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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Santos vs. Rivera
Beck vs. Liakhovich

September 3, 2005
Gund Arena
Cleveland, Ohio
9 PM ET/PT*
WBO Jr. Middleweight Title
Bout (12 Rds)
Champion Daniel Santos
(29-2-1, 20 KOs) vs. Jose Antonio Rivera (37-4-1, 24 KOs)
Heavyweight Bout (10 Rds)
Owen “What the Heck”
Beck (24-1, 18 KOs) vs. Sergei “The White Wolf”
Liakhovich (22-1, 14 KOs)
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Showtime Championship Boxing To Present
WBO Junior Middleweight Title Fight,
Important Heavyweight Showdown
NEW YORK – World Boxing Organization (WBO) Junior Middleweight
Champion Daniel Santos will seek
to extend his unbeaten streak
in world title bouts to 10 (with one no-contest) when he defends against
former
World Boxing Association (WBA)
welterweight champion Jose Antonio Rivera in the main event on
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING,
Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005, at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west
coast).
In a must-win fight for a pair
of talented, once-beaten heavyweights who aspire to box for a world title,
World
Boxing Council (WBC) No. 7/WBA
No. 9/International Boxing Federation (IBF) No. 12 contender Owen
“What the Heck” Beck
will face IBF No. 8 contender Sergei “The White Wolf”
Liakhovich in the 10-round
co-feature. Don King
Productions will promote the explosive doubleheader from Gund Arena in
Cleveland,
Ohio.
Santos (29-2-1, 20 KOs), of
Bayamon, Puerto Rico, will make his first start in nearly a year and fifth
defense
of the WBO 154-pound belt he
won with a come-from-behind 11th-round TKO over Luis Ramon “Yory
Boy”
Campas on March 16,
2002, in Las Vegas.
In his last outing on Sept.
11, 2004, Santos retained his title when he won a rematch against
Antonio
Margarito on a
ninth-round split technical decision in Hato Rey, Puerto Rico. The rough,
hard-fought, hotly
contested battle was stopped
due to a Margarito cut caused by Santos. The defending champion kept his
belt by the narrow margin of
87-85, 86-85 and 85-86. Their first fight, which SHOWTIME televised on
July 21,
2001, from Bayamon, occurred
when Santos was WBO welterweight champion. It ended in a no contest
after a clash of heads at 2:11
of the first round.
“Margarito is a great fighter
and that was a tough fight,” Santos said. “But I was better. There are a
lot of
great fights at 154 pounds. I
am willing to defend against anybody.”
Santos captured the WBO
147-pound crown by scoring an impressive fifth-round knockout over
Ahmed
Katejev in a rematch on
May 6, 2000, in Neuss, Germany. The previous Nov. 27 in Lubeck, Germany,
Santos was on the wrong end of
a controversial 12-round split decision.
Rivera (37-4-1, 24 KOs), of
Worcester, Mass., by way of Philadelphia, claimed the vacant WBA
welterweight
crown with a 12-round decision
over Michel Trabant on Sept. 13, 2003, in Berlin, Germany.
“It was an amazing feeling,”
said Rivera after winning by the scores of 116-111, 116-114 and 114-114.
“I still
get goose bumps thinking about
it. I remember training for that fight, and having tears coming out of my
eyes
while doing roadwork because I
was finally fighting for a world title. The whole plane ride home I was
like,
‘Wow, I did it.’
“Honestly, I never expected to
be fighting for the 154-pound title so soon. I had planned to defend my
welterweight title a few
times. But I sure appreciate this opportunity and plan to make the best of
it.’’
After winning the WBA belt,
Rivera did not defend his crown for one-and-one-half years. He was
inactive, but
not by choice. Rivera was
slated to meet Thomas Damgaard, but Damgaard lost his father and
did not
fight. Rivera was then matched
against Ricardo Mayorga, but Mayorga did not make weight.
Rivera was set to face
Damgaard again, this time on April 2, 2005, before the hometown fans in
Worcester.
But when the Dane pulled out
again, Brooklyn’s Luis Collazo stepped in as a late replacement. In
a major
upset, Collazo outpointed
Rivera by the scores 115-113 twice and 113-115 in a tremendous,
crowd-pleasing
slugfest that featured
numerous, non-stop exchanges round after round.
“I pushed the whole fight,”
Rivera said. “I do not know how Collazo got the split decision.”
Beck (24-1, 18 KOs), of
Nashville, Tenn. by way of Kingstown, Jamaica, will make his first start
since
suffering his lone defeat on a
ninth-round TKO to the more experienced Monte Barrett on Feb. 5,
2005, on
SHOWTIME. Beck fought hard in
the IBF eliminator and landed many solid shots. After going down in the
second round, he rallied to
perform exceedingly well to make the battle of top-10 fighters close.
However,
Beck began to falter down the
stretch and got floored twice in the ninth. The bout was stopped at 2:52.
“That fight was a great
learning experience,” Beck said. “I learned more in that one loss than in
my 24 wins
combined. I have worked harder
since that fight than I ever have worked before. This will be a good fight
with
Liakhovich, but I am ready to
go. I will be a legitimate force in the division.
“My goal and dream is still to
win the heavyweight championship of the world.”
Beck compiled a 73-5 amateur
record. A natural middleweight, he won the Caribbean Championship three
times and was the national
champion six times. He also captured the Central American & Caribbean
silver
medal and earned a bronze
medal at the Commonwealth Games in Malaysia as a super heavyweight in
1998. It was in Jamaica that
Beck picked up his nickname.
“‘What the Heck’ was mentioned
as a possible nickname, so my brothers and I took a vote and it won,”
Beck said. “It was not my
choice. I did not like the name. I did not think it was tough enough.”
Liakhovich (22-1, 14 KOs), of
Phoenix, Ariz., by way of Minsk, Byelorussia, will make his 2005 debut.
The
latest heavyweight from
Eastern Europe to make a strong impression on United States soil,
Liakhovich is
coming off of a 10-round
unanimous decision over Dominick Guinn on Dec. 3, 2004, in Atlantic
City, N.J. In
an impressive outing,
Liakhovich got off first, consistently outworked Guinn and triumphed by
the scores of
97-93 and 96-94 twice.
“I like being the underdog,”
said Liakhovich, a winner of six consecutive bouts. “If a fighter wants to
look past
me, fine, but there is no
looking past my fists once I am in the ring. Guinn was supposed to be too
good for
me, but I showed him.
“Beck is a big talker, but I
will silence him once and for all on Sept. 3.”
In one of his toughest tests,
Liakhovich captured the North American Boxing Association (NABA)
heavyweight title with a
hard-fought 12-round decision over previously undefeated Friday
Ahunanya on Nov.
17, 2001, in Las Vegas.
Tickets priced at $100, $50
and $25 are on sale at the Gund Arena ticket office (where there is no
service
fee), all TicketMaster
locations or online at
www.ticketmaster.com.
Fans also can charge tickets by phone
in Cleveland at (216) 241-2121
and in Akron at (330) 945-9400. For more information, log on to
www.GundArena.com
or call the Gund Arena event
information line at (216) 420-2200.
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 SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING and “ShoBox: The New
Generation” telecasts,
including complete fighter
bios and records, related stories and more, please go to the SHOWTIME
website
at
http://www.sho.com/boxing.
*
Taped Delayed on the West
Coast
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
(8/9/05)
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