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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Enrique Ornelas vs.
Sam Soliman

November 17, 2006
Soboba Casino
San Jacinto, California
Featured Bouts:
Middleweight
Bout (10 Rds)
Enrique Ornelas (25-2,
15 KOs) vs. Sam Soliman (32-8, 13 KOs)
Heavyweight
Bout (8 Rds)
Travis "Freight
Train" Walker (21-0-1, 17 KOs) vs. Jason "Big Six"
Estrada (7-0, 1 ND, 1 KO)
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Ornelas-Soliman, Walker -Estrada Highlight Tremendous "SHOBOX" Fight Card
NEW YORK - One half of the
popular Southern California-based "Bash Brothers," Enrique Ornelas,
will
face world-ranked Sam
Soliman in the main event on Friday, Nov. 17 on "ShoBox: The New
Generation."
True to the 'ShoBox' mantra,
the 26-year-old Ornelas will be facing his toughest opponent to date in a
10-
round middleweight bout.
Also, in a battle of unbeaten
heavyweights the 2003 Golden Gloves champion Travis "Freight
Train"
Walker will face the
man who defeated him three times in the amateurs, 2004 United States
Olympian
Jason "Big Six"
Estrada.
Walker (21-0-1, 17 KOs), of
Tallahassee, Fla., will attempt to turn the tables on Providence R.I.'s
Estrada
(7-0, 1 ND, 1 KO) when they
meet in an eight-round match. One of the most decorated amateur
heavyweight boxers in U.S.
history, Estrada beat Walker the last time they fought at the 2004 U. S.
Olympic Trials.
The outstanding doubleheader
at Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, Calif., is presented by Goossen Tutor
Promotions and will air on
SHOWTIME at 11 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast).
The crowd-pleasing Ornelas
(25-2, 15 KOs) hails from Guanajuato, Mexico. A winner of five consecutive
bouts, the 6-foot-Ornelas has
been consistently stepping up the level of his competition. But, he never
has
faced anybody like Soliman,
who is ranked No. 4 by the International Boxing Federation (IBF), No. 6 by
both the World Boxing Council
(WBC) and World Boxing Association (WBA), and No. 13 by the World
Boxing Organization (WBO).
Soliman (32-8, 13 KOs), of Melbourne, Australia, won the respect of the
boxing world when he nearly
upset former two-time world champion Ronald "Winky" Wright on Dec. 10,
2005.
"This will be a culture shock
for Ornelas," said Soliman, who will turn 33 four days before the
telecast. "He
is a tall, young guy who can
fight, but relies on his reach. He will not be able to do anything with
his reach
when I am finished with him. I
am going to get inside and make sure he cannot throw his punches, and
make him pay.
"The fight will not go the
distance. I throw 100 punches a round, and they are all going to land
flush. I am
going to make sure that
Ornelas does not come back for more.''
The younger brother of
undefeated, No. 1-ranked WBC super middleweight contender Librado
Andrade,
Ornelas was scheduled to fight
Soliman in August 2006, but the fight was cancelled.
Trained by former world
champion Wayne McCullough, the offensive-minded Ornelas is known as
a non-
stop, heavy-handed puncher
with impressive skills. He has recorded a number of knockdowns, but goes
down a lot, too.
Regarding his style, Ornelas
said: "I am more of a counter-puncher. I am aggressive when I need to be,
but
I am more of a patient
fighter. I am learning how to pace myself better."
Born and raised in Leon
Guanajuato, Mexico, Ornelas and Andrade have the same mother and father
despite having different last
names. The different names occurred because their father failed to show up
at
their confirmations in the
local Catholic Church. In Mexico, if only one parent is present, the child
takes the
last name of that parent.
When Andrade was confirmed,
his father was not there, but the church said he could have his dad's
name.
However, if it happened again,
that child would have to take his mother's last name. That is what
happened
when Ornelas was confirmed, so
he took his mother's maiden name.
The youngest of seven
children, Ornelas moved with his mother, brothers and sisters to La Habra,
Calif.,
when he was seven years old.
It was at this time that Librado, who is two years older, took him to a
gym
for the first time.
