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SHOBOX
on Showtime
"ShoBox" Super Middleweight Tournament
Rolls On With Semi-Final Bouts

October 6, 2006
Chumash Casino Resort
Santa Ynez, California
11pm ET/PT
Featured Bouts
Super Middleweight Tournament
Semi-Final Bout (10 Rds)
Henry Buchanan (14-0,
11 KOs) vs. Jean Paul Mendy (22-0, 12 KOs)
Super Middleweight Tournament
Semi-Final Bout (10 Rds)
LaFarrell Bunting
(16-1-1, 16 KOs) vs. Tony Hanshaw (20-0, 13 KOs)
__________________________________
"ShoBox" Super Middleweight Tournament
Rolls On With Semi-Final Bouts
NEW YORK - One match-up
features former roommates who used to spar together, while the other pits
undefeated fighters from
different sides of the globe. What all four fighters have in common,
however, is a
goal to reach the top of the
super middleweight division. That journey will continue when SHOWTIME
televises the semi-finals of
the "ShoBox: The New Generation" super middleweight tournament on Friday,
Oct. 6, as part of a FREE
PREVIEW WEEKEND.
The SHOWTIME broadcast from
the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, Calif., will open with American
Henry Buchanan (14-0,
11 KOs) of Capital Heights, Md., squaring off against France's Jean
Paul Mendy
(22-0, 12 KOs). The second
bout of the evening will pit LaFarrell Bunting (16-1-1, 16 KOs) of
Las Vegas,
Nev., against former sparring
partner Tony Hanshaw (20-0, 13 KOs) of Warren, Ohio.
The winners of the two 10-round bouts on SHOWTIME (11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed
on the west coast) will
advance to the Jan. 5, 2007,
final. The last man standing will walk away with the International Boxing
Organization (IBO) 168-pound
title and will be one big step closer to a top world ranking. Gary Shaw
Productions, LLC, is promoting
the event, which also offers two boxers from the original field of eight
the
rare opportunity to appear on
national television three times in only six months.
In first-round action on July
28, 2006, Mendy registered an opening-round TKO over Dallas Vargas
of
Toledo, Ohio, while Buchanan
slugged his way to a 10-round unanimous decision over Lucas Green-Arias
on SHOWTIME.
Making his third United States
start, Mendy stunned Vargas with a combination, then continued to land
seemingly every punch he threw
until the referee halted matters 1:45 after the opening bell.
"There was no way that I
expected to win that early, but I knew I hurt him and was not surprised
the referee
stopped it," said the southpaw
after his fifth victory inside of the distance in his last six outings. "I
was just
in there analyzing things when
I nailed him with a good body shot.''
The flashy Buchanan was too
quick and fast-handed for Green-Arias of Costa Rica. Much of the damage
inflicted came from his
injured right hand.
"I broke my hand in the first
round," said Buchanan, who won by the scores 98-92, 97-93 and 96-94. "I
ought with one hand and did
not give any excuses. I did not tell my trainer and finished the fight. I
am a lot
better now, and you will get
to see my power in the next fight against Mendy.''
One week later on Aug. 4,
2006, Hanshaw cruised to a 10-round unanimous decision shutout over
Esteban
Camou of Navojoa,
Mexico. In a battle of knockout specialists, late substitute Bunting
opened the
SHOWTIME telecast by scoring a
fifth-round TKO over Jose Luis Herrera of San Onofre, Colombia.
Favored by many insiders to
win the super middleweight tournament, Hanshaw recorded his second
consecutive victory by
decision and remained undefeated following a nearly two-year layoff. Each
of the
judges scored the contest
100-90.
Hanshaw sees no roadblocks en
route to capturing the IBO title in early January.
"I was over anxious and tried
to get Camou out of there," Hanshaw said. "I rushed it. I tried to get him
on the
ropes and set him up with
combinations. I needed the rounds because of my layoff, but now I am back.
I am
not worried about any fighter
in the tournament. I am in tip-top shape. This is my time."
Replacing the injured Sakio
Bika, Bunting took the fight on four day's notice and cancelled a
fishing trip
with his grandfather. The
decision turned out to be a good one as "Memphis Fairway" knocked out his
11th
consecutive opponent.
Following a barrage of more
than 20 unanswered punches against the ropes, referee Kenny Bayless
gave
Herrera a standing-eight count
and decided to stop the contest at 1:20 of the fifth round.
