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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Diego Corrales
vs. Joel Casamayor

October 7, 2006
Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino
Las Vegas, Nevada
9 PM ET/PT
WBC Lightweight Title
Bout
Champion Diego
Corrales (40-3, 33 KOs) vs. Joel Casamayor (33-3-1, 21
KOs)
IBF \ IBO Flyweight Title Bout
Champion Vic
Darchinyan (26-0, 21 KOs) vs. Glenn Donaire (16-2-1, 9
KOs).
________________________________________________
Heated Rivals Diego
Corrales And Joel Casamayor
To Square Off In Grudge
Match
Plus: Lord of the Flys, Vic
Darchinyan to Defend Title against Glenn Donaire in Co-Feature
NEW YORK - Two boxers with a
genuine disdain for each other will duke it out with bad intentions for a
third
time when Diego "Chico"
Corrales defends his World Boxing Council (WBC) and RING
lightweight titles
against former world champion
and longtime adversary, southpaw Joel "El Cepillo"
Casamayor, on
Saturday, Oct. 7, during a
Free Preview Weekend on SHOWTIME.
In the co-feature bout of a
world championship doubleheader that begins at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on
the
west coast), rising superstar
Vic "The Raging Bull" Darchinyan (26-0, 21 KOs) will
risk his International
Boxing
Federation/International Boxing Organization (IBF/IBO) flyweight crowns
and his undefeated record
against world-ranked Glenn
"The Filipino Bomber" Donaire (16-2-1, nine KOs).
Saturday's SHOWTIME BOXING
CHAMPIONSHIP telecast is the second night of fight cards airing on the
network during the Free
Preview Weekend that runs Friday, Oct. 6 through Monday, Oct. 9. On Oct.
6,
"ShoBox: The New Generation"
will air two semi-final bouts as the super middleweight tournament
continues
live at 11 p.m. ET/PT on
SHOWTIME (delayed on the west coast).
During the Free Preview
Weekend, entitled "Destination: SHOWTIME," the network will be available
to
viewers in more than 35
million homes across the country. In addition to boxing, viewers will have
the
opportunity to view some of
the hottest original series on premium television: Damon Wayans' "The
Underground," (Oct. 7 at 11
p.m.), "Dexter" (Oct. 8 at 10 p.m.), and "Weeds" (Oct. 8 at 9 p.m.); and
movies
including the television
premier of "Chappelle's Block Party" (Oct. 7 at 7 p.m.). SHOWTIME ON
DEMAND
will be offered free, where
available, during the preview weekend providing viewer controlled access
to these
programs and many more.
The rubber match of a hotly
contested series between Corrales and Casamayor will be promoted by Gary
Shaw Productions, LLC, and
take place at Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas.
Corrales (40-3, 33 KOs), of
Las Vegas, by way of Sacramento, is 7-1 in world title fights. Casamayor
(33-3-1, 21 KOs), of Miramar,
Fla., via Guantanamo, Cuba, is 5-3 (2-0 in interim bouts).
"This fight was one I knew we
could make," Shaw said. "Their first two fights were very exciting events,
so I
new that a rubber match would
be equally great. Plus, these guys do not like each other, so it makes for
even more intrigue."
The Corrales-Casamayor debate,
which stands at one victory apiece, dates back several years. In their
initial clash Oct. 4, 2003, on
SHOWTIME, Casamayor won a high-velocity showdown for the vacant
International Boxing
Association (IBA) 130-pound title with a disputed sixth-round TKO.
In a drama-filled brawl,
Corrales went down twice and Casamayor once before the contest was stopped
by
the ringside physician after
the sixth round due to heavy bleeding from cuts to Corrales' mouth and
lip.
Despite losing a point for a
foul, Casamayor was ahead on each of the judges' scorecards at the finish
of a
slugfest that drew cheers when
the boxers went at it and "boos" when it was stopped.
