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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Mike Oliver vs.
Gary Stark Jr.

February 16, 2007
Buffalo Run Casino
Miami, Oklahoma
Featured Bouts:
USBA Jr. Featherweight Title
Bout (12 Rds)
Champion Mike "Machine
Gun'' Oliver (17-0, 7 KOs) vs. Gary "Kid"
Stark Jr. (18-0, 8 KOs)
Jr. Middleweight Bout (8 Rds)
Derek "Pooh''
Ennis (10-0-1, 7 KOs) vs. Allen "The Dream Shatterer"
Conyers (10-2, 8 KOs)
__________________________
Mike Oliver To Defend USBA
122-Pound Title
Against Fellow Unbeaten
Gary Stark Jr.
Ennis to Put Undefeated
Record on Line Against Conyers in Co-Feature
At Buffalo Run Casino,
Miami, Oklahoma, Friday, Feb. 16, at 11 p.m. ET/PT
NEW YORK - Looking for a real
fight? "ShoBox: The New Generation" will present yet another showdown
when Mike "Machine
Gun'' Oliver (17-0, seven KOs) defends his United States Boxing
Association
(USBA) junior featherweight
title against Gary "Kid" Stark Jr. (18-0, eight KOs)
in the main event Friday,
Feb. 16, on SHOWTIME (11 p.m.
ET/PT, delayed on the west coast).
The co-feature will pit unbeaten Derek "Pooh'' Ennis
(10-0-1, seven KOs) against Allen "The Dream
Shatterer'' Conyers
(10-2, eight KOs) in an eight-round junior middleweight scrap. The
excellent DiBella
Entertainment doubleheader
will originate from the Buffalo Run Casino in Miami, Okla.
"Oliver against Stark Jr. is
exactly the type of fight that has given 'ShoBox' its reputation." said "ShoBox"
color commentator Steve
Farhood. "The fighters have a lot of similarities; unbeaten records,
strong
amateur backgrounds and
excellent boxing skills. Also, both are junior featherweights hailing from
the
Northeast, which means moving
them has been extremely difficult. In that sense, they're perfect for each
other. This is the right fight
at the right time for both Oliver and Stark Jr.
"Stark Jr. is a boxer who
doesn't need much convincing to become a brawler. He has faced better
opposition
than Oliver, but Oliver's hand
speed is superior. Then again, if you haven't seen Oliver, trust me on
this one:
his hand speed is superior to
just about any fighter you can name.
"This should be a fast-paced
12-rounder, competitive throughout. The winner is likely to emerge as a
top-15
contender."
In typical "ShoBox" fashion,
the excellent 12-round match between Stark Jr. and southpaw Oliver will
represent the sternest
challenge of each prospect's career. Both young men, known more for their
boxing
skills and talent than raw
punching power, will make their SHOWTIME debuts.
"I have wanted to step up, so
this will be a good fight for me," said Oliver, 27, of Hartford, Conn.,
who
captured the USBA belt in his
last start by easily and impressively outpointing Adam Carrera
across 12
rounds on Oct, 28, 2006, in
Uncasville, Conn.
"People seem to think I am
just a boxer,'' Oliver continued. "But, I am not one-dimensional. I don't
always do
the same thing. I do a lot of
switching up in the ring. I do not just box. I can bring the pressure if I
need to.
You get into the first round,
see how it feels and take it from there."
Stark Jr. disagrees. "Oliver
is going to rely on his speed a lot and try to box, but speed only gets
you so far,"
said Stark, 27, who was born
and raised in Brooklyn and now fights out of Staten Island, N.Y. "Oliver
and I
were in the amateurs together,
so I know he has good skills. But, the guys I have fought are way
tougher."
"You have got to have heart
and a will to win. I train too hard to lose. I don't care how many times
you hit me,
I am not losing."
Oliver was a top amateur
before turning pro in September 2001. He won his initial six starts
through May
2003, but ran afoul of the law
and did nine months in jail. However, he has been a model citizen since
and
has won 11 in a row since
resuming his career in April 2005. He fought six times in 2006.
In a dominant performance,
Oliver ousted Carrera by the scores 120-108, 118-110 and 116-112.
"I was prepared for 12
rounds," said the five-foot-six-inch Oliver, who is trained by John
Scully. "It was
speed and power, whatever I
could use. I know the body shots affected Carrera a lot. I outworked and
outboxed him. I thought the
referee was going to stop the fight a few times, but Carrera was a tough
guy."
The five-foot-five-inch Stark
Jr. was born into a boxing family and is co-managed and co-trained by his
father,
Gary Stark Sr., who was
an amateur boxer from 1978-88.
Like Oliver, the younger Stark
Jr. also was an excellent amateur and brought home many trophies. A three-
time Golden Gloves champion
once ranked fifth in the country by USA Boxing, Stark Jr. turned pro in
May
2002. Also, Oliver will
represent the sixth lefty Stark Jr. has faced in his career.
In his last outing, Stark Jr.
won the vacant New York State 122-pound title by scoring a lopsided
10-round
decision over southpaw
Vernie Torres on Dec. 14, 2006, in New York. Stark cut Torres over his
left eye in
the first and bloodied his
nose in the seventh en route to winning by 100-89 on all the cards.
The five-foot-eight-inch,
26-year-old Ennis, of Philadelphia, is the son of former prizefighter
Derek "Bozie"
Ennis. This will be the
crowd-pleasing, hard-punching Ennis' first start since he registered a
fourth-round
TKO over Richard Hall
on April 21, 2006, in Mt. Pleasant, S.C.
"I'm ready to get it on," said
Ennis, who is trained by his father. "I had a lot of hard training. It's
time to get it
over with (and fight). I just
let the fight come to me."
Ennis, who turned pro in
August 2002 after a brief amateur career, boxed to a six-round draw
against
southpaw Maxwell Taylor
in his outing before last on March 9, 2006. Ennis scored a knockdown in
the
third, but went down twice
himself in the fourth.
"The only round Taylor won was
the round he dropped me in," the switch-hitting Ennis said. "(But) this
was
a good fight for my career."
Conyers, of Bronx, N.Y., is
the New York State welterweight champion. He captured the crown with a
first-
round TKO over six-foot-two
southpaw Russell Jordan on Nov. 3, 2006.
The bout represented the
second straight first-round TKO for the five-foot-11 inch, 30-year-old
Conyers, and
will be his fourth start since
returning to the ring in February 2006 after an 18-month layoff.
An aggressive,
offensive-minded sort, Conyers turned pro in January 2002, is managed by
Gil Reyes and
trained by Luis Olmo.
"For this fight, I've been
working with Luis Collazo and Travis Simms, so I will be
ready," said Conyers,
who will step up a notch in
weight. "The only thing I know about Ennis is his record and that he is
shorter
than me. I will probably just
feel him out in the first round and see what type of fighter he is."
Nick Charles and
Steve Farhood will call the action from ringside. The executive
producer of "ShoBox" is
Gordon Hall with
Richard Gaughan producing.
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.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
highlights, etc...).
Subject to change
(2/9/07)
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