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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Eric Harding vs.
Chad Dawson

June 2, 2006
Chumash Resort Casino
Santa Ynez, California
11:00 PM ET/PT
Line-up:
NABF Light Heavyweight Title
Bout (12 Rds)
Champion Eric Harding
(23-3-1, 7 KOs) vs. Chad Dawson (21-0, 1 NC, 15 KOs)
Featherweight Bout (10 Rds)
Mario Santiago (14-0, 9
KOs) vs. Lenny DeVictoria (8-3, 2 KOs)
__________________________________
"Shobox:
The New Generation"
Kicks Off
Big Weekend of Action on
Showtime
NEW YORK - Talk about a
devastating 1-2 punch! One night before the most anticipated rubber match
in
recent history between World
Boxing Council (WBC) Lightweight Champion Diego Corrales and former
two-time WBC titlist Jose
Luis Castillo, Eric Harding will defend his North American
Boxing Federation
(NABF) light heavyweight belt
against undefeated Chad Dawson in a battle of world-ranked
southpaws on
SHOWTIME.
It is one thing for a
promising, up-and-coming boxer to "step up" and face a "name" opponent. It
is an
entirely different scenario,
however, to engage a "name" that has defeated Antonio Tarver and
performed
well against three other
former world champions including Roy Jones, Jr.
Such is the intrigue as Dawson
(21-0, 1 NC, 15 KOs) is set to challenge Harding (23-3-1, 7 KOs) in the
12-
round "ShoBox: The New
Generation" main event Friday, June 2, on SHOWTIME (11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed
on the west coast). In the
co-feature, undefeated Mario Santiago will face Lenny DeVictoria
in a 10-round
featherweight match for the
vacant USNBC, a minor title of the WBC. Gary Shaw Productions, LLC, will
promote the doubleheader from
the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, Calif.
Harding says that Dawson erred
by taking this fight.
"I am willing to fight for
winner-takes-all," Harding said. "Dawson has made a big mistake. This is
like a man
against a young kid. He better
be ready. Every fight is a must-win for me."
Harding, of West Hartford,
Conn., via Philadelphia, outpointed Tarver in a WBC eliminator on June 23,
2000,
from Biloxi, Miss. The other
ex-world champs Harding fought were Montell Griffin and Glen
Johnson.
Harding, who is the WBC No.
10/International Boxing Federation (IBF) No. 9 contender, won the United
States Boxing Association (USBA)
and NABF 175-pound crowns in his last two starts, taking 12-round
decisions over David
Telesco and Daniel Judah, respectively.
"You can tell a lot about what
management thinks of a young fighter by the quality of the opposition
chosen,"
said "ShoBox" expert analyst
Steve Farhood. "The fact that Chad Dawson is fighting Eric Harding
speaks
volumes about their confidence
in their fighter.
"Dawson is new to the light
heavyweight division and a highly touted prospect. In Harding, he is
facing a
superb counter-puncher and
fighter who gave a prime Roy Jones one of his best fights. Harding is
coming
off of two nice wins, so he
clearly has plenty left.
"This is a supreme test for a
young fighter and the exact type of match-up we love on "ShoBox." We are
going to learn tons about
Dawson on June 2."
Dawson, 23, of New Haven,
Conn., by way of Hartsville, S.C., is quietly confident.
"I am looking forward to
this," the WBC No. 7/World Boxing Association (WBA) No. 15 contender said.
"It is
a great fight for 'ShoBox.' I
am a still-improving, young fighter who is stepping up in competition.
"Harding is a great fighter.
He has a good resume, but I definitely think I am the stronger fighter. I
am in great
shape. The world will know my
name when I walk out of the ring with a victory."
Dawson started boxing at age
11. As a Junior Olympian, he was a three-time State champion, a two-time
regional titlist and a
national runner up. In addition, he earned top honors at the 2000 Golden
Gloves,
captured the U.S. National
title at the Under 19 Championships, won a bronze medal at the World Under
19-Championships and was named
U.S.A. Boxing Athlete of the Month in November 2000.
"I was blessed with a good
amateur background," Dawson said. "I always had a pro style, so it was not
hard
for me to make the adjustment
from amateur to pros."
