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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Robert
Guerrero vs.
Gamaliel Diaz

June 23, 2006
Oakland
Arena
Oakland,
California
11:00pm ET/PT
Featured Bouts
WBC Featherweight Title
Elimination Bout (12 Rds)
Robert Guerrero
(17-1-1, 10 KOs)
vs.
Gamaliel Diaz
(20-5-2, 9 KOs)
Super Middleweight Bout (6 Rds)
Andre Dirrell
(7-0, 4 KOs)
vs.
James Morrow
(9-2-2, 1 NC, 4 KOs)
Super Middleweight Bout (6 Rds)
Anthony Dirrell vs.
Marcus Don Hall
(11-1, 1 NC, 4 KOs)
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Diaz-Guerrero in ShoBox
rematch!
In a rematch of a thrilling,
action-packed slugfest that wound up as one of 2005's most shocking
upsets,
"The Ghostbuster,"
Gamaliel "Platano" Diaz (20-5-2, 9 KOs), will face
Robert "The Ghost" Guerrero
(17-1-1, 10 KOs) in the "ShoBox:
The New Generation" main event Friday, June 23, on SHOWTIME
(11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the
west coast).
The winner of the World Boxing
Council (WBC) featherweight elimination bout - and first rematch in the
five-
year history of "ShoBox" -
will become the mandatory challenger to WBC featherweight champion
Takashi
Koshimoto.
In co-featured bouts, the
promising, unbeaten Dirrell brothers, Andre and Anthony,
of Flint., Mich., will
make their "ShoBox'' debuts in
six-round super middleweight bouts. Andre (7-0, 4 KOs) will meet James
Morrow (9-2-2, 1 NC, 4
KOs). Anthony (8-0, 8 KOs) will face Marcus Don "The Barber"
Hall (11-1, 1 NC,
4 KOs). The tripleheader from
the Oakland/Alameda County Arena in Oakland, Calif., will be promoted by
Goossen Tutor Promotions.
Diaz stunned the boxing world
by winning the initial collision of top-10 featherweights with a
well-deserved,
12-round split decision Dec.
5, 2005, on "ShoBox." Going in, southpaw Guerrero was undefeated, ranked
No. 2 by the WBC and regarded
as one of boxing's brightest young stars.
Despite being the WBC No. 7
contender, Diaz was a virtual unknown. That is not the case anymore. The
Mexico City native proved he
was not afraid of apparitions by outpointing Guerrero 115-112, 114-113 and
112-115.
Diaz, of Mexico City, has won
11 straight bouts and is unbeaten in his last 19 (17-0-2). This will be
the
current WBC No. 3 contender's
first start since he made his United States debut against Guerrero.
"I see this fight the same as
the first one, except I will win easier," Diaz said. "He got in some good
punches
the first time that he will
not land this time. I am changing my style and working more on defense. I
do not
care if it is a knockout or
another decision. I am confident that I will gain the victory."
Guerrero (17-1-1, 10 KOs), of
Gilroy, Calif., is ranked No. 7 by the WBC. Unusually tall and rangy for a
featherweight, Guerrero is
known for tremendous defense and speed. He showed no effects from the Diaz
bout by scoring an impressive
third-round TKO over Sandro Marcos May 18, 2006, in San Jose.
In a sharp and overpowering
performance, the popular Guerrero bloodied Marcos' nose in the second
round
and scored a knockdown in the
third. Marcos made it to his feet, but was staggered again from a series
of
punches. He was falling to the
canvas when the referee stopped the fight at 0:54.
"I am back and right on
track," Guerrero said, after his first outing in five-and-one-half months.
"Looking back at the first
Diaz fight," Guerrero said, "I thought I had edged it out and won, but the
judges
saw it differently. It was a
really close fight and a great learning experience. Now, I know I cannot
take
anything for granted or take
anybody lightly. I have to be on my toes for everybody.