"The first time we went to the
gym, my brother said, 'I will not hit you hard. I am going to show you how
to
protect yourself.' Well, he
beat the heck out of me and made me cry,'' Ornelas said. "I did not go
back for a
week. I thought he just wanted
to beat me up. Finally, I said, 'Let's go do it again.'"
Ornelas only had 15 amateur
fights. "I lost all the time," he said. "I never trained or fought like an
amateur.
I hit too hard. But the other
guys would get points. I never had the style to get points."
A star wrestler in high
school, Ornelas turned pro at 19 on Oct. 7, 1999. In his 13th start, he
captured a
WBC junior belt. Other
noteworthy early wins came on a third-round knockout over Richard
Karsten (12-1
going in) on Feb. 26, 2004,
and on an eighth-round TKO over Miguel Martin (17-1) less than five
months
later on July 15.
Stamina and an inability to
pace himself may have cost Ornelas when he suffered his first loss, a
come-from-behind, ninth-round
knockout by Christian Cruz (9-1) on Sept. 30, 2004, in Los Angeles.
Hurt
in the first from a right
hand, Ornelas shook it off and rallied to drop Cruz three times. In the
ninth, however,
Ornelas seemed to tire and got
floored with a counter right. He did all he could to survive, but after
getting
smashed with two more right
hands, the bout was stopped at 2:38.
"Losing was tough but it made
me stronger,'' Ornelas said. "It will only help me as I move on."
Ornelas triumphed in his next
start with an eight-round majority decision over Giorbis Barthelemy
on
Dec. 16, 2006, in Los Angeles.
Ornelas scored a knockdown in the first, but his opponent came back with
a knockdown of his own in the
second. Ornelas rallied to floor Barthelemy in the fifth and sixth to win
76-72,
75-73 and 74 twice.
Then, on March 25, 2005, in
Tucson, Ariz., Ornelas dropped a 10-round majority decision (98-90, 95-93
and
94 apiece) to Samuel Reese.
Ornelas had built a lead but Reese registered knockdowns in the eighth and
10th-rounds to win.
Two weeks before the Reese
rumble, however, Ornelas competed in the Los Angeles Marathon. "I ended up
getting sick after the race
and had to take two days off from training," he said.
Ornelas, who is 5-0 with two
knockouts since the Reese bout, weighed 160 pounds in his three 2006
starts.
In his last start, Ornelas
floored Raul Munoz twice en route to a first-round knockout on Aug.
18, 2006, in
Temecula, Calif.
A married father of three,
Ornelas knows the importance of his upcoming scrap with Soliman. "For me,
this
is like a world title fight,"
he said. "Soliman is a great fighter and warrior, but I am ready.''
An Australian of Egyptian
descent, the five-foot-eight-and-one-half-inch Soliman has won 20 of his
last 21
starts. The defeat came when
he lost a WBC title elimination bout on points to Wright in Uncasville,
Conn.,
on Dec. 10, 2005.
What most expected to be an
easy night's work for Winky turned out to be anything but as Soliman
pushed
the heavy favorite to the
limit. Every time Wright scored, the slippery Soliman rallied. He threw an
astounding 1,260 punches in 12
rounds to Wright's 652. Afterward, the courageous Soliman was given a
standing ovation.
"The Winky fight is the last
one I am ever going to have that goes the distance,'' said Soliman, who is
coming off of a sixth-round
knockout over Munoz on March 3, 2006, in Temecula. ''I will make sure of
that.
I proved it against Munoz and
I will prove it again against Ornelas.
"Expect a more powerful,
hard-hitting Sam Soliman on Nov. 17. When it comes to putting away an
opponent
and not letting it go to a
decision, I have never been as adamant as I am for this fight.''
A guy who maintains peak
condition and is always in the gym, Soliman is a relentless, two-fisted
puncher
who delivers blows from
different angles. He is not known for bone-crunching power or accuracy,
but
manages to outwork and
outscore his opponents.
"I have trained very hard for
this fight and am totally fit," Soliman said. "But I have been working
especially
hard on adding power to my
punches. Ornelas goes down a lot. We will see if he can take it.''
From the instant Soliman began
watching Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard and Roberto
Duran, he
knew he wanted to box. His
parents, however, were less enthusiastic and stressed education.
