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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Lacy
vs. Pemberton
Marquez vs. Mabuza

November 5, 2005
Caesars Tahoe
Lake Tahoe, Nevada
9 PM ET/PT
IBF \ IBO Super Middleweight Title Bout (12 Rds)
Champion Jeff "Left
Hook" Lacy (20-0, 16 KOs)
vs. Scott "The Sandman" Pemberton (29-3-1,
24 KOs)
IBF \ IBO Bantamweight Title Bout
(12 Rds)
Rafael Marquez
(34-3, 30 KOs) vs. Silence "African Spice" Mabuza (18-0,
15 KOs)
________________________________________________
Showtime Championship
Boxing To Present
IBF / IBO Super Middleweight
Championship. IBF Bantamweight Title
NEW YORK - The long and
winding path to superstardom is quickly approaching its zenith for
talented,
undefeated Jeff "Left
Hook" Lacy, who will defend his International Boxing Federation
(IBF) and
International Boxing
Organization (IBO) super middleweight titles against IBF No. 5 contender
Scott "The
Sandman" Pemberton
on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, at 9 p.m. ET/PT
(delayed on the west coast).
Gary Shaw Productions, LLC will promote the event from Caesars Tahoe in
Lake Tahoe, Nev.
In the co-feature, IBF
Bantamweight Champion Rafael Marquez will defend his belt for the
sixth time when
he takes on International
Boxing Organization (IBO) 118-pound Champion/IBF No. 1 contender, Silence
Mabuza. Originally scheduled
for Oct. 1, this title bout was postponed on Monday, Sept. 26, when
promoter
Gary Shaw reported that
Marquez became ill during fight week.
"I go into every fight with
the same mindset and that is to put on a good show and, most importantly,
to win,"
Lacy (20-0, 16 KOs), of St.
Petersburg, Fla., said. "For me, it is all about winning.''
One of the best and most
feared pound-for-pound fighters today, Lacy will make his 14th SHOWTIME
appearance and fourth defense
of the IBF belt he won with an impressive eighth-round TKO over Syd
Vanderpool Oct. 2,
2004, on SHOWTIME.
Most, including Lacy, thought
his next fight would be against fellow unbeaten Joe Calzaghe in a
world title
168-pound unification bout.
However, Calzaghe reportedly suffered a broken hand during his unanimous
decision win over Evans
Ashira on Sept. 10, putting that fight on hold.
"I am concentrating on
Pemberton and nobody else," Lacy said. "This is going to be a great fight.
There is
no way I will underestimate
him, or anybody who wants what I have. He is a really good fighter. We
both
fought Omar Sheika. He
stopped him. I did not. The fans are going to be treated to a tremendous
action
fight."
The first 2000 Olympian to
capture a world title, Lacy successfully defended his crown in smashing
fashion
in his last start and his
first before the hometown fans in Tampa/St. Petersburg, Fla. In perhaps a
career-
best performance, Lacy dropped
Reid twice in the fifth and once in the sixth and seventh rounds. He was
ahead, 70-57, on all the
scorecards at the time the bout was stopped.
In Lacy's other title
defenses, he registered a hard-fought 12-round unanimous decision over
Sheika (117-111
and 115-113 twice) on Dec. 2,
2004, and an exciting seventh-round TKO over Rubin Williams in a
fast-
paced, terrific skirmish on
March 5, 2005. Both bouts aired on SHOWTIME.
One of nine children, Lacy and
three of his siblings were raised in St. Petersburg by their father,
Hydra. A
former boxer, Hydra competed
in the 1968 U.S. Olympic Trials and went 13-4-1 in the pros. Jeff, who
went
209-12 in the amateurs
himself, won numerous competitions and made it to the second round of the
2000
Olympics.
Pemberton (29-3-1, 24 KOs), of
Fair Haven, Mass., will enter the ring as the International Boxing Union (IBU)
and North American Boxing
Federation (NABF) 168-pound titleholder. This will be his first appearance
in a
world title bout.
