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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Antonio Margarito vs.
Joshua Clottey
Miguel Cotto vs.
Carlos Quintana

December 2, 2006
Boardwalk Hall
Atlantic City, New Jersey
9 PM ET/PT
WBO Welterweight Title Bout
Champion Antonio Margarito
(33-4, 1 NC, 24 KOs) vs. 5th ranked Joshua Clottey (30-1, 1 NC, 20
KOs)
WBA Welterweight Title
Bout (vacant)
Miguel Cotto (27-0, 22
KOs) vs. Carlos Quintana (23-0, 18 KOs)
________________________________________________
Superstars Cotto And
Margarito To Headline
Final Showtime Championship
Boxing Telecast Of The Year
NEW YORK - In 2006, SHOWTIME continues to live up to its billing as
America's No. 1 Boxing Network
by televising the most
compelling championship fights on the first Saturday of every month. The
memorable
20th anniversary year of
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING will conclude in sensational style on
Saturday, Dec. 2, with an
outstanding world championship doubleheader featuring two of boxing's most
dynamic performers, Miguel
Cotto and Antonio Margarito, live at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic
City (9 p.m.
ET/PT, delayed on the west
coast).
In the first of the two
co-featured main events on SHOWTIME, Margarito (33-4, 1 NC, 24 KOs), the
exciting,
hard-hitting, World Boxing
Organization (WBO) 147-pound champion will defend his crown against WBO
No.
5 contender Joshua Clottey
(30-1, 1 NC, 20 KOs).
The second championship bout
of the night will pit undefeated Cotto (27-0, 22 KOs) against fellow
undefeated Puerto Rican,
southpaw Carlos Quintana (23-0, 18 KOs), for the vacant World
Boxing
Association (WBA) welterweight
title.
Bob Arum's Top Rank, Inc., in
association with Northeast Promotions and Caesars Atlantic City, will
promote the twin bill.
A bonafide superstar in the
making, the popular, crowd-pleasing Cotto, of Caguas, Puerto Rico, was his
country's 2004 and '05 Fighter
of the Year.
After making six successful
defenses of his WBO 140-pound title, Cotto will step up in weight to vie
for the
147 pound belt recently
vacated by Ricky Hatton. Cotto retained his championship in his
last start when
he recorded a scintillating
12-round unanimous decision over Paul Malignaggi on June 10, 2006,
in New
York.
Regarded as the greatest
amateur boxer from Puerto Rico, Cotto was national champion at 132 pounds
for
four consecutive years
(1997-2000) and represented his homeland at the 2000 Olympic Games at 139
pounds. In his first bout in
Sydney, Australia, he lost a 17-7 decision to Uzbekistan's Muhammad
Abdullaev, who went on
to win the gold medal. Cotto got his revenge when he defeated dominated
Abdullaev in June 2005.
On Sept. 11, 2004, Cotto
scored a sixth-round TKO over Kelson Pinto to capture the WBO belt
in Hato
Rey, Puerto Rico. Pinto had
twice beaten Cotto as an amateur, but Cotto staggered his foe in the first
and
scored a knockdown a round
later. After dropping Pinto in the fifth, Cotto recorded another knockdown
in
the sixth. Pinto's corner
threw in the towel to stop the fight at 2:28.
In his third WBO title
defense, Cotto retained his crown with a ninth-round TKO over Abdullaev on
June 11,
2005. On the eve of the Puerto
Rican Day Parade before a raucous, predominantly Puerto Rican crowd that
chanted Miguel's name
throughout, Cotto outclassed the challenger and caused his right eye to
completely
shut. The referee stopped the
fight at 0:57 of the ninth round.
The next day, Cotto rode in
the annual parade down 5th Avenue in New York City.
Cotto almost had his parade
rained on by Ricardo Torres. In one of 2005's most exciting fights,
Cotto
scored a sensational
seventh-round knockout over the previously unbeaten WBO No. 1 contender on
Sept.
24 in Atlantic City.
In yet another dominating
performance, on March 4, 2006, Cotto scored an eighth-round TKO over
Gianluca
Branco (36-1-1 going
in) in Bayamon, Puerto Rico. Before a capacity crowd that chanted his name
even
during the undercard bouts,
Cotto masterfully worked Branco up and down his body. In the eighth, Cotto
landed a left hook to Branco's
right shoulder. Branco grabbed his shoulder in pain and turned away from
the
action. The referee stopped
the fight at 0:49.
Cotto has fought a number of
former world champions, including Cesar Bazan, Demetrio Ceballos,
Carlos Maussa,
Randall Bailey and DeMarcus "Chop Chop'' Corley.
He impressively knocked out
Bailey and Corley in his
initial two title defenses.
A lifelong resident of Moca,
Puerto Rico, Quintana is one of eight children. The
five-foot-nine-and-one-half
inch boxer-puncher started to
fight when he was 14 and went 46-4 in the amateurs before making his pro
debut on June 14, 1997. All
the while, Quintana played a lot of basketball. However, he gave up hoops
after
breaking two hands in 2001
that caused him to be inactive for eight months.
Quintana, who will turn 30
less than one month before the Dec. 2 telecast, bolted onto the boxing
scene in
his last start. In a WBA
welterweight elimination bout on June 24, 2006, the undefeated brawler
outclasssed
Colombian phenom Joel Julio
and registered a 12-round unanimous decision (118-110, 117-111 and 115-
112). Quintana neutralized the
strength of the power-punching Julio and rallied from a first-round
knockdown
to win.
