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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Results
Samuel Peter vs.
James Toney

January 6, 2007
Seminole Hard Rock Hotel &
Casino
Hollywood, Florida
WBA Super
Welterweight Title Bout (12 Rds)
Travis
Simms (25-0, 19 KOs) wins by TKO at 2:00 of
the 9th rd over Jose Antonio Rivera (38-5-1, 24 KOs)
- Simms
regains title from Rivera.
WBC Heavyweight Title
Eliminator Bout (12 Rds)
Samuel Peter
(27-1, 22 KOs) wins a unanimous decision over James Toney (69-5-3, 43 KOs)
- Judges
scored the bout 118-110,
118-110, 119-108 for Peter.
_________________________________________
Two Dominating Performances
On A Hollywood Night
Peter Wins Explosive
Rematch by Clear Decision;
Simms Regains WBA Super
Welterweight Title
HOLLYWOOD, Fla.- A busier,
more precise and determined Samuel Peter showed up to Saturday
night's
World Boxing Council (WBC)-mandated
heavyweight rematch and that meant trouble for James Toney.
In a spectacular and brutal
battle of big men, Peter and Toney met at Hard Rock Live at the Seminole
Hard
Rock Hotel & Casino to
determine once and for all the No. 1-ranked, mandatory challenger to WBC
Champion Oleg Maskaev.
Peter won the unanimous decision by scores of 118-110 twice and 119-108.
In the co-feature, super
welterweight Travis Simms regained the World Boxing Association (WBA)
title in
devastating fashion with a
ninth round TKO of Jose Antonio Rivera.
The night was promoted by Duva
Boxing, Goossen Tutor Promotions, Warriors Boxing Promotions, and
Don King Productions and
televised live on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING. A star-studded,
capacity crowd filled the Hard
Rock Live, a 5,000 seat arena. Among those in attendance were Shaquille
O'Neal, model
and actress Anna Nicole Smith, wrestling and television star
Hulk Hogan, actor Mickey
Rourke and professional
fighters Bernard Hopkins, Cruiserweight World Champion O'Neil
Bell, Glen
Johnson, Steve
Cunningham and others. In a rare treat, fans in attendance and those
watching on
SHOWTIME listened as the Star
Spangled Banner was performed live by the late James Brown's band,
The Soul Generals.
As with their first match,
Peter-Toney 2 featured thunderous exchanges and nearly non-stop action.
In the first round, Peter
stunned Toney with an overhand right and the Nigerian followed up with a
flurry of
punches and caught Toney on
the back of the head, drawing an early warning from referee Jorge
Alonso.
In the second Peter sent Toney
to the canvas with a short jab that landed squarely on the chin of an
out-of-
balance Toney. It was the
first time Toney had been down in nearly 13 years and just the second time
in his
professional career. It was
clear from that point that Peter intended to carve out a clear and
decisive victory.
In the middle rounds, Toney
seemed to shake off the slow start and began landing patented counter left
hands and combinations. But
nothing seemed to hurt the bigger and more powerful Peter as he continued
to win round after round.
"Sam Peter just can't be hurt
by James Toney," said Al Bernstein in the telecast.
"Every time we see him, he
adds more to his arsenal," said Steve Albert. "Tonight, Peter has
the upper cut
and is working the jab very
effectively."
At the final bell, Peter
danced in a wide circle in celebration, knowing there was no chance he
would be
denied the points victory.
The first meeting between
Peter and Toney on Sept. 2, 2006 was another action-packed affair that
ended in
controversial split decision.
As a result, the WBC Board of Governors voted 21 to 10 on Sept. 26 in
favor of
an immediate re-match.
"I fought my best fight and I
thank God for this night," said Peter, who improves to 27-1, 22 KOs. "I
trained
very hard for four months for
this fight. I have never run in my life, but I ran hard for this fight.
"I am not the best in the
heavyweight division," a humble Peter told reporter Jim Gray in the
ring. "I am not
the best, but I will be. The
champions with the belts right now are the best. When I take the belt, I
will be
the best."
Toney, who drops to 69-6-3, 43
KOs, said that he'd continue to fight all comers. "I have done what no one
has ever done in boxing. With
Dan (Goossen, Toney's promoter), I will be back."
Rivera, in his first WBA super
welterweight title defense, was outclassed by Simms, a swift and strong
southpaw.
Both having grown up in New
England-Rivera of Worcester, Mass., and Simms of Norwalk, Conn.,-the
fighters had known each other
from the amateurs but had never met.
Simms was coming off a layoff
of more than two years and wasted no time in jumping on the champion.
In the second, Simms rocked
Rivera with a powerful straight left hand that bloodied Rivera's nose and
eventually lead to the fight's
first knockdown. When Rivera got up, Simms switched his stance to right-
handed in order to utilize his
effective left hook as he attempted to finish the fight early. But Rivera
showed
tremendous heart and weathered
a relentless attack.
As the fight wore on, Rivera
was troubled by the bloody nose and Simms' effective movement. Simms
utilized distance well and
kept the champion, an inside fighter, at bay.
In the ninth, another solid
left from Simms caught Rivera flush and he went down for the second time.
When
Rivera got up, referee
Frank Santore, Jr., warned him that he'd have to fight or it
would be over.
Rivera subsequently absorbed
five or six punishing blows to the head and Santore stopped the contest at
2:00 of the round.
"I knew he was tough," said
Simms. "We have a history from the amateur days. I relied on my speed and,
tonight, that left hook just
came to me."
Through eight rounds, the
three judges collectively gave just one round to Rivera.
"I persevered," said Simms of
his long layoff. "I stayed in the gym, worked hard. I was determined.
Don't ever
doubt my determination.
"I am looking at the top guys
now," said Simms, who at 35 years old is 25-0, 19 KOs. "Mayweather, De La
Hoya, Spinks."
The 33-year-old Rivera drops
to 38-5-1, 24 KOs and will return to his 'day job' as a court officer for
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's
Steve Albert and Al Bernstein called the action from ringside with
Jim Gray serving as roving
reporter and Karyn Bryant as special correspondent. The executive producer
of
the SHOWTIME telecast was
David Dinkins Jr. with Bob Dunphy directing.
For more information on
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING and "ShoBox: The New Generation"
including complete fighter
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- Post Fight Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
(1/7/07)
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