"I am working hard and
watching the tape of me and Diaz, and basically going off of that. I know
I have to
change it up more and not
focus as much on defense. I plan to work much more on offense.
"I have so been into being
slick and slipping shots and looking good in there that I left out what
got me there:
coming in and grinding in
there. I plan to come out in round one firing punches and keep it that
way, picking
it up round after round."
Andre "The Matrix'' Dirrell
was the 2004 Olympic Games bronze medalist. After an outstanding amateur
career in which he went
214-22, the youngster turned pro with a fourth-round TKO over Carlos
Jones on
Jan. 27, 2005, in Glen Burnie,
Maryland.
The southpaw is coming off of
a hard-fought, six-round unanimous decision over Alfonso Rocha on
May
25, 2006, in Temecula, Calif.
Despite getting floored from a right hand in the closing seconds of the
third,
Dirrell dominated and finished
strongest to win 58-55 on all the scorecards,
"This fight proved that I was
in great shape," said Dirrell, who recovered after the hard knockdown to
bloody
Rocha's nose in the fourth and
cut him over the right eye in the fifth. "Rocha could take a punch. It was
not
an easy fight, but this is
what I want. To be champion you have to fight tough guys."
Between fights, Andre, who is
13 months older than Anthony, is working on getting his high school
diploma.
"When the Olympics came
around, I started slowing down. I had to go to camps and stuff, so I did
not have
the time to finish."
Morrow, of Lafayette, Ind., is
coming off of an eight-round decision over James Rice on March 18,
2006.
Morrow won five straight at
the outset of a career that began on Nov. 29, 2003, and was 8-0-1 after
nine
starts. However, he has gone
0-2-1 with one no contest until beating Rice.
"I wanted the win and a good
performance and I got both," said Morrow, who fried Rice by the scores
80-70
on the three scorecards. "This
gets me close to where I need to be.''
Anthony "The Dog" Dirrell is a
switch-hitter who has majored in finishing off opponents quickly and
decisively
since turning pro on the same
show as his brother. None of his eight starts have lasted more than two
rounds. Four have ended by
knockout in the first round, including his last three.
In his most recent outing,
Dirrell stopped Juan Ramos in the opening session on May 25, 2006,
in
Temecula. Dirrell scored one
knockdown before the referee stopped the fight at 2:54.
"I was a little surprised the
Ramos fight was so easy," Dirrell said. "I did not expect a first-round
knockout.
I was just more aggressive,
and he realized that my punch was too much for him."
The Dirrell brothers have
tattoos of the face of their grandfather, Leon Lawson, on the back of
their shoulders.
"We never had a father
figure," Andre said. "Our grandfather took me and my brother in. He got me
started in
boxing when I was 10. He has
ridden our back in school and everything we have done, including boxing.
We
decided to make it literal,
and put him on our backs."
Hall, of Savannah, Georgia,
has gone unbeaten (11-1,1 NC, 4KOs) since losing his pro debut on Sept.
27,
2002. The Georgia native has
won nine straight since his third bout ended in a no contest. In his two
2006
starts, Hall has won six-round
decisions, including one in his last outing against Vincent Harris on
April 14.
It was the fourth time Hall
outpointed Harris, but the scores were tighter this time: 58-56 twice and
56-58.
"My style is that I give a lot
and I take a lot. I am determined, durable and come to fight," said Hall,
who
goes by the name of Don,
although Marcus is his real name. He got his nickname because "I have been
a
barber since high school.''
The upcoming bout will represent his first fight outside of Savannah.
The telecast represents the
78th in the well-received, critically acclaimed "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 Ricky Hatton, Juan Diaz, Leonard Dorin,
Joan Guzman and
Scott Harrison, and
Jeff Lacy.
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 more information on
Goossen Tutor Promotions, visit:
www.goossentutor.com.
- Press Release issued by
Goossen Tutor Promotions (with a little editing from us, highlights,
etc...).
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(6/13/06)
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