"I kept telling them, 'but I
can do it.' They said, 'Yeah, right.' All my life I have tried to prove
them wrong. I
finished high school, but I
skipped a lot of school. I tried to concentrate on school, but I always
wound up
going back to the gym.''
After winning countless belts
in tae kwon do, karate, and kick boxing, Soliman turned to boxing full
time.
With a 73-11 record in the
amateurs, he turned pro as a cruiserweight at age 23 on April 20, 1977. In
only
his second fight, Soliman
captured the Australian cruiserweight title. However, he lost his third
and fourth
outings and was just 12-7
after losing to, among others, Howard Eastman, Raymond Joval
and
Anthony Mundine.
"I had no manager and was on
my own for several years," Soliman said. "When I turned pro, I could not
wait
for a title, so I took one in
my second fight. Some fighters get all the breaks, but my trainer never
had the
big connections. I was just
this little local bloke who would travel to fights by myself. I knew no
one in
England, but I went there by
myself and won the Commonwealth title.''
In one of his finest
victories, Soliman outpointed Joval across 12 rounds in a rematch on July
18, 2004, in
Temecula. Soliman scored a
knockdown in the fourth, cut his opponent over the left eye in the sixth
and
won by the scores 120-107
twice and 119-108.
A 19-fight winning streak
ended when Soliman lost to Wright. Soliman fought at a blistering pace and
outworked Wright in many
rounds. Wright was unable to dictate the pace for one of the few times in
his
career, but landed the harder
punches and staggered Soliman in the 10th. Soliman never went down,
recovered, and finished the
round well, but two judges scored the round, 10-8, for Wright.
Soliman won the last two
sessions on two of the scorecards, but fell short by 117-110, 115-113 and
115-112. "The people saw it as
my victory," he said. "I do not know how the three judges didn't."
In his lone 2006 start,
Soliman dominated en route to knocking Munoz out at 1:49 of the sixth.
Soliman
took the fight on five days'
notice after his originally scheduled foe, Vernon Forrest,
withdrew.
Soliman, who earlier this year
played a boxer in a soon to be released movie, is managed by Stuart
Duncan and trained by
Dave Hedgecock. Nigel McCartney is the boxer's strength and
conditioning
coach.
Walker and Estrada turned pro
within five months of each other in 2004, but Walker has three times as
many fights. Including his
debut on July 30, 2004, Walker fought six times in '04, nine times in '05
and
seven times so far in 2006.
"I did not have the background
of some of the guys, but anybody watching my career since I turned pro
knows I have advanced a lot in a short amount of time," said the
27-year-old Walker, who is six-foot-four-
and-one-half inches tall. "I
am pretty athletic. Boxing came pretty easy.''
Armed with good reflexes and
natural talent, Walker only had about 32 amateur fights, but was good
enough to become the 2003
National Golden Gloves super heavyweight champion.
In his second fight of the
double elimination U.S. Olympic Trials, Walker dropped a 15-4 decision to
Estrada.
After a 30-25 setback to
George Garcia eliminated him from the Trials, Walker said, "This is
something I
will always remember, but it
was probably one of the worst tournaments I have been to. Even some of the
judges said this was some of
the worst judging they had seen."
Walker began boxing at the
late age of 21 and turned pro at 25 on July 30, 2004. "The boxing coach at
my
high school, who also was the
dean, asked me to box, but I played football, ran track and was on the
weight-lifting team, so I told
him I wasn't interested," he said.
"Then I saw a fight on TV.
Lennox Lewis beat some guy in 58 seconds of the first round and the
dude got
$300,000. That just stuck in
my head. 'I could make that money.' I was basically sitting at home. I had
a job,
but it was a nothing job that
was not going anywhere.
"So, I went back to the high
school and starting training. I have been going to the gym since."
Brought along carefully,
Walker won his initial 13 outings before stepping up in class and boxing
to an
eight-round draw against
Jason Gavern on Sept. 30, 2005, in Brooks, Calif. The improving Walker
has won
eight consecutive contests
since, including six inside of the distance. In his last start, he scored
a second-
round TKO over John Clark
on Sept. 2, 2006, in Los Angeles.
Walker has been anticipating
the bout with Estrada since the pair turned pro. "I am going to destroy
this
guy," he said. "There is no
way I am going to leave it to the judges. I owe Estrada."
