcia, who has tipped the
scales as high as 267½ pounds, weighed 260 in his last outing when he
recorded an eight-round
unanimous decision (79-72 and 77-74 twice) over Charles Davis on
Oct. 28, 2006,
in Phoenix.
To achieve his goal of
becoming the first Mexican heavyweight champion, Garcia knows that he will
have to
continue winning and slim
down.
"It is up to me," Garcia said.
"If you want to be up there with the best, you have to look better.
"I know I have to do what it
takes. I have so many critics. I want to prove the world wrong. That is
what
makes this fight on SHOWTIME
so important. "It is my opportunity to prove that it is not always all
about
looks, but that I am a
fighter.''
In between training, Garcia
serves as a teacher's assistant at a Phoenix school where he works with
alternative-education
children. His path took him to college, but due to the rigors of traveling
and training
with the national boxing team,
he had to drop out.
Now, Garcia supports his wife,
Valerie, and their two children.
"Boxing is just not about the
money," Garcia said. "It would help though if I got a little bit."
Butler, of Rochester, Minn.,
by way of Chicago, Ill., has won eight consecutive bouts, including seven
by
knockout. Since turning pro at
age 20 in June 2004, the hard-hitting heavyweight has knocked out half of
his
opponents (14) in the first
round.
After averaging more than
eight fights a year during his first three pro campaigns, Butler already
has fought
twice in 2007, including a
victory over Louis Monaco at The Target Center on Jan. 12. In his
last outing,
Butler scored a first-round
TKO over Brad Bowers on Feb. 24 in Superior, Wis.
Oruh, of Las Vegas, Nev., by
way of Port Harcourt, Nigeria, has defeated 11 straight opponents since
fighting to a four-round draw
in February 2002. After battling nine of his past 11 bouts in California,
Oruh will
make only his second pro start
outside of the west coast.
In his only other contest
outside of Arizona, California or Nevada, Oruh scored a first-round
knockout in his
pro debut over Gustavo
Robleto on July 28, 2001, in Fort Myers, Fla. In his last contest,
Oruh recorded a
hard-fought six-round majority
decision (58-56 twice and 57 apiece) over John Clark on Feb. 22,
2007, in
Lemoore, Calif.
Blow-by-blow announcer Nick
Charles will call the action from ringside with expert analyst and
boxing
historian Steve Farhood
at his side. The executive producer of "ShoBox" 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.
About ShoBox: The New
Generation
Since its inception in July
2001, the critically-acclaimed SHOWTIME boxing series, "ShoBox: The New
Generation" has featured young
talent matched tough. The "ShoBox" philosophy is to televise exciting,
crowd-pleasing and competitive
matches while providing a proving ground for willing prospects determined
to
fight for a world title. The
growing list of fighters who have appeared on ShoBox and advanced to
garner world
titles includes Leonard Dorin,
Scott Harrison, Juan Diaz, Jeff Lacy, Ricky Hatton, Joan Guzman, Juan
Urango, David Diaz (interim)
and Robert Guerrero.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
highlights, etc...).
Subject to change
(3/12/07)
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