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Sensational Cage Fight Card On Saturday,
Nov. 10
At
American Bank Center Arena
Live on SHOWTIME, 10
p.m. ET/PT From Corpus Christi, Texas
Nick Diaz, KJ
Noons Fight For EliteXC 160-pound World Title;
From Street To Elite
-- Legendary Internet Fighter Kimbo Slice Makes EliteXC Debut;
Jake Shields Faces
Mike Pyle; The Doctor, Seth Kleinbeck Meets Kyle Noke,
“Big Foot’’
Silva Returns Versus Wiezorek In ‘Renegade’ On SHOWTIME

November 10, 2007
American Bank Center
Corpus Christi, Texas
LOS ANGELES (Nov. 6,
2007) -- The America Bank Center Arena in Corpus Christi, Tex., will rock
like it
never has before when Gary
Shaw Productions, LLC, presents “EliteXC: Renegade’’ this
Saturday, Nov.
10, on SHOWTIME (10 p.m.
ET/PT, delayed on the west coast).
“We’re all very excited about
doing our first show in Corpus Christi,’’ Shaw said. “I hope fans are
ready for
‘Renegade’ because this is
going to be a tremendous event.
“One great thing about EliteXC
fights is that you just can’t point to one corner or the other beforehand
and
say, ‘this guy is going to
win.’ My fighters know they all have to fight and they are all going to
have to fight
to win on Saturday.
“Texas fans in attendance and
those watching on SHOWTIME are in for a real exciting night of fights in
the
cage.’’
What will
be an emotional, memorable, hotly contested
main event will feature an EliteXC world
title fight in a
new weight class – 160 pounds
-- between talented, crowd-pleasing Nick Diaz (15-6) of Stockton, Calif.,
and
exciting, hard-hitting KJ
Noons (4-1) of San Diego.
In an eagerly awaited
match on the undercard, Kimbo Slice will make his EliteXC debut. A legendary
underground
bare-knuckle fighter, Kimbo became an overnight pop-culture sensation when
his fighting videos
were posted
on various video sites throughout the Internet. His videos have been
downloaded in excess of 10
million
times – and counting -- on YouTube.
Kimbo (1-0), of
Miami, Fla., will be opposed by Bo “Redrum’’ Cantrell (10-10) of Citrus
Heights, Calif. (10-10).
Cantrell is a
replacement for Mike Bourke, who broke his clavicle during training and
withdrew. In March
2006, Cantrell
scored a 1:05, first-round TKO over Bourke.
“What I really
love about Kimbo is his work ethic and his attitude,’’ Shaw said. “He has
the mentality of a real
fighter. He
doesn’t care who he fights. He doesn’t care about weight, height, if
they’re southpaw or orthodox,
he’s here to
fight.
“I do believe
Kimbo has the ability to be the heavyweight world champion in boxing, as I
do believe he has
the ability under
(trainer) Bas (Rutten) to be the world champion in MMA in probably several
weight classes.’’
A compelling co-feature
Saturday will match a Cesar Gracie
Jiu-Jitsu against an Xtreme Couture fighter
when
streaking, world-ranked
welterweight, Jake Shields (19-4-1), of San Francisco, faces the
always-dangerous
Mike “Quicksand” Pyle
(14-4-1), of Dresden, Tenn.
Shields is trained by Gracie;
Pyle is coached by Couture.
In other
SHOWTIME-televised fights, Kyle “KO’’ Noke (13-3-1), the bodyguard of the
late “Crocodile Hunter’’
Steve Irwin, will make
his EliteXC debut in a 185-pound fight against “Doctor” Seth “Mass
Destruction’’
Kleinbeck (8-3) of
Ozark, Ark., and Brazil’s
Antonio “Big Foot’’ Silva (8-1) returns to
the cage for the first time
in nine
months against Jonathan Wiezorek (11-1).
Saturday’s scheduled
non-televised, undercard fights that will be available on ProElite.com the
week of Nov.
12 include: Geoff Bumstead
(2-1) of Corpus Christi vs. Robert Ruiz (1-0) of Corpus Christi, at 265
pounds;
Yves Edwards (29-13-1) of
Woodlands, Tex., vs. Nick Gonzalez (13-5) of Austin, Tex., at 160 pounds;
Jon
Kirk (10-1) of Houston vs.
Matt Lucas (7-0) at 185 pounds; Ralph Kelly (6-1) of San Antonio vs. Brett
Rogers
(5-0) at 265 pounds; and Jae
Sok Lim (7-2) vs. Lane Yarbrough (6-4) of Huntsville, Tex., at 170 pounds.