Against Cotto, Quintana will
have his first shot at a world title.
Quintana has victories over
other capable fighters, including a third-round knockout on March 5, 2004,
over
Edwin Cassiani, the
Colombian known for knocking out former world champion Luis Collazo.
Until Julio, Quintana's best
performance was a fourth-round demolition of two-time Turkish Olympic
representative Nurhan
Suleymanoglu on Feb. 25, 2005. Quintana rocked Suleymanoglu several
times in
the fourth and scored a
knockdown with a straight left hand. The referee stopped matters at 2:33.
Another impressive result came
when Quintana captured the WBO Latino belt on Feb. 24, 2006, by scoring
a 10th-round TKO over
Argentina's Raul Bejarano.
Regarding his upcoming bout
against Cotto, Quintana says, "I hope that people from our country don't
see
the fight in a bad light
because two Puerto Ricans are fighting, and that everyone sees it from the
point of
view that the title remains in
Puerto Rico."
Margarito, of Tijuana, Mexico,
by way of Torrance, Calif., will make his seventh WBO title defense.
Arguably
the most avoided boxer in the
game today, the five-foot-11-inch, 28 year old is 7-1 with one no-contest
in
world title fights. He is
co-managed by Francisco Espinoza and Sergio Diaz Jr. and
trained by Javier
Capetillo.
In his last start, Margarito
knocked out Manuel Gomez in the first round on Feb. 18, 2006, in
Las Vegas. It
was in his outing before last,
however, that Margarito stamped himself as not only one of the world's
premiere 147-pounders, but one
of boxing's best pound-for-pound.
Margarito's defense against
previously unbeaten Kermit Cintron on April 23, 2005, in Las Vegas
was a
highly anticipated affair that
figured to be a physical "Fight of the Year" candidate. Instead, the
defending
champion turned it into a
one-sided, fifth-round TKO.
"It (the result) wasn't a
surprise at all," said Margarito. "Cintron's a strong kid, but he had not
fought anyone
even close to the level that I
have fought. I was so sure of myself. I knew how it would work out."
After turning pro at age 15,
Margarito compiled a 9-3 record at the outset of his career. However,
since
October 1996, the reigning WBO
champion has gone 24-1 with one no contest. The one loss during the past
10 years occurred when he
moved up in weight to 154 pounds and challenged WBO junior middleweight
champion Daniel Santos
in September 2004.
Margarito rallied in the late
rounds against Santos, but was cut badly over his right eye in the sixth
by a
clash of heads. Even though
the challenger fought hard for the remainder of the fight, the doctor
stopped
matters on the cut in the
early seconds of the 10th round and went to the scorecards. Although many
ringsiders thought Margarito
deserved to win, the judges scored it 86-85, 87-84 for Santos and 86-85
for
Margarito.
In his third WBO title
defense, Margarito recorded a second-round TKO over previously unbeaten
Hercules
Kyvelos on Jan. 31,
2004. In the second round, the champion floored Kyvelos flat on his side
with a left
uppercut. Kyvelos got up, but
was unsteady and staggered backward into the ropes without a punch being
thrown. Margarito attacked and
the referee stopped the fight at 0:54.
On March 16, 2002, Margarito
captured the vacant WBO welterweight title with a 10th-round TKO over
Antonio Diaz. The fight
was evenly scored after six rounds, but Margarito swept rounds seven,
eight and
nine on two scorecards, and
gradually wore Diaz down. Margarito scored a knockdown in the 10th round
with a series of uppercuts.
After Diaz got up, Margarito rocked him several more times, and Diaz'
corner
threw in the towel at 2:17.
After nine rounds, Margarito led 87-84 twice and 86-85.
Clottey, of Bronx, N.Y., via
Accra, Ghana, is 10-0 with one no-contest since suffering his lone defeat
in
November 1999. The WBC
Continental Americas super welterweight champion is a former NABC
welterweight champion, former
African welterweight champion and former Ghanian junior welterweight
champion.
In November 1999, Clottey
suffered his lone loss in a questionable 12th-round disqualification
against
Argentinian Carlos Baldomir.
Clottey was penalized two points in the 10th round for an intentional head
butt that cut Baldomir over
his left eye. The referee warned Clottey again for leading with his head
in the 11th
round, but Joshua pressed in
with his head down once more. He was disqualified at 2:30 for "continual
use
of the head." Clottey was
leading on the scorecards when he was DQ'd.
"They robbed me," Clottey
said. "I was winning all the scorecards. That was a big robbery."
After suffering his lone loss
to Carlos Baldomir in November 1999, Clottey has won 10 consecutive bouts
and vaulted into the top-10
rankings in three of the four major boxing organizations.
On Dec. 3, 2005, Clottey won
the WBC Continental Americas super welterweight title by scoring a
10-round
unanimous decision (100-90
twice and 100-89) over Marcos Primera.
A native of Accra, Ghana,
Joshua moved to New York in late 2003. During his amateur career, Clottey
compiled a 45-4 record and
reached the quarter-finals of the Commonwealth Games. Clottey is a member
of the Ga tribe, a tribe of
Ghanan warriors that includes Azumah Nelson, Ike Quartey,
Ben "Wonder"
Tackie, and many of the
country's other top boxers.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's
Steve Albert and Al Bernstein will call the action from
ringside
with Jim Gray serving
as roving reporter. The executive producer of the SHOWTIME telecast will
be David
Dinkins Jr. with Bob
Dunphy directing.
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
Subject to change
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(10/6/06)
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