Managed by Steve Munisteri
and co-trained by former junior welterweight contender Dwight Pratchett
and Dick Wood, Walker
currently resides and trains in Houston.
The super quick, highly
regarded, six-foot-one-inch, 25-year-old Estrada is perhaps America's top
heavyweight pro prospect.
One of the most celebrated
amateur boxers in U.S. history, Estrada completed his amateur career with
a
spectacular 261-14 record
(excluding international matches). Among his many noteworthy
accomplishments, Estrada
became the first boxer to win both the U.S. Nationals and U.S. Challenge
three
straight years (2001-03). The
first U.S. super heavyweight in history to win the Pan-American Games
(2003),
Estrada went unbeaten at the
2004 U.S. Olympic Team Trials.
However, the biggest guy on
the U.S. team disappointed in the Olympic Games. In a totally unexpected
performance, Estrada was
uncharacteristically lackluster and lost a chance for a medal by dropping
a
21-7 decision to Cuba's
Michel Lopez Nunez in Athens.
Estrada weighed 228 pounds
when he beat Nunez in the finals of the 2003 Pan Am Games. But, he tipped
the scales at 262 and fought
passively when they met at the Olympics. Estrada said he never pursued
Nunez because he figured he
would lose anyway and did not want to take any more punishment.
"If I am going to lose, I am
going to lose getting hit as little as possible," Estrada said. "This is
just one part
of my life. It is just the end
of this book. I will have to bring a new book out."
If Estrada's pro career was a
book, it would be a best seller. A terrific boxer with excellent hand
speed,
defense and smarts, Estrada
has not lost a minute of a round among 40 since turning pro on Dec. 10,
2004.
Estrada's lone pro victory
inside of the distance came in his second bout when he scored a
first-round TKO
over Jerry Simpson on
April 1, 2005, in New Haven, Conn. Since fighting to a no decision on Feb.
13, 2006,
Estrada has won two straight.
After hurling a 10-round shutout over Robert Wiggins on May 18,
2006,
Estrada fought to an
eight-round victory over Maurice Wheeler on Sept. 23, 2006.
"The best quality about me is
that I am smart in the ring and can change my style to adapt to whatever
style of fighter that I am
fighting," Estrada said. "I love the pro game.''
A tremendous boxer for his
size, Estrada is very adept without much of a punch. He routinely trains
with
middleweights and super
welterweights, and is almost always just as quick.
"People say my son cannot
punch, but look at the levels of the guys that he is fighting," Estrada's
father,
Roland, said. "Nobody at his
level is fighting these guys. Jason has a lot of speed. He makes guys miss
and takes advantage of that.
He has the talent, but most importantly, he is smart about what he does
and
how he takes care of himself.
He is willing to fight anyone."
Said the younger Estrada, who
has a son named Lennox and has sparred with former world champions
Hasim Rahman and
John Ruiz: "It is all about confidence. I am not afraid to fight
anybody. What does it
prove to beat guys that are
not that good? I want to prove myself to be the best."
Growing up in the projects of
Providence, Estrada began boxing at the age of 10 and immediately fell in
love
with what he calls the "thrill
of competition." Translated, it means he has been fighting for as long as
he can
remember.
"I had to fight to prove
myself day after day after day," Estrada said. "That is not me. I had to
defend myself.
But, I do not have to fight
anymore, though. Now, the word is out.''
Estrada expects to make it
four straight victories over Walker without much difficulty.
"This guy will come to me, so
I will probably knock him out," said Estrada, who also defeated Walker in
the
2002 National PAL
Championships and 2001 Everlast U.S. Challenge. "The last amateur fight
with Walker
was not even close. I think I
won by 10 points. This one will not be close either."
Blow-by-blow announcer Nick
Charles will call the action from ringside with expert analyst
Steve Farhood
at his side. 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. The
growing list of fighters who have appeared on ShoBox and advanced to
garner
world titles includes
Leonard Dorin, Scott Harrison, Juan Diaz, Jeff Lacy,
Ricky Hatton, Joan
Guzman, Juan Urango,
David Diaz (interim) and Robert Guerrero.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
highlights, etc...).
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