"I welcome a fight with Lacy,"
Pemberton said. "He is a warrior and I am a warrior. It will be great. I
have
been to two training camps
this year, one for a proposed third bout with Sheika earlier in the year
and one
recently for a proposed fight
with Danny Green. So, I know I am sharp and will be ready. I
personally do not
think Lacy has fought anyone
that can hit as hard as I can."
"This is not only a boxing
match, it is an event," said Pemberton's promoter, Jimmy Burchfield.
"We have
so much respect for the champ
for taking this because they could have taken an easier one. Pemberton is
the hottest puncher in boxing.
Lacy has never been in with anyone who can hit as hard. Styles make
fights,
and if they fight to their
full potential, it could be the fight of the year in 2005."
Pemberton captured the IBU
crown on March 21, 2003. The following July 25, he claimed the NABF belt
with
a 12-round split decision over
Sheika (scored 114-113 twice and 111-116). He followed that performance
with
a stunning 10th-round TKO of
Sheika in a rematch on Jan. 23, 2004. Both slugfests were "Fight of the
Year"
candidates.
"I do not go into a fight
thinking I am going to knock anyone out,'' Pemberton said. "I get into the
best shape
possible and do the best I
can. I never go looking for the knockout. I never thought I would knock
out
Sheika.''
A winner of five in a row,
including the last three by TKO, Pemberton will not be in with a total
stranger on
Nov. 5.
"I sparred with Lacy in Big
Bear, Calif., a few years ago," Pemberton said. "He is a great fighter and
a
dynamite guy. I like him, but
that will not affect the fight. You can be best friends, but when you step
into the
ring, it is all business.''
Before turning pro, Pemberton
was in the United States Army stationed in Fort Bragg, N.C. While serving,
he
was a stinger, a gunner, and
part of the 82nd airborne. Pemberton made his professional debut in
Providence, R.I., on Oct. 26,
1994, with a first-round TKO over Manuel Feliz.
Marquez (34-3, 30 KOs), of
Mexico City, Mexico, has successfully defended his title five times since
knocking out previously
undefeated champion Tim Austin in the eighth round on Feb. 23,
2002.
"I did not go for it early
because Austin hit me with some shots to the body that really hurt,"
Marquez said.
"My corner told me I had to
quit wasting time, so I just went for it all in the eighth.''
Marquez, whose brother,
Juan Manuel Marquez, is recognized as one of the most talented
featherweights
in the world, currently is
riding a 13-bout winning streak that dates to December 2000. During the
streak, he
has knocked out former world
champions Mark Johnson and Mauricio Pastrana.
In his most recent title
defense, Marquez cruised to a 12-round decision over Ricardo Vargas
on May 28,
2005, in Los Angeles. Marquez
floored his opponent in the fight's final minute to ensure the nod by the
scores 116-111 twice and
118-109.
"I am ready to go," Marquez
said. "I cannot wait to get in the ring and silence Silence Mabuza. He has
never
fought anybody of my caliber,
and on Nov. 5, I will give him a boxing lesson."
Mabuza (18-0, 15 KOs), of
Johannesburg, South Africa, captured the IBO bantamweight title in only
his 11th
professional bout by knocking
out Jose Sanjuanelo in the sixth round of their March 2, 2002, bout
in
Brakpan, South Africa.
Undefeated as a pro, Mabuza
successfully defended his title for a sixth time in his last bout by
recording a
12-round unanimous decision
over former world champion, Cruz Carbajal, on May 13, 2005, in Las
Vegas.
"Marquez is a talented boxer
with a distinguished ring record," Mabuza said. "Beating him will add more
value to my boxing career.
"I have tapes of Marquez' last
couple of fights and have been keeping tabs on him. He is a tough puncher
who has a tight defense, but I
feel I can take him out."
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 Jay
Larkin, with David
Dinkins, Jr. producing and Bob Dunphy directing.
For information on upcoming 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 http://www.sho.com/boxing.
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
(10/14/05)
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