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Showtime Pay-Per-View
Boxing
Rahman vs. Barrett;
Garcia vs. Messi
Collazo vs. Gonzalez;
Mayorga vs. Piccirillo

August 13, 2005
The United Center
Chicago, Illinois
9pm ET / 6pm PT
On Showtime PPV
Line-up (not in fight order):
Interim WBC Heavyweight Title
Bout
Hasim "The Rock"
Rahman (40-5, 33 KOs) vs. Monte "Two Gunz" Barrett
(31-3, 17 KOs)
Interim WBA Super Welterweight
Title
Champion Alejandro "Terra"
Garcia (24-1, 23 KOs) vs. Luca "Bergamo Bomber"
Messi (28-5-1, 11 KOs)
WBA Welterweight Title Bout
Champion Luis Collazo
(25-1, 11 KOs) vs. Miguel Gonzalez (49-4-1, 39 KOs)
WBC Super Welterweight Title
Bout (vacant)
2nd ranked Ricardo Mayorga
(27-5-1, 23 KOs) vs. 3rd ranked Michele Piccirillo (44-2, 28
KOs)
Heavyweight Bout
Andrew Golota (38-6-1,
31 KOs) vs. Przemyslaw Saleta (42-6, 21 KOs)
Heavyweight Bout
Sergei Liakhovich
(22-1, 14 KOs) vs. Owen "What the Heck" Beck (24-1,
18 KOs)
______________________________________
CHICAGO - Promoter Don King
has scheduled another blockbuster card that will feature three world title
fights-and two additional
heavyweight matches with world title implications-on Aug. 13 at the United
Center
and on pay per view.
Former unified heavyweight
world champion and current World Boxing Council No. 1-ranked heavyweight
contender Hasim "The
Rock" Rahman will face No. 2-ranked Monte "Two Gunz"
Barrett for the interim
WBC heavyweight crown; WBA
interim super welterweight champion Alejandro "Terra"
Garcia will take on
Luca "Bergamo Bomber"
Messi; World Boxing Association welterweight titlist Luis
Collazo will meet
former world champion
Miguel Angel Gonzalez; a special heavyweight attraction showcases
Andrew
"Powerful Pole"
Golota against Przemyslaw "Chemek" Saleta in what
has been dubbed the "Polish
Fight of the Century";
and another special heavyweight attraction pits world top-10 ranked
Sergei
Liakhovich opposing
Owen "What the Heck" Beck.
The necessity for an interim
heavyweight title match occurred after current WBC heavyweight champion
Vitali Klitschko
suffered an injury while training to face Rahman, which postponed their
scheduled April 30
meeting at Madison Square
Garden to June 18. The fight was then rescheduled for July 23, but
Klitschko
was forced to postpone the
match again and underwent back surgery on April 19.
With Klitschko's health in
question, the possibility exists that the winner of Rahman vs. Barrett
will not only
become the interim WBC
champion but could become outright champion if Klitschko is unable to
return to
the ring in the near future.
"If Vitali will not or cannot
fight me, I'm happy to fight Monte Barrett for the interim title,"
Rahman said. "I'll
beat Monte and then it's up to
Vitali whether he wants to surrender his title to me in or out of the
ring."
Rahman, (40-5, 33 KOs) from
Baltimore, Md., now living and training in Las Vegas, reached the pinnacle
of
his career when he shocked
unified world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis and the world on
April 22,
2001, with a fifth-round
knockout punch in Carnival City, South Africa.
The newly crowned WBC and
International Boxing Federation titlist was contractually obligated to
give Lewis
an immediate rematch, which
was held at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas on Nov. 17, 2001. Rahman deviated
from the game plan that had
served him so well in South Africa months earlier, and Lewis went on to
win the
fight by way of knockout in
round four.
Rahman went on to face
Evander Holyfield, David Tua and John Ruiz with mixed
results. Long
considered to be the most
physically gifted athlete in the heavyweight division, Rahman, 32,
recently re-
dedicated himself to the
sport. In his last appearance he weighed in, for the first time since he
defeated
Lewis, at a trim 232 pounds.
The result was a fourth-round technical knockout over Australian Kali
"Checkmate" Meehan
on Nov. 13 at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Barrett, (31-3, 17 KOs) from
Queens, N.Y., arrives at his first world title appearance coming off
impressive
back-to-back wins over
previously undefeated foes, both of whom were 24-0 before facing Barrett.
He won a
decision over Dominick
Guinn in Hot Springs, Ark., on March 27, 2004, and scored a
ninth-round technical
knockout over Owen "What
the Heck" Beck on Feb. 5 in St. Louis.
Barrett, 34, is also a
seasoned veteran like Rahman whose only losses have come against top-notch
contenders Lance "Mount"
Whitaker (split decision, 1999), Wladimir Klitschko (KO,
2000) and "Baby
Joe" Mesi
(majority decision, 2003).
In a wide open heavyweight
division, one of the more intriguing aspects of this fight is Barrett and
Rahman
both possess the dangerous
combination of skill and experience that could enable either to emerge as
the
next great heavyweight world
champion.
