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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Diego Corrales vs.
Joshua Clottey

April 7, 2007
The Shrine Mosque
Springfield, Missouri
9
PM ET/PT
Featured Bout:
Welterweight Bout (10 Rds)
Diego Corrales (40-4,
33 KOs) vs. Joshua Clottey (30-2, 1 NC, 20 KOs)
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Diego Corrales To Debut At
Welterweight Against Top-Five Contender Joshua Clottey
NEW YORK - Three-time world
champion Diego Corrales will move up two weight classes when he
returns
to SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING on Saturday, April 7, 2007, to take on world-ranked challenger
Joshua Clottey.
SHOWTIME will televise the
10-round welterweight bout at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast).
Gary
Shaw Productions will promote
the event from The Shrine Mosque in Springfield, Missouri.
While the change in weight
from 135 to 147 pounds is a considerable step for most boxers, Corrales
says it
was a natural progression for
him.
"I couldn't make the weight at
lightweight anymore," he said. "It took me three weeks to get under 142
pounds, and I was damn near
killing myself just to make weight. "One-forty-seven is a much more
natural
weight for me. This change is
going to be the best thing for me."
Corrales (40-4, 33 KOs) hopes
the combination of the weight change and replacing his revered trainer
Joe
Goossen, with whom he
won his title belts, for long-time friend and respected trainer Dickie
Wood will be
a recipe for success.
"I just want to get back to my
old boxing style and save the wear and tear on my body, and I think Dickie
can get me back to that," said
Corrales, who worked with Wood as an amateur. "Training is going
fantastic.
I am very, very strong right
now."
Having won the International
Boxing Federation (IBF) junior lightweight crown early in his career,
Corrales
became one of the world's top
fighters at 135 pounds. The former World Boxing Council (WBC) and World
Boxing Organization (WBO)
lightweight world champion perhaps will best be remembered for his series
of
scintillating battles against
Jose Luis Castillo and Joel Casamayor.
The first meeting between
Corrales and Castillo (May 7, 2005, on SHOWTIME) was one of the most
sensational fights in boxing
history. Corrales, who entered the ring as the WBO 135-pound champion,
came
from the absolute brink of
defeat to take Castillo's WBC crown.
Two powerful left hooks from
Castillo sent Corrales to the canvas twice in the 10th round. However, he
rallied
and caught Castillo on the
ropes with a series of unanswered punches, causing the referee to stop the
fight
at 2:06 in the 10th round.
Five months later on Oct. 8,
2005, Corrales lost the rematch on Showtime PPV. However, no titles were
at
stake because Castillo failed
to make weight before the fight.
In Corrales' three-fight
series against Casamayor, he was 1-2.
In their last fight (Oct. 7,
2006, on SHOWTIME), Corrales failed to make weight for his WBC title
defense
and dropped a 12-round split
decision to Casamayor. In their previous two meetings, Corrales registered
a
12-round split decision over
the hard-hitting southpaw on March 6, 2004, and was stopped in the sixth
round
on Oct. 4, 2003.
Corrales' hopes of earning
another title belt may lie in the hands of his new trainer. The former
world
champion claims that he had
some of the best fights with Wood, and hopes the change will get him back
to that elite form.
"What I ask of Diego is just
to stay focused and smart," Wood said. "I told him that one of our
philosophies
for this fight is more output,
less input. I want him to throw more punches and take less."
While this step up in weight
will not prove to be an easy task, Wood is ready for the challenge.
"I am going to make Corrales
as hard at 147 pounds as you can imagine," Wood said. "You won't even
know that he was a 135 pounder.
He is going to be as tough as nails."
The new and improved Corrales
will have some stiff opposition when he takes on Clottey (30-2, 1 NC, 20
KOs). The current WBO No. 4
welterweight contender is known as a devastating puncher with tremendous
determination.
In his last outing on Dec. 2,
2006, Clottey fought a thrilling match against WBO Welterweight Champion
Antonio Margarito on
SHOWTIME. The challenger dominated the early rounds with a series of
concurrent
left hooks and impressive
combinations. However, a fractured left hand suffered weeks earlier in
training
camp slowed his attack in the
later rounds. Clottey lost the crowd-pleasing bout on the scorecards
118-109
and 116-112 twice.
"If I hadn't broken my hand, I
would have beaten him and won that belt," said Clottey, who is now
rehabilitated. "I am ready to
beat Corrales so I can get another shot at a belt."
Clottey, of Bronx, N.Y., by
way of Accra, Ghana, is ready to get back on track and return to the ring.
Prior
to the setback against
Margarito, Clottey was undefeated in his previous 10 fights (10-0, one no
contest)
dating back to his only other
loss in November 1999.
A consensus top-10
welterweight fighter, Clottey suffered a hand injury while training two
weeks prior to the
Margarito fight. Always the
warrior, he decided to take the fight anyway.
"I was on a roll before the
injury, and I was never 100 percent for the fight against Margarito,"
Clottey said.
"I am ready now to prove on
April 7 that I can battle for a world title once again."
As opposed to others who fight
for strictly financial reasons, boxing is Clottey's life.
"I think about my boxing
career more than anybody else," Clottey said. "I just want to fight the
best. Even if
I am going to lose some, I
have to fight them."
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's
Steve Albert and Al Bernstein will call the action from
ringside
with Karyn Bryant
serving as special correspondent. The executive producer of the SHOWTIME
telecast
will be David Dinkins Jr.
with Bob Dunphy directing.
For information on SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING and "ShoBox: The New Generation" telecasts,
including complete fighter
bios and records, related stories and more, please go the SHOWTIME website
at
www.sho.com/boxing.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING
In March 1986, SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING was born when "Marvelous" Marvin Hagler
defeated John "The
Beast" Mugabi in a spectacular and unforgettable 11th-round
knockout in Las Vegas.
Since that time, the network
has aired some of the most historic and significant events in the sport
including
both Evander Holyfield-Mike
Tyson bouts.
Always at the forefront of
boxing, SHOWTIME has set itself apart by televising "great fights, no
rights" on
the first Saturday of every
month. SHOWTIME is the first network to regularly deliver live boxing in
High
Definition. In addition,
SHOWTIME continues to be a pioneer in sports television with a number of
interactive
features across multiple
platforms making SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecasts the most
enjoyable, immersive viewing
experience for the boxing audience.
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
Subject to change
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