On March 6, 2004, Corrales won
the rematch and the vacant World Boxing Organization (WBO) and IBA
belts with a 12-round split
decision on SHOWTIME. Always regarded as a feared pure puncher, Corrales
fought a tactically brilliant
fight. In addition to being the aggressor, he showed that he could box
well from
the outside, and perform with
poise and patience. Casamayor spotted Corrales a big early lead, but
rallied
to register a knockdown in the
10th. It was too little, too late, however, as Corrales triumphed 115-112
twice
and 113-114.
"I want to punish this dude,"
said Corrales shortly after the grudge rubber match was made official. "I
want
Casamayor to be there for some
rounds so I can beat on him. I do not like the guy. I never have. He has a
big mouth and he likes to talk
a lot. I am going to make him pay a price for talking. I want to make him
hurt.
I am not here to play. I am
here to defend my titles and move on. I am looking to close this chapter.
I am
going to end his career.
"We have bad blood between us.
From the start, we got off on the wrong foot and stayed on that foot. We
are like oil and water. We do
not mix."
Said Casamayor, who called out
Corrales on television after his last fight: "People already know who the
real man is. But, if I have to
remind them, I will do it on Oct. 7. I am happy that Corrales finally gave
me the
rematch. I have been waiting a
long time. I am the stronger guy.
"Corrales has been in a lot of
ring wars. He is burnt. I just need to touch him on the chin and he will
go. He
has said a lot of bad things
about me; that I am not a good fighter, that I am not this, that I am not
that. Yes,
it is personal. He has brought
the hunger back in my heart."
Corrales will make his 2006
debut and first start since back-to-back classic scuffles with Jose
Luis Castillo
in 2005. In his historic first
bout against Castillo on SHOWTIME that would become a near-unanimous pick
for '05 Fight of the Year,
Corrales rallied dramatically from the brink of defeat to register a
10th-round TKO
on May 7 from Las Vegas and
unify the WBC and WBO titles.
Castillo won the brief, but
brutal sequel on Oct. 8, 2005, in Las Vegas by scoring a sudden
fourth-round
knockout. Despite losing the
rematch, Corrales came away with his world title belts because Castillo
failed
to make the 135-pound limit,
and one of his camp members was caught trying to tamper with the scale at
the weigh-in. Corrales has
since relinquished the WBO belt. Twice in 2006, Corrales and Castillo were
scheduled to collide, but
neither fight transpired.
In a brilliant performance,
Corrales captured the WBO belt with a 10th-round TKO over previously
unbeaten,
defending champion Acelino
Freitas (35-0, 31 KOs going in) Aug. 7, 2004, on SHOWTIME. After
falling way
behind after six rounds,
Corrales scored knockdowns in the eighth, ninth and 10th rounds to triumph
in an
eagerly anticipated match-up
of two of boxing's best and hardest hitters.
A two-time world champion at
130 pounds, Corrales won his first world title with a seventh-round TKO
over
defending IBF champion
Robert Garcia Oct. 23, 1999, on SHOWTIME.
After taking the IBF belt from
Garcia, Corrales lost a battle of unbeatens when WBC titleholder Floyd
Mayweather defeated him
on Jan. 20, 2001.
Corrales compiled an
outstanding 105-12 amateur record while capturing numerous titles,
including the 1991
National P.A.L. Championship
at 112 pounds and a bronze medal at the 1995 Pan Am Games in Argentina.
He turned pro at age 18 on
March 19, 1996.
Casamayor is perhaps the most
prolific amateur boxer in history (380-30). He won a gold medal as a
bantamweight at the 1992
Olympic Games and was a prohibitive favorite to repeat in 1996. Prior to
the
opening ceremonies, however,
he walked away from the Cuban compound in Guadalajara, Mexico, and left
a five-year-old daughter, a
girlfriend and his parents in Guantanamo.
"I never got to say goodbye,"
Casamayor said. "But, I wanted to be free. I have experienced a lot of
success
in boxing, but the greatest
feeling in my life was coming to America."
The cool and classy
boxer-puncher has had few missteps since turning pro on Sept. 20, 1996.
His three
losses, all on points, came in
world title fights. Two of the 12-round decisions were split.
Casamayor earned the interim
WBA 130-pound crown with a lopsided decision over Antonio Hernandez
on
June 19, 1999. In 2000,
Casamayor became the first U.S.-based Cuban defector to win a world title
when he
captured the WBA belt with a
fifth-round TKO over Jongkwon Baek. Casamayor made four successful
defenses before suffering his
first loss on a controversial split decision in a world title unification
bout to
then-WBO champ Freitas Jan.
12, 2002, on SHOWTIME.
Since the loss to Corrales in
the rematch, Casamayor has gone 3-1-1. The defeat came on a 12-round split
decision to then-WBC
lightweight champion Castillo on Dec. 4, 2004, in Las Vegas, on SHOWTIME.
In an
uncharacteristic meltdown,
Casamayor faltered down the stretch as Castillo swept the last three
rounds on
all the scorecards to win
117-111, 116-112 and 113-115.
The draw came in a bout many
felt Casamayor won against Almazbek Raiymkulov, a.k.a. "Kid
Diamond''
on June 11, 2005, in New York.
Casamayor scored a knockdown in the first round of the WBC eliminator.
Raiymkulov rallied, however,
to stagger Casamayor in the eighth, ninth and again in the closing seconds
of
the 12th stanzas. At the
finish, one judge had it 115-112 for Casamayor, another scored it 116-111
for Kid
Diamond, while the third
totaled it 114 apiece.
Casamayor has won each of his
2006 efforts inside of the distance, including a ninth-round TKO over
Lamont Pearson in his
most recent outing July 7 at Phoenix.
In the Oct. 7 co-feature, two
aggressive minded bangers will go head to head.
Darchinyan, of Sydney,
Australia, by way of Vanadvor, Armenia, has won his last two outings by
eighth-
round knockout. In his most
recent start, the forever-stalking offensive-minded slugger retained his
titles by
defeating Luis Maldonado
June 3, 2006, on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING. In his effort before that,
Darchinyan ousted Diosdado
Gabi on March 3, 2006, on "ShoBox."
A pint-sized powerhouse armed
with bone-crunching power in either mitt, Darchinyan is one of the hardest
pound-for-pound hitters in
boxing. The Lord of the Flys has won eight consecutive bouts by knockout.
He
will be defending his IBF belt
for the fifth time and his IBO title for a fourth time.
"My goal is and always has
been to unify the belts and to fight the best," said Darchinyan, who went
152-18
in the amateurs and
represented Armenia at the 2000 Olympic Games. He made the team as a
flyweight
and advanced to the
quarterfinals where he dropped a 15-8 decision to Bulat Jumadilov
of Kazakhstan.
Donaire, of San Leandro,
Calif., by way of General Santos City, Philippines, captured the North
American
Boxing Association (NABA) and
vacant North American Boxing Organization (NABO) 112-pound crowns in
his most recent outing with a
12-round unanimous decision over Cesar Lopez on May 5, 2006, on
"ShoBox." In a good scrap,
Donaire spotted Lopez an early lead before coming on strongly to triumph
117-110, 116-111 and 115-112.
"I am excited and I cannot
wait to become our country's lone world champion," Donaire said. "I also
want to
avenge the loss of my good
friend (Gabi) to Darchinyan."
The older brother of top
prospect Nonito Donaire, Glenn is an aggressive-minded, two-fisted
banger who
likes to get in close and
throw hard combinations to the head and body.
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.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING
celebrates 20 years of hard-hitting, explosive programming in 2006.
In March 1986, SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING was born when "Marvelous" Marvin Hagler
defeated John "The
Beast" Mugabi in a spectacular and unforgettable 11th-round
knockout in Las Vegas.
Since that time, the network
has aired some of the most historic and significant events in the sport
including
both Holyfield-Tyson bouts.
Always at the forefront of
boxing, SHOWTIME has set itself apart by telecasting "great fights, no
rights" on
the first Saturday of every
month. SHOWTIME is the first network to regularly deliver live boxing in
High
Definition. In addition,
SHOWTIME continues to be a pioneer in sports television with a number of
interactive
features across multiple
platforms making SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecasts the most
enjoyable, immersive viewing
experience for the boxing audience.
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
Subject to change
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(9/11/06)
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