|
Showtime
Championship Boxing
Results
Mormeck vs. Bell
Judah vs.
Baldomir
Post Fight Release

January 7, 2006
Theatre At Madison Square
Garden
New York City, New York
Undisputed Cruiserweight Title
Bout (12 Rds)
O'Neil Bell
(26-1-1,24KOs) wins by knockout at 2:50 of the 10th rd over Jean-Marc
Mormeck (31-3,21KOs)
- Bell retains his IBF title
and wins the WBC & WBA titles from Mormeck
WBC Welterweight Title Bout
(12 Rds)
Carlos Baldomir (42-9-6,
12 KOs) wins a unanimous decision over Zab
Judah (34-3, 1 NC, 25 KOs) -
Judges scored the bout
115-112, 115-113 and 114-113 for Baldomir - Baldomir wins the WBC title
from
Judah
_____________________________________________________
Baldomir And Bell Steal The
Show
On A Showtime Championship
Doubleheader
From the Theatre At Madison
Square Garden in New York City
World Championship Twinbill Will Be Replayed
First Time On SHO Extreme Monday,
Jan. 9, At 11 PM ET/PT
NEW YORK (Jan. 7, 2006) -
Coming off a tremendous 2005, America's No. 1 Boxing Network picked up
right were it left off with an
incredibly exciting, action-packed world championship doubleheader
Saturday on
SHOWTIME.
Let the network's 20th
Anniversary Celebration of televising meaningful, competitive fights
begin!
Huge underdogs Carlos
Baldomir and O'Neil Bell got the year off to a rousing
start by registering major
upsets in the SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING co-features. In what in all likelihood will be the
2006
Upset of the Year, Baldomir
registered a close, unanimous 12-round decision over undisputed
welterweight
champion Zab Judah. In
what may turn out to be a leading candidate for 2006 Fight of the Year,
Bell
knocked out Jean-Marc
Mormeck in the 10th round to become the first undisputed cruiserweight
champion
of the world since 1988.
Not bad for starters, eh?
The thrilling world title
fights at The Theater At Madison Square Garden were promoted by Don King
Productions and aired at 9
p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast).
By defeating Judah, a
prohibitive favorite, Baldomir (42-9-6, 12 KOs), of Los Angeles, by way of
Santa Fe,
Argentina, not only spoiled
the homecoming of the Brooklyn-born Judah but destroyed the chances of
Judah
fighting Floyd Mayweather
later in the year. Baldomir took home the World Boxing Council (WBC) belt,
but he did not paying
sanctioning fees to the International Boxing Federation (IBF) or World
Boxing
Association (WBA) so those
belts are expected to become vacant.
It mattered little to the
gallant, albeit lightly regarded Argentine.
"I said before the fight that
this was going to be better than a Cinderella story, and it is," he said.
"This is a
dream come true. I am the new
Cinderella man.''
Dictating the pace throughout,
the aggressive Baldomir won by the scores of 115-112, 115-113 and 114-113
despite fighting the last half
of the fight with cuts over both eyes and on the bridge of his nose. It
was his
sixth consecutive victory and
upped his record in his last 20 starts to 18-0-2.
His biggest round may have
been the seventh when he connected with a right hand that badly shook and
staggered Judah.
"Judah never hurt me, but I
knew I was hurting him," Baldomir said.
Despite the crushing loss,
Judah (34-3, 1 NC, 25 KOs) offered no excuses.
"Baldomir is a good fighter,
and he put up a good fight. He took the fight to me," Judah said. "I am
not going
to make any excuses or argue
with the judges, but I will be back.''
Judah was making the second
defense of the undisputed 147-pound title he won with a ninth-round TKO
over
defending champion Cory
Spinks on Feb. 5, 2005, on SHOWTIME. In that one, the slick-boxing
southpaw
defeated Spinks before 22,370
fans in Spinks' hometown of St. Louis. On Saturday, Baldomir shocked
Judah in his hometown. So much
for homecourt advantage.
Bell (26-1-1, 24 KOs), of
Atlanta, by way of Montego Bay, Jamaica, flattened Mormeck at 2:50 into
the 10th
round. The IBF champion was
leading the WBC/WBA champion on two of the scorecards (87-84 and 86-84)
and behind on the other
(86-85) at the time of the stoppage. Bell, now unbeaten in his last 26
starts (25-0-1)
dating to April 1998, became
the division's first undisputed champion since Evander Holyfield
defeated
Carlos DeLeon in 1988 -
and just its second since the division's inception in 1980.
Mormeck (31-3, 21 KOs), of
Rosny-sous-Bois, France, by way of Point-a-Pitre, Guadalupe, France, had a
28-fight winning streak end.
Bell-Mormeck was a slugfest
from the outset. Each took turns clubbing each other with his best shots.
Mormeck was slightly ahead on
two of the scorecards and tied on the other after six rounds before Bell
edged ahead.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's
Steve Albert and Al Bernstein called the action from
ringside
with Jim Gray serving
as roving reporter. The producer of the SHOWTIME telecast was David
Dinkins Jr.
with Bob Dunphy
directing.
In addition to Monday night,
Saturday's fights also will be replayed in their entirety on SHOWTIME TOO
at
11 p.m. ET/PT on Tuesday, Jan.
10.
The next SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING telecast is Feb. 4 at El Paso, Tex. "In the War To Settle
The Score On Feb. 4," Diego
"Chico" Corrales (40-3, 33 KOs) and Jose Luis
Castillo (53-7, 47 KOs) will
collide in an eagerly awaited
rubber match to decide once and for all the No. 1 135-pounder on the
planet. It
will be their third meeting in
less than 10 months. In the 2005 Fight of the Year, Corrales won the epic
first
meeting when he dramatically
rallied from the brink of near-certain defeat to register a memorable
10th-round
TKO and capture the WBC
lightweight title on May 7. Castillo avenged the loss with a suddenly
shocking,
controversial fourth-round
knockout on Oct. 8. Corrales kept his title belts, however, as Castillo
failed to
make the 135-pound limit.
Rounding out the greatest
opening quarter (first three months of the year) in SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING history, SHOWTIME will
deliver a special 20th anniversary gift to fans on March 4 with the most
meaningful world title
unification fight of the decade when IBF super middleweight champion
Jeff "Left
Hook'' Lacy
(21-0, 1 ND, 17 KOs) squares off against World Boxing Organization (WBO)
titleholder Joe
Calzaghe (40-0, 31 KOs)
to determine the best in the 168-pound division. The Lacy-Calzaghe fight
comes
almost 20 years to the day of
the first SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecast when "Marvelous"
Marvin Hagler defeated
John "The Beast" Mugabi in a spectacular and
unforgettable 11th-round
knockout.
(1/07/06)
To The Top
|