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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Cesar Lopez vs.
Glenn Donaire
Juan Manuel Buendia vs.
Alexis Divison

May 5, 2006
Lucky Star Casino
Concho, Oklahoma
11:00 PM ET/PT
Line-up:
NABA \ NABO Flyweight Title
Bout (NABO title vacant) - 12 Rds
NABA Champion Cesar Lopez
(18-2, 4 KOs) vs. Glenn Donaire (15-2-1, 9 KOs)
Super Welterweight Bout
(10 Rds)
Juan Manuel Buendia
(12-0, 4 KOs) vs. Alexis Divison (16-2, 13 KOs)
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"Shobox:
The New Generation" To feature
NABA /
NABO Flyweight Title And Super Welterweight Clash
NEW YORK - SHOWTIME will kick
off the Cinco de Mayo weekend with the first of excellent back-to-back
fight cards on Friday, May 5.
In the main event on "ShoBox: The New Generation" (11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed
on the west coast), North
American Boxing Association (NABA) flyweight champion Cesar "El
Gallito"
Lopez (18-2, four KOs)
defends against Glenn "The Filipino Bomber" Donaire
(15-2-1, nine KOs). The
vacant North American Boxing
Organization (NABO) 112-pound belt will also be on the line in the
12-round
bout.
In the 10-round co-feature,
undefeated super welterweight Juan Manuel Buendia (12-0, four KOs)
collides
with hard-hitting Alexis
Division (16-2, 13 KOs). Gary Shaw Productions, LLC, in association
with Tony
Holden Productions, will
promote the doubleheader from the Lucky Star Casino in Concho, Okla.
The next evening on Saturday,
May 6, the 20th anniversary celebration of SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING continues with a World
Title Doubleheader from Worcester, Mass. Alejandro "Terra"
Garcia will
defend his World Boxing
Association (WBA) super welterweight belt against local favorite and
former WBA
welterweight champion Jose
Antonio Rivera. In the other world title fight, Luis Perez will
defend his
International Boxing
Federation (IBF) junior bantamweight crown against mandatory challenger
and IBF
No. 1 contender Dimitri
Kirillov.
Lopez, of El Paso, Texas, is a
master technician who creates crafty angles and picks apart his opponents.
At his best when he can
maintain a fast pace and utilize his excellent movement, the soft-spoken
warrior
with a docile and humble
demeanor is the NABA flyweight champion and former Texas State 115-pound
titleholder.
Lopez, using his
lightning-quick speed and technical skills, won 18 consecutive bouts and
ascended to the
top 10 of the world rankings (WBA
No. 7, WBO No. 8 and IBF No. 10). Although he dropped his last outing,
a 10-round decision to top-10
contender Gabriel Elizondo (19-1 going in) on Dec. 8, 2005 in New
Mexico,
he is ready for his ShoBox
debut.
"This is a great opportunity
for me to get back to where I was," said Lopez, whose flyweight title was
not on
the line in this super fly
event. "I did not have my best night against Elizondo, but I will be ready
on May 5.
Donaire has never fought a
boxer like me."
During his world-ranked
amateur career, Lopez represented the United States in the Junior Golden
Gloves
World Championships. At 18, he
turned pro only to lose a majority four-round decision to Fidencio
Reyes
on May 17, 2001, in Victoria,
Texas. Lopez lost by the scores 39-37, 40-36 and 38-38.
Three years later, Lopez
avenged his loss in a rematch with Reyes by winning an eight-round split
decision
(July 9, 2004, in El Paso). "I
knocked Reyes down twice in our first fight, but the referee ruled those
slips
both times," said Lopez. "I
always wanted to fight Reyes again because he did not beat me the first
time
and I knew he definitely would
not beat me the second."
Lopez captured the NABA title
on Jan. 24, 2004, and made two successful defenses, the last coming on a
10-round decision over
Alejandro Moreno on Dec. 10, 2004, in Albuquerque, N.M.
On May 5, Lopez needs a
victory to keep alive his dream of becoming the first El Paso fighter to
win a world
title. Bantamweight Fernie
Morales and lightweight Juan Lazcano came close in 1990 and
2005,
respectively, but fell short.