With the exception of
Diaz-Noon, which is scheduled for five, 5-minute rounds, the fights are
three, 5-minute
rounds. The event will begin
at 7 p.m. CT. Doors open at 6 o’clock.
Tickets in all price
ranges, starting at $25, are available
at the American Bank Center Box Office and
all
TicketMaster locations. They also may be obtained at
www.ticketmaster.com
or by calling (361) 881-8499.
Any ticket buyer may
purchase a $50 VIP
Package Upgrade, which includes VIP parking and post-fight
party at
the American Bank Center.
The talented,
well-schooled Diaz
(nickdiaz.proelite.com)
has phenomenal Jiu-Jitsu and cardio. A major
player in MMA
and one of its most recognizable and popular figures, the wily
Diaz, 24, always enters the
ring in exceptional condition
and makes for exciting scraps.
Diaz is making his second
consecutive start on SHOWTIME and first since signing a long-term contract
extension with EliteXC.
A Brazilian black belt and
loyal student of Cesar Gracie, Diaz made his EliteXC debut on “Uprising”
Sept.
15, 2007, in Hawaii. In an
exhausting, bloody, give-and-take slugfest, he scored a thrilling,
three-round split
decision over hard-trying Mike
Aina.
A fierce, confident
competitor, the
six-foot southpaw
Diaz survived an early knockdown and a cut right eye to
outpoint
the local favorite by the scores of 30-27, 29-28 and 28-29.
Shortly after his first start in six months,
Diaz flew to Las Vegas to watch his brother, Nate, fight. Nick barely
had made off the plane
before he was taken to a hospital where he would spend a week for a severe
staph
infection
that he contacted a few days
before the bout with Aina.
“I felt pretty
crappy in my match in Hawaii, but I figured I was suffering from jet lag
or from something I had
eaten the night
before,’’ Diaz said. “When I left Hawaii, I was getting chills and had to
be covered with
several blankets
on the plane. I kept having cold sweats.
“By the time I got to Vegas,
the infection had ballooned up so I went to a hospital and was admitted
right
away. I started getting my
strength back the last few days in the hospital.
“But I definitely
won that fight with Aina and people that think otherwise; well, I do not
know what they were
watching. If we
ever fight again, I will tap him out.’’
The
outspoken, brutally honest Diaz
recuperated quickly enough to compete in a
triathlon for a second
consecutive year. “I ended up
taking second place,’’ he said. “I lost first by seven minutes due to a
poor
swim. I couldn’t get much swim
practice because I was in the hospital.’’
Diaz has fought
some of the sport's biggest names in an illustrious six-year career.
In perhaps his most
unforgettable performance, a
battered, bruised and bloodied Diaz rallied from the brink of defeat to
score an
impressive,
legendary gogoplata submission victory over then-consensus No. 1
lightweight contender,
Takanori
Gomi (takanorigomi.proelite.com),
in a 2007 Fight of the Year candidate that wound up going into
the books as a
no contest.
“I am looking
forward to getting back in the cage on Saturday,’’ Diaz said.
Noons (kjnoons.proelite.com),
who is also a professional boxer, is coming off a smashing third-round
knockout over
Edson Berto on July 27, 2007, at Santa Ynez, Calif. Despite fracturing his
left hand in the
opening
minutes, Noons would go on to mostly dominate the favored Berto.
In a
scintillating finish to a thrilling encounter on ShoXC: The Elite
Challenger Series on SHOWTIME,
Noons wore down
Berto, then dropped him with a devastating right knee to the face. Noons
followed the
knockdown with a
right hand and right elbow to the face before the referee stepped in and
halted the
proceedings 45
seconds into the round.
The victory was
monumental for Noons, who had been knocked out by “Krazy Horse’’ Charles
Bennett in his
outing before
last (Feb. 10, 2007, the debut telecast of EliteXC on SHOWTIME).
“I had to
prove I was better, which is why I put in so much time and sweat and blood
preparing for Berto,”
Noons
said. “It wasn’t easy, but I made it look easy. It definitely helped me
put the ‘Krazy Horse’ fight
behind me.
I got a lot off my shoulders with that fight.’’
The
victory earned Noons a berth in the initial EliteXC lightweight
championship fight. “The thing about
EliteXC is
I knew if I was winning, I would eventually get a title shot,” Noons said.
