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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Mormeck vs. Bell
Judah vs.
Baldomir

January 7, 2006
Location TBA
9 PM ET/PT
Line-up:
Undisputed Cruiserweight Title
Bout
WBA/WBC Champ Jean-Marc
Mormeck (31-2, 21 KOs) vs. IBF Champ O'Neil Bell
(25-1-1, 23 KOs)
WBC Welterweight Title Bout
Undisputed Champ Zab
Judah (34-2, 1 NC, 25 KOs) vs. Carlos Baldomir (41-9-6,
12 KOs)
____________________________________________________
Showtime Championship
Boxing
To Begin Its 20th Year of
World Class Fights
With World Championship
Doubleheader
NEW YORK - The first Saturday of every month belongs to SHOWTIME,
and 2006 promises to be no
different for America's No. 1
boxing network, now in its 20th year on the air.
Following a spectacular 2005,
the network that consistently offers fans the best match ups in boxing
begins
the New Year with an exciting
world championship doubleheader Saturday, Jan. 7, at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed
on the west coast). The
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING twinbill will be promoted by Don King
and
take place at a site to be
determined.
In the main event, two
reigning cruiserweight champions will collide when World Boxing
Council/World
Boxing Association (WBC/WBA)
champion Jean-Marc Mormeck faces his International Boxing
Federation
(IBF) counterpart, O'Neil
"Supernova" Bell, in a world title unification bout. And one
of the world's best
pound-for-pound boxers,
undisputed welterweight champion Zab "Super" Judah
will defend his WBC 147-
pound crown against mandatory
challenger and No. 1 contender, Carlos Baldomir, in the co-feature.
The Mormeck-Bell bout is the
division's third enthralling match-up in nine months on SHOWTIME. On April
2,
2005, Mormeck retained his WBA
title and captured the WBC belt with an impressive 12-round unanimous
decision over defending WBC
titlist Wayne Braithwaite. By winning the first world title
unification bout
since 1988, Mormeck became
France's first boxer in any weight division to become a unified world
champion. The other division
showdown again featured Braithwaite, this time in a dramatic 4th round TKO
over Guillermo Jones (Gund
Arena, Cleveland, Ohio - Sept. 3).
The winner of Mormeck-Bell
will become the division's first undisputed champion since Evander
Holyfield
defeated Carlos DeLeon
in 1988 on SHOWTIME, and just the second since the division was created in
1980.
"My goal is to be the unified
cruiserweight champion," Mormeck said. "I want to fight the best so I can
prove
I belong with the sport's
elite champions. Bell is good, but I am better. I am very confident of
victory. I will
make Bell regret he ever
signed a contract to fight me."
Mormeck (31-2, 21 KOs), of
Rosny-sous-Bois, France, by way of Point-a-Pitre, Guadalupe, France, has
won
28 consecutive fights. By
upending defending champion Virgil Hill to capture the WBA title on
Feb. 23,
2002, Mormeck joined
Anaclet Wamba, Taoufik Belbouli and Fabrice Tiozzo as
the only boxers from
France to win a cruiserweight
world title.
In his last start, Mormeck
retained his WBA title a fourth time and won the first world cruiserweight
unification match since
Holyfield-DeLeon by outpointing the previously undefeated Braithwaite
116-110, 115-
111 and 114-112 in Worcester,
Mass. The strong, muscular Mormeck scored the bout's lone knockdown in
the seventh round with an
overhand right. Mormeck seemed to hurt the smaller, quicker Braithwaite
with
every punch he landed.
"I asked for the fight against
Braithwaite because I always knew I was stronger than him, just like I
know I
will be stronger than Bell,"
said Mormeck, who has not lost since June 1997. "That was a very important
victory, but I was not
surprised I handled Braithwaite so easily.
"I have always been famous in
France, so there was just a little change there for me after winning. But
to win
on such a national stage as
SHOWIME was great. It got me more recognition in the United States. I hope
to
live in the States one of
these days."
Bell (25-1-1, 23 KOs), of
Atlanta, by way of Montego Bay, Jamaica, has not been defeated since April
1998
and is unbeaten in his last 25
starts (24-0-1). This will be the second defense of the then-vacant IBF
title he
won with a 12-round decision
over Dale Brown by the scores of 117-111, 116-112 and 115-113 on
May 20,
2005, in Hollywood, Fla.
In his lone defense and last
outing, the hard-punching Bell rang up Sebastian Rothman, knocking
him out
in the 11th round of what had
been a very tight fight on Aug. 26 in Hollywood, Fla.
"I spoke to Jean-Marc in
France by phone and told him he can bid adieu to his titles," Bell said. "Mormeck
needs to be ready to face the
most devastating fighter in the sport.