Since his debut at age 19 on
Aug. 18, 2001, Dawson has campaigned at middleweight, super middle and
light heavy. Like one of his
boxing idols, Thomas Hearns, the 6-foot-3-inch Dawson always was
tall for his
weight class. So, it was only
a matter of time before he settled in for good as a light heavy.
"I knew that I eventually
would move up permanently to 175 pounds," said Dawson, who won belts at
168
pounds (North American Boxing
Organization) and at 160 (WBC junior youth).
Dawson captured the WBC junior
youth title in his 14th outing by scoring an eighth-round TKO over
Dumont
Welliver, who had
defeated him in the 1998 U.S. Junior Olympics Championships.
In one of his best early
victories, Dawson registered one knockdown en route to retaining his WBC
belt with
a seventh-round TKO over
former world champion Carl Daniels on Dec. 10, 2004. "I knew I was
taking a
risk," Dawson said. "Beating
Daniels was a big boost to my confidence."
In his "ShoBox" debut and New
Haven homecoming, Dawson won the vacant NABO title with an 11th-round
TKO over Ian Gardner on
Nov. 18, 2005. After a slow start against the reluctant and awkward
Gardner,
Dawson scored four knockdowns
to win impressively.
"I could have done more, but
Gardner made the fight ugly," Dawson said. "There were times I could have
taken him out, but I did not
pull the trigger."
Nineteen out of Dawson's first
20 starts originated on the Eastern seaboard, but this will be his third
in a row
away from "home." After
opening 2006 with a bout in El Paso, Texas, Dawson stopped James Hearn
on
March 4 in Manchester,
England.
"You cannot beat the exposure
you get on SHOWTIME, but showcasing your talents in front of different
people and places is
important, too."
Promoted by Gary Shaw,
Dawson will make his sixth start with trainer, Dan Birmingham.
"I have learned a ton working
with Dan," Dawson said. "I have Darryl Hudson as my strength and
training
coach. I am with the best. As
for Gary (Shaw), everything he has told me has happened."
Dawson has risen from prospect
to genuine contender in five years. The soft-spoken, undefeated fighter
knows his shot at a world
title will come if he continues to triumph.
"My ultimate dream is to
become a world champion and have a different lifestyle," Dawson said. "But
I do not
want to just be the best
champion. I want to be one of the best champions ever. I am not talking
just fighting
wise, but by being a good guy.
It is not about going in and knocking people's heads off and holding a
title."
Dawson has been down once as a
pro. In his 11th fight, he was dropped by Willie Lee in the first
round on
March 21, 2003. He got up to
flatten Lee in the third.
Santiago (14-0, 9 KOs), of
Ponce, Puerto Rico, will attempt to knock out his fourth consecutive
opponent in
his second "ShoBox"
appearance. In his debut on Oct. 21, 2005, Santiago picked apart
Cornelius Lock en
route to a fifth-round KO from
Santa Ynez.
During a stellar amateur
career, Santiago captured the Puerto Rican national championship twice,
was a
member of the Puerto Rican
National team and compiled a 45-7 record. The southpaw made his pro debut
at age 22 and recorded an
opening-round knockout over Antonio Martinez on April 27, 2001, in
Hatillo,
Puerto Rico. In his last
outing, Santiago registered an eighth-round TKO over Terry Lantz on
March 4,
2006, in Bayamon, Puerto Rico.
"I am very excited to be
fighting on SHOWTIME again," Santiago said. "It was like a dream the first
time
when my father got to watch me
fight on national television. This is even better."
DeVictoria (8-3, 2 KOs), of
Philadelphia, has won five out of his last six starts since losing his
fourth and fifth
outings on decisions. He is
coming off a fourth-round TKO over Yamin Mohammad on Feb. 16, 2006,
in
Uncasville, Conn. The loss
came in his outing before last when he dropped a majority six-round
decision to
unbeaten Melvin Cumba
(9-0 going in) on Dec. 16, 2005, in Philadelphia. DeVictoria lost a good,
close fight
by the scores of 76-76 78-74
and 79-73.
The telecast represents the
77th in the popular, 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 Kermit Cintron, Juan Diaz, Leonard Dorin,
Joan Guzman
and Scott Harrison.
Nick Charles will call
the action from ringside, with Farhood serving as expert analyst. The
executive
producer of the telecast 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
(5/27/06)
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