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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Update
Eric Aiken
vs. Robert Guerrero
James Toney vs.
Samuel Peter

September 2, 2006
Staples Center
Los Angeles, California
10 PM ET/PT
Line-up:
IBF Featherweight Title Bout
Champion Eric Aiken
(16-4, 12 KOs) vs. Robert Guerrero (18-1-1, 11 KOs)
WBC Heavyweight Title
Eliminator Bout
James “Lights Out”
Toney (69-4-2, 43 KOs) vs. Samuel “The Nigerian
Nightmare” Peter (26-1, 22 KOs)
_______________________________________________________
Aiken-Guerrero To Fight For
IBF World Title At Staples Center
Featherweight World
Championship Is Co-Featured Bout
To WBC Heavyweight Showdown
- Toney vs. Peter
September 2, 2006, on
Showtime Championship Boxing, 10 p.m. ET/PT
LOS ANGELES - An already
spectacular night of boxing just got better!
International Boxing Federation (IBF) 126-pound champion Eric "Mighty
Mouse" Aiken (16-4, 12 KOs) will
put his title on the line when
he faces Robert "The Ghost" Guerrero (18-1-1, 11 KOs)
at STAPLES Center
Saturday, Sept. 2, 2006 on
SHOWTIME (10 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the west coast), it was announced
by co-promoter Dan Goossen.
The explosive match-up,
featuring two of the busiest and hardest hitting featherweights in the
business, will
open the SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING telecast before headliners James "Lights Out"
Toney
and Samuel "The
Nigerian Nightmare" Peter go toe-to-toe in what promises to be
an electrifying World
Boxing Council (WBC)
heavyweight elimination bout.
The 25-year-old Aiken is a
remarkable story. On March 13, 2006, his record dipped to an unimposing
14-4
when he dropped a decision to
a boxer with a 5-0 record (Johnnie Edwards) in Columbus, Ohio. But
the
amazing Aiken manufactured
major upsets in his two starts since.
In a bout in which he was
thought to be little more than a tune-up for Tim Austin, he scored
a sixth-round
TKO over the former world
bantamweight champion on April 1, 2006, in Cleveland. Then, six weeks
later, in
Boston, in a match he took on
short notice, he wrested the IBF title from the heavily favored
Valdemir
Pereira on a
disqualification.
The referee's decision to
disqualify Pereira (24-0 going in) wasn't a popular one with the fans, but
at the time
the highly entertaining fight
was stopped, Aiken had twice knocked down the defending champion and had a
three-point lead on one
scorecard; the fight was even on the other two. Three low blows by the
Brazilian, two
of which resulted in point
deductions, led to the DQ.
"Ghosts don't scare me," said
Aiken, of Marysville, Ohio who is aching to get Guerrero in the ring. "I
am
looking forward to defending
my title against Guerrero in front of his hometown fans. I plan on being
aggressive and fighting like a
champion and coming out with a victory."
The Pride of Gilroy, Calif.,
the popular Guerrero avenged his lone professional loss when he knocked
out
Gamaliel Diaz in the
sixth round on "ShoBox: The New Generation" on SHOWTIME on June 23, 2006.
"I wanted to prove that my
loss to Diaz (in our first fight) was a fluke, and I did," said Guerrero
after dumping
Diaz twice in the first and
once more in the sixth that ended matters at 2:33. "I put a hole in his
body and
broke him in half. I went out
and attacked. When I am focused, I am a hard man to conquer.
"My focus now is on Eric Aiken
and his IBF title belt. He may think he can hit a ghost, but I can absorb
anything he throws at me. The
punishment I can hand out is downright scary, and, as Diaz would tell you,
impossible to absorb. Aiken
doesn't stand a ghost of a chance."
Unusually tall and rangy for a
featherweight, the North American Boxing Federation (NABF) 126-pound
champion is known for
tremendous defense and speed. In his first outing after losing the
thrilling, action-
packed slugfest to Diaz that
wound up as one of 2005's most shocking upsets, Guerrero scored a
third-round
TKO over Sandro Marcos
on May 18, 2006, in San Jose, Calif.
"The Guerrero-Aiken
championship bout is a great fight to add at STAPLES Center and SHOWTIME,"
said
Goossen of Goossen Tutor,
which is promoting the scrap in association with Art Pellulo's Banner
Promotions. "Both Robert and
Eric possess aggressive styles and are among the hardest hitters in the
lighter weight divisions.
"They won't need a 20-foot
ring for this one. These guys could put on a great fight in a phone booth
with a
referee inside. 'The Ghost
Versus Mighty Mouse.' It should be a real treat for the fans at STAPLES
and
those watching on SHOWTIME."
The "No Risk, No Reward"
Toney-Peter WBC heavyweight title elimination bout will be promoted by
Goossen Tutor Promotions, Don
King Productions and Duva Boxing.
Tickets priced at $300, $150,
$75, and $50 are available at STAPLES CENTER box office or
www.Ticketmaster.com.
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, etc...)
Subject to change
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(8/8/06)
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