“In EliteXC, the people
who fight
actually earn (the right).’’
A fighter
who has never turned down a challenge, Noons is confident of an upset.
“This is for a world title,’’
he said.
“I’ll be ready. I wasn’t impressed with Nick’s last performance. This is a
good match-up. He’s the
No. 1 guy
in the world; he beat Gomi. I’m just glad to have the opportunity to have
a chance to be fighting
someone of
his caliber.
“I have
nothing to lose, everything to gain. He’s great on the ground. I’m not,
but I work hard at the ground
game. I
don’t plan on trying for a submission. I’ll just be trying to stop him.
“Nick is
probably going to try and stand and then take it to the ground to finish
it. I want to make it a fight.
The way I
fight, every fight is exciting and a war. I’m going in to win. I won’t be
letting down. It’s going to be
head-to-head. I think fighting at 160 is good for both of us.’’
Kimbo (kimboslice.proelite.com),
aka Kevin Ferguson, is a big, scary-looking, intimidating
heavyweight who
developed an
astonishing following on the Internet due to his famous “unsanctioned”
backyard fights.
Lest
you think he is not serious about MMA, however, forget it.
“I am totally committed,’’
Kimbo said. “I’m for real at this and not short term, but long term. I am
not a
novelty act. I mean business.
I am coming to bring the noise. I work extremely hard. There are critics
who
don’t think I can do this, but
I am going to prove them all wrong.”
Kimbo, who possesses pretty
solid standup, defeated former world boxing heavyweight champion
“Merciless’’ Ray Mercer via
guillotine submission in his MMA debut June 23, 3007.
One individual
who liked what he saw was Rutten, an MMA legend and one of the sport’s
all-time great
trainers.
“I was way
more than impressed with his fight,’’ Rutten said. “He
did his homework and worked the game
plan to perfection. I write
game plans. I told Kimbo, ‘these are the things you have to focus on. If
you do,
you’re not going to be in
trouble, but you have to hit every point.’
“Normally, guys go for
something then forget it. Kimbo took the game plan, kept it and kept
working on the
points. He’s a sponge and
wants to learn. He comes in on time and doesn’t complain. He’ll do
everything
you say. Things you teach him
today, he remembers tomorrow.’’
Kimbo, who weighed 239 ½
pounds, a weight much lower than he had anticipated, shot in early on
Mercer.
After a barrage of elbow, Muay
Thai knees and combination punches, Kimbo was able to tap out Mercer at
1:10.
Fans and critics alike were
impressed – and shocked -- by the brawler’s ability to pull off such a
skillful
submission technique
“I’ve worked really hard on my
wrestling and Jiu-Jitsu.’’ Kimbo said. “It hasn’t been easy. I’ve never
trained
as hard. Training has never
been as intense. I don't think any other trainers can match what Bas puts
us
through. But I couldn't ask
for better guys to work with.
“They push me to the limit.
When I feel like quitting, they literally beat me down and it's hard to
get a person
that's willing to beat me
down. I have more respect for them than anything.
“I get frustrated, but it’s
frustration that drives me. I'm determined. I will not be denied.’’
Since converting to the
cage, Kimbo’s universe has been altered dramatically. “My life’s
definitely changed,
but it has all been for
the better -- mentally,
physically, emotionally and spiritually,’’ he said. “I’m
more
patient and dedicated to
things that are more important.’’
Regarding his premium
television debut, Kimbo said, “With EliteXC on SHOWTIME, everyone's got a
chance
to watch. SHOWTIME is a
household deal. Anybody who has a TV should have SHOWTIME. They're going
to see what hard work,
sacrifice and dedication will do for you.’’
On his incredible fan base,
Kimbo said, “I love the fans. They respect me and I respect them. They
show me
love and I show love back. I
know what they want and I'm going to give them what they want. They want
to
see me come in and bang and
I'm coming in to bang.
“The fans know that anyone
that comes my way, they better be prepared to bring it.’’
The six-foot-one-inch Cantrell
is a former Marine and five-time Gladiator Challenge heavyweight titlist.
The
hard-hitting Cantrell is not
accustomed to putting in a full night’s work. His last eight fights have
ended in
the first round, and 11 of his
last 13 have ended inside two.
Cantrell will be making his
second start on SHOWTIME. In his debut, he lost to Tim Persey on EliteXC’s
“Destiny” on Feb. 10, 2007.
Like Kimbo, Cantrell is
no stranger to underground fights.
“I
had my share of them in Oregon before getting
a shot at
the real shows,’’ Cantrell said.
Despite the
short notice, Cantrell
(bocantrell.proelite.com)
is coming to win.
“To beat Kimbo would give my
career a gigantic boost,’’ he
said.
Shields, 28, has won eight
straight and nine of 10. Unbeaten since December 2004, he has defeated
the
likes of current UFC
middleweight contender Yushin Okami, former UFC middleweight champion Dave
Menne and current WEC
welterweight champion Carlos Condit.
Known for technical grappling
and amazing cardio, the lifelong vegetarian captured the Shooto
Championship
in 2004 and won the Rumble on
the Rock Grand Prix Tournament in ‘05.
In his last start, Shields (jakeshields.proelite.com)
scored a surprisingly easy first-round knockout over BJ
Penn’s Renato “Charuto’’
Verissimo on “Uprising.’’
The referee stopped the fight at 4:00 with Shields on top
of
Verissimo and landing a series of unanswered punches.
“That fight went pretty
good,’’ the highly regarded Shields said. “I came in and threw a couple
kicks, a couple
punches and ended up getting
in the clinch. He ended up tripping me and taking me down but I didn’t
want
to be on bottom so I bounced
right back up.
“From there we were in the
clinch and I took him down, opened up his guard and passed, got mount, and
started raining down punches
on him.’’
A beast at welterweight,
Shields has a lot of respect for Pyle.
“Mike is really good,’’
Shields said. “I’ve been watching his tapes and he is really well rounded.
He has good
standup, a good ground game
and cardio, but I think I’m going to be too much for him. I think it will
take a
little longer to wear him
down, but eventually I’ll break him.’’
Pyle, 21, who trains out of
Xtreme Couture in Las Vegas, will be seeking his third consecutive
victory. In his
last outing,
Pyle recorded an impressive, unanimous decision over Aaron
Wetherspoon on the June 22
“Shamrock vs. Baroni”
undercard at San Jose, Calif.
In his start before last, Pyle
registered a 1:55, first-round submission (rear naked choke hold) over
Ross
Ebanez on the
historic EliteXC “DESTINY’’ undercard on Feb. 10, 2007.
Pyle (mikepyle.proelite.com),
who has experience in Tae Kwon Do, judo, karate and
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, has
been in
against tough, risky opposition and is back to fighting at 170 pounds
(down from 185). The drop in
weight has
proven to be an excellent move.
“A fight with
Shields has been talked about for months, and now that it is here, I am
really looking forward to
it,’’ Pyle
said. “I think my striking is a bit sharper than his and I feel I’m a
physically stronger athlete, but he
might possibly
have an edge on me with the wrestling.’’
A five-month
layoff is not a concern. “My preparation has been excellent,” said
Pyle, who’s defeated the likes
of
welterweight star Jon Fitch and Shonie Carter. “The
inactivity didn’t bother me. It gave me some time off to
work on my
game. I don’t suffer from ring rust because I train with top athletes.
“Five months
off is nothing for me. I always come back just as strong if not better.
Beating Jake will be a
good step for
me. This is going to be a good show.’’
At first glance,
Kleinbeck, of Stuttgart, Ark., seems like an average, easy-going young
man. He has been
married 16 years, has
two children and is a licensed physician who practices emergency and
family
medicine in his home
state and has family
offices in Ozark
and Waldron.
Kleinbeck, 34, is anything but
typical, however. The most well educated man in MMA, he is “Dr. Kleinbeck’’
to his patients but he’s “Mass
Destruction” to MMA fans. No, Kleinbeck is not known for his bedside
manner
inside the cage, which may be
a shock to his patients.
The exciting,
aggressive-minded Kleinbeck possesses solid striking power, comes to win
and produces
excellent
scraps. Along with carrying plenty of strength and a devastating punch,
Kleinbeck boasts a sharp
kick attack
that sends many of his opponents limping to the mat.
All his victories have ended
inside the distance. In his SHOWTIME debut, Kleinbeck
(sethkleinbeck.proelite.com)
knocked out Jaime Jara (16-6) in the second round with a picture-perfect
left-
right combination at 4:59 in
Vicksburg, Miss., on July 27, 2007.
“There was no doubt the fight
was over,” said Kleinbeck after dealing Jara -- a champion at one time or
another in four Gladiator
Challenge weight classes -- his first loss in three years. “I caught him
perfectly.
This is probably my best win
and I’m obviously happy.
“I was surprised he tried to
box for as long