"This fight is going to be a
banger. Mormeck had better be ready. I feel blessed and honored to get
such an
opportunity. It has been a
long-time coming, a life-long, childhood dream of mine to fight in a
unification world
title fight. I always wanted
to fight for a world title, but this is the ultimate.
"This is just the kind of
match-up that will bring notoriety to the cruiserweight division, and
especially to the
winner. Boxing has always been
about challenges and fighting the dangerous guys. I am ready to fight
Mormeck now."
Bell has the most unusual
training schedule in perhaps the history of boxing. Each day, the IBF
champion
does what he wants, when he
wants, and that includes jogging, swimming, meditation and "intense
sparring
and intense body work."
"After I sign to fight," Bell
said, "I begin purifying my system by ridding myself of all toxins,
including negative
influences. Everything I do is
predicated on maximizing my intensity. If I am too intense, I might get
caught
with a shot from my opponent
because I am too tight. If I lack intensity, I am also putting myself at
risk of
making a mistake that could
cost me.
Bell is no longer nicknamed
"Give Him Hell." "I changed before my last fight," he said. "I did some
research
and there was nothing good
about the word 'hell,' so I totally disassociated myself from it."
Judah (34-2, 1 NC, 25 KOs), of
Brooklyn, N.Y., stamped himself as one of boxing's most talented fighters
when he captured the world's
undisputed 147-pound championship with a ninth-round TKO over defending
champion Cory Spinks on
Feb. 5, 2005, in St. Louis.
Before 22,370 fans and
millions more watching on SHOWTIME, Judah ruined the homecoming of Spinks
and
turned the tables on the
defending titleholder with perhaps a career-best outing. He dropped Spinks
with a
big left hand at around the
two-minute mark of the ninth round. A groggy Spinks got to his feet to
beat the
count, but Judah continued to
land punches and the referee stopped the bout at 2:49. After eight
completed
rounds of a grudge rematch
between the world-class, major league southpaws, Judah was ahead by the
scores 79-73, 77-75 and 78
apiece.
A former two-time world
champion at 140 pounds, Judah retained his undisputed title in his last
start when
he scored three knockdowns en
route to registering an easy third-round TKO over Cosme Rivera on
May
14, 2005, in Las Vegas.
Judah, who won the WBO junior
welterweight crown with a 12-round decision over DeMarcus Corley on
July
12, 2003, captured the vacant
IBF crown with a fourth-round knockout over Jan Bergman on Feb. 12,
2000.
After five successful
defenses, he suffered his first defeat and lost his IBF crown when
Kostya Tszyu
captured the undisputed
140-pound crown with a second-round TKO on Nov. 3, 2001, on SHOWTIME.
"I do not know a whole lot
about Baldomir except that he is from Argentina and he did what he had to
do to
earn the mandatory shot,"
Judah said. "So, I respect him for that. I know enough not to take these
kinds of
guys lightly. Mandatory
challenges are always good fights.
"Everybody knows me. They know
I want the biggest fights against the so-called biggest names. But no one
has the courage to sign the
contract."
Baldomir (41-9-6, 12 KOs), of
Los Angeles, by way of Santa Fe, Argentina, is much better than his record
indicates. After going 24-9-4
during the first six years of his career, Baldomir has gone 17-0-2 since.
A winner of five in a row,
Baldomir earned the right to challenge Judah by taking a unanimous
12-round
decision (116-112 twice and
116-113) over Miguel Angel Rodriguez in a WBC elimination bout on
May 21,
2005, in Chicago.
"The turning point in my
career came when I won the WBC International welterweight title in 1999,"
Baldomir
said. "Winning that fight gave
me the confidence that I needed. After that, I totally rededicated myself
to
being the best I could be.
That is when I decided that I wanted to become a world champion."
Baldomir was born in the same
hometown as legendary middleweight champion, Carlos Monzon, and his
famed trainer, Amilcar
Brusa.
"Monzon was a hero where we
lived, and all the young boys wanted to grow up like him," Baldomir said.
"I
was no different. It was all
because of Monzon that any of us started to box."
Baldomir, who also is trained
by Brusa, says his dream will come true on Jan. 7.
"This is better than a
Cinderella story," Baldomir said. "I have waited such a long time. There
have been so
many bumps along the way. But
now my time has come and I am ready. Everybody is in for a big surprise.
"I am going to beat Judah and
shock the world. It does not matter what Judah tries, I plan to go forward
and
do whatever it takes to win. I
have waited a lifetime for this. I hope Judah takes me lightly. It will
just make
my job easier."
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's
Steve Albert and Al Bernstein will call the action from
ringside
with Jim Gray serving
as roving reporter. The 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...)
(11/29/05)
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