"I expected more out of
Herrera," Bunting said. "I was prepared to be versatile and use all my
abilities. I was
expecting more pressure. He
let me do whatever I wanted to. You cannot wait around for me. One big
shot
and I can get you up and out
of there. I was not sharp like I wanted to be, but when you get a stoppage
like
that, how much more can you
ask for?"
No stranger to one another,
Bunting and Hanshaw used to live together and spar in Mansfield, Ohio.
"I have not seen Bunting fight
in a while, but, in his last fight, he looked tough," Hanshaw said. "He is
a
tough guy, but I am tougher."
Bunting, on the other hand,
believes that his personal knowledge of Hanshaw's fighting style will help
land
him a spot in the finals.
"I already know how Hanshaw
fights, and nothing changed, so I am ready," Bunting said. "He will be
slick.
But, when I take his
advantages away, then what? I am just a much bigger puncher."
The following are thumbnail
biographies on the Oct. 6 "ShoBox" tournament participants:
Henry "Sugar Poo"
Buchanan (14-0, 11 KOs): Why Sugar Poo, you ask? Buchanan's mother
called him
"Poo" as a child. His former
trainer, Barry Hunter, put the "Sugar" on it, likening the young fighter
to
Sugar Ray Leonard and Sugar
Ray Robinson.
The aggressive-minded prospect
turned pro on March 27, 2004. He won his initial 10 starts by knockout
(each inside of six rounds,
and eight inside of three) before taking back-to-back eight-round
unanimous
decisions in July and November
of 2005.
The supremely confident
boxer-puncher displays impressive movement and hand speed. Buchanan
continues to impress industry
experts with his power, a good uppercut from the inside and an ability to
slip
punches. He prefers to enter
the ring to the sound of rap music, donning his trademark shades that give
him
the look of a superstar and
adorning trunks emblazoned with the word, "Poo."
___________
Jean Paul Mendy (22-0,
12 KOs): At 32 years old, Jean Paul Mendy is the oldest of the tournament
participants and a
five-and-one-half-year professional. The undefeated southpaw recently
relocated to Las
Vegas and will make his fourth
professional U.S. start on Oct. 6. Mendy turned pro on Dec. 22, 2000, in
his
current residence of Bondy,
France.
In February, 2002, Mendy
captured the French super middleweight belt with a 10-round majority
decision,
and has made four successful
title defenses. He has TKO'd five out of his last six opponents. Prior to
turning
pro, Mendy notched a 102-25
record and represented his homeland of France at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic
Games.
___________
LaFarrell Bunting
(16-1-1, 16 KOs): Has won 11 consecutive bouts by knockout. In his last
start before the
tournament, the
six-foot-one-inch, 25 year old registered a first-round knockout over
Carlos Bates to capture
the vacant International
Boxing Association (IBA) International light heavyweight title in San
Marcos, Texas,
on July 15, 2006.
The 1997 National Junior
Olympics champion at 165 pounds, Bunting, who will turn 26 five days
before his
semi-final showdown against
Hanshaw, started boxing at age 10 when his stepfather took him to a gym.
He
turned pro three days after
his 21st birthday on Oct. 4, 2001. Bunting boxed to a draw in his third
outing and
suffered his lone defeat in
his seventh.
___________
Tony Hanshaw (20-0, 13
KOs): Had more than 300 amateur bouts since he first stepped into the ring
for
the first time at age five. As
an amateur, Hanshaw registered impressive victories over some of today's
top
contenders, including Sechew
Powell, Kelly Pavlik and Sergio Mora. Hanshaw was introduced to boxing by
his late father, Henry
Russell, a professional light heavyweight, who died when he was
electrocuted by a
power line while trimming
trees on a landscaping job. "I thought about giving up," Hanshaw said. "My
dad
meant everything to me. I
could not imagine going back to my corner and him not being there."
Shortly after his father's
death, Hanshaw lost a decision loss to future world champion Jermain
Taylor in a
2000 U.S. Olympic team trials
box off at 156-pounds. As a result, Hanshaw was named as an alternate, but
chose to forego the Sydney
Games. As a pro, Hanshaw won his first five bouts inside of the distance,
and
fought nine times during his
first pro year. The Ohio native has won each of his 2006 starts and
stopped
three of his last five
opponents.
Blow-by-blow announcer Nick
Charles will call the action from ringside with expert analyst and
boxing
historian Steve Farhood
at his side. The executive producer of "ShoBox" is Gordon Hall with
Richard
Gaughan producing.
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights, etc...).
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(9/21/06)
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