"I think about it all the
time," Lopez said. "My goals were to win a regional title, to win a world
title and be
the first world champion from
El Paso. I am sure other boxers from El Paso have the same goal, but I
would
love to be the first." Donaire, of
San Leandro, Calif., by way of General Santos City, Philippines, is
subbing
for his younger brother, NABF Super
Flyweight Champion Nonito, who was scheduled to fight Lopez on the
May 5 ShoBox card but sustained an
injury during training.
Glenn, unlike his younger
brother, is an aggressive-minded, two-fisted banger who likes to get in
close and
throw hard combinations to the
head and body. The older Donaire turned pro at age 20 with a first-round
knockout over Eduardo Reyes
on Aug. 27, 2000, in Del Mar, Calif.
Donaire continued to dispose
of opponents early in his next four fights, scoring knockouts inside the
first,
second and fourth rounds.
After suffering a loss in his sixth bout, Donaire rebounded to win his
next eight,
including a 12-round decision
over Phanomchai Dejritha to capture the World Boxing Organization
Asian
Pacific (WBO/AP) flyweight
title on Nov. 22, 2002, in Guam. Donaire then lost in a shocking
first-round TKO
to Zcy Gorres on March
19, 2005. The fight, scheduled for eight rounds, was over at the 2:03 mark
of the
opening session.
As the boxers sized each other
up, both simultaneously moved in, which caused their heads to collide.
Donaire got the worst of the
unintentional exchange and the referee gave him a few minutes to recover.
Shortly after the bout
resumed, Donaire committed a big mistake and lowered his hands. Gorres
took
advantage and landed a right
hook solidly on the jaw.
"I definitely wanted to
continue," said Donaire, who vehemently protested the decision.
Donaire rebounded to pound out
a lopsided 10-round decision over veteran Juan Alfonso Keb Baas on
June
24, 2005, in Cabazon, Calif.
In his final 2005 start, Donaire scored a sixth-round TKO over Benito
Abraham
on Nov. 5 at Stateline, Nev.
In his lone 2006 outing, Donaire and Jose Albuquerque boxed to a
six-round
draw on March 3 from Santa
Ynez, Calif.
Buendia, of Detroit, by way of
Durango, Mexico, is a versatile sort who will be making his 2006 debut. He
has won his last two outings
inside of the distance, including a first-round TKO over Jonathan
Nelson in his
most recent start on Nov. 18,
2005, in New Haven, Conn. Buendia scored one knockdown before the referee
stepped in and stopped the
bout at 1:28.
In one of his finest
performances, Buendia captured the Illinois State welterweight title with
a crowd-pleasing
eight-round unanimous decision
over previously undefeated Luciano Perez (9-0, eight KOs going in)
on
Aug. 13, 2004, in Cicero, Ill.
To the surprise of some,
Buendia opted to go toe-to-toe with the hard-hitting Perez and took the
fight to him
from the outset. Out-landing
Perez with heavy rights and lefts to the head and body while proving to be
the
quicker and the more accurate
puncher of the two, Buendia repeatedly backed up his opponent. He then
covered, ducked and countered
as Perez stormed back.
Divison, of Miami, via Santa
Domingo, Dominican Republic, is a rangy, rough, rugged, long-armed,
rail-thin,
5-foot-11 brawler who comes to
fight and is at his best when he can utilize his height and box from the
outside. A good amateur in his
homeland, Division turned pro on Nov. 29, 2001, and won his first 16
professional fights before
heading to the U.S. He is winless in his two stateside outings, but both
were
against good opposition in
bouts he took on short notice.
In his last start, Divison
lost to Delvin Rodriguez on a fourth-round disqualification on Feb.
17, 2006, in
Memphis. Divison may have been
leading a bout that was close after three rounds. A former sparring
partner of Bernard Hopkins
and Zab Judah, Divison had landed his fair share of solid shots,
including a
couple looping overhand bombs
that rocked Rodriguez in the first round. But after getting warned
repeatedly
by the referee for fouling and
getting a point docked for hitting behind the head, Divison was DQ'ed 28
seconds into the fourth.
"I am determined to win this
time," said Divison. "I am trying to make it up to all the people who
believe in
me." The telecast represents
the 76th 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 Jeff Lacy, Ricky Hatton, Juan Diaz,
Leonard Dorin, Joan
Guzman and Scott
Harrison.
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.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights).
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(5/01/06)
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