WBA Super Welterweight
Championship: Alejandro "Terra" Garcia vs. Luca "Bergamo Bomber" Messi
WBA interim super welterweight
champion Garcia will defend his title against Italian native Messi.
Garcia,
(24-1, 23 KOs) from Tijuana,
Mexico, won the interim title in Chicago on May 21 in a terrific fight,
his second
meeting with Roshii "The
Mongoose" Wells.
The heavy-handed Garcia decked
Wells in round eight and disposed of his game foe by way of technical
knockout near the end of round
nine.
Messi, (28-5-1, 11 KOs) from
Bergamo, is currently the Italian 154-pound champion and held the WBA
International welterweight
title in 2002. This will be the biggest fight of his career, his first
appearance in
America, and only his second
appearance outside of Italy.
WBA Welterweight Championship:
Luis Collazo vs. Miguel Angel Gonzalez
WBA welterweight champion
Collazo (Zab Judah has been anointed a WBA Super Champion) will defend his
title against former WBC
lightweight champion Gonzalez.
Collazo made the fateful
decision to take his first world title fight on three weeks' notice when
WBA
welterweight champion Jose
Antonio Rivera's opponent scratched just before their scheduled
meeting on
April 2.
If that weren't daunting
enough for Collazo (25-1, 11 KOs), a proud Puerto Rican from Queens, N.Y.,
the fight
took place in Rivera's
hometown of Worcester, Mass. The brave challenger battled Rivera for the
full 12
rounds, always seeming to give
more than he took, and was rewarded with a split-decision victory and his
first world title.
Gonzalez (49-4-1, 39 KOs) is a
Mexican legend who has battled many greats during his career including
Julio Cesar Chavez, "The
Golden Boy" Oscar De La Hoya, Kostya Tszyu and Cory
Spinks.
Special Heavyweight Attraction
"Polish Fight of the Century": Andrew "Powerful Pole" Golota vs.
Przemyslaw "Chemek" Saleta
Golota vs. Saleta is a Polish super-fight that had been planned to take
place twice previously only to be
delayed until now. The two
great Polish heavyweights were close to finalizing a deal in 1999, but
Golota
chose to face Michael Grant
instead. Similarly, Golota had been in discussions to face Saleta the
following
year but opted to face "Iron"
Mike Tyson.
Saleta, (42-6, 21 KOs) from
Warsaw, Poland, has long fought in the shadow of his more famous
countryman
Golota; however, Saleta was
the first Polish fighter to turn professional in 1991. He had been a
national,
European and world kickboxing
champion as both an amateur and professional, who turned to boxing
"because I had achieved
everything there was to achieve in the sport," Saleta said.
Saleta sparred with Golota in
the late 1980s, but the two fighters have followed completely different
paths
since then both in and out of
the ring. While Golota became an enigmatic introvert whose boxing skills
brought him to the top of the
heavyweight division, Saleta, with his movie star looks and endorsement
deals,
has become a media darling in
Poland who often graces the covers of female-appeal magazines.
"I have always wanted to prove
that I am a better fighter than Golota and as good as any fighter in the
world,"
Saleta said. "He's just had
better promoters. This will be the Polish Fight of the Century and Chicago
will be
a better place for this fight
than Warsaw.
"Golota has always talked
about me in the press and now he's going to have to face me in the ring. I
will do
the same thing Brewster did to
him."
Saleta lived in Florida and
trained under the legendary Angelo Dundee from 1992 to 1996. Saleta
became
the WBC International
cruiserweight champion in 1994 before moving to heavyweight the following
year.
Saleta's career highlight
occurred when he became the first and only Polish fighter to become
European
champion when he scored a
ninth-round technical knockout over then-undefeated Luan Krasniqi
in
Dortmund, Germany on July 20,
2002. (Krasniqi defeated Lance "Mount" Whitaker on
May 28 in a World
Boxing Organization
elimination bout, which puts him in line to face champion "Relentless"
Lamon
Brewster.)
Golota's last three fights have been for world heavyweight titles. He
fought IBF champion Chris Byrd to a
draw at Madison Square Garden
on April 17, 2004. After knocking down World Boxing Association
heavyweight champion John "The
Quietman" Ruiz twice in the second round at the Garden on Nov. 13
(and Ruiz had a point deducted
for hitting on the break in round four), he still suffered a decision
loss. Many
ringside observers felt Golota
had won both of these contests.
In his last appearance, Golota
(38-6-1, 31 KOs) faced WBO heavyweight champion "Relentless" Lamon
Brewster on May 21 at the
United Center and suffered a first-round technical knockout.
After having gone 24 rounds
with two world champions, Golota was let down after losing so quickly to
the
WBO champion.
"I feel unfulfilled after the
Brewster fight," Golota said. "Those 53 seconds is not who I am and what
boxer I
am. I don't want to leave the
sport this way. Knockouts are just part of boxing."
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 by Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
card
subject to change
(7/19/05)
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