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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Mario Santiago vs.
Salvador Garcia

December 1, 2006
Chumash Casino Resort
Santa Ynez, California
Featured Bouts:
Featherweight
Bout (10 Rds)
Mario Santiago (16-0,
11 KOs) vs. Salvador Garcia (14-3-2, 1 ND, 7 KOs)
Welterweight
Bout (8 Rds)
Timothy Bradley
(16-0, 10 KOs) vs. Jaime Rangel (30-9-1, 26 KOs)
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World-Ranked Santiago, Bradley Put Unbeaten Records On The Line
They Co-Headline On "ShoBox: The New Generation"
Friday, Dec. 1, 2006, at 11 p.m. ET/PT
NEW YORK - A knockout winner
and a fight fan's dream, "Shobox: The New Generation" will conclude
another fantastic year when
promising undefeated featherweight Mario Santiago (16-0, 11 KOs)
faces the
streaking, always dangerous
Salvador Garcia (14-3-2, 1 ND, 7 KOs) in the 10-round main event
Friday,
Dec. 1, on SHOWTIME (11 p.m.
ET/PT, delayed on the west coast).
In the co-feature, former
amateur standout and highly touted unbeaten welterweight Timothy "Desert
Storm" Bradley
(16-0, 10 KOs) makes his anxiously awaited "ShoBox" debut against Jaime
Rangel
(30-9-1, 26 KOs) in an
eight-round bout. The doubleheader will be promoted by Gary Shaw
Productions,
LLC, from Chumash Casino
Resort in Santa Ynez, Calif.
Santiago, of Ponce, Puerto
Rico, is a rising star in the 126-pound division and is ranked No. 10 in
the World
Boxing Council (WBC) and No.
12 in the International Boxing Federation (IBF). The crowd-pleasing
southpaw
went 45-7 during an excellent
amateur career; he was his country's national champion at 119 pounds in
1998-99. From 1998-2000, he
was a member of the Puerto Rican national team.
"As a pro, I am always
striving to get to the next level and become the complete fighter I know I
can be,"
said Santiago, who will make
his third "ShoBox'' start. "You have not seen the best of me yet."
Garcia, of Whittier, Calif.,
by way of East Los Angeles, is much better than his record indicates.
Since
resuming his career in
September 2005, a guy always matched tough is 4-0-1 with one no decision.
Garcia
was a decided underdog in his
last three fights against top up-and-comers but came away with two
impressive upset wins. Two of
the victories came against Puerto Rican prospects.
"I'll fight anybody," Garcia
said. "I can't afford to lose again. I fought two prospects the last year.
Both
thought they were going to
beat me. They didn't think I could fight. I won both easy. I can fight."
Bradley, of Palm Springs,
Calif., is ranked No. 11 (super lightweight) in the WBC. The talented,
charismatic
young man narrowly missed
earning a berth on the 2004 U.S. Olympic team, but he did not make many
other mistakes in a stellar
140-bout amateur career. He was a two-time National Champion and won
titles at
the PAL National Tournament,
the Under-19 National Tournament and the Junior Golden Gloves
Championship.
"I have waited a long time to
fight on TV," said the former WBC welterweight and junior welter Youth
Champion, who has won his last
four outings by knockout. "I am very excited about Dec. 1."
Rangel, of Cordoba, Colombia,
has far more experience than Bradley, and once fought for a world title.
This
is his first start since he
lost to tough Emanuel Burton Feb. 10, 2006, in Mashantucket, Conn.
Nick Charles (blow by
blow) and Steve Farhood (analysis) will call the action from
ringside. The executive
producer of "ShoBox" is
Gordon Hall with Richard Gaughan producing.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
highlights, etc...).
To The Top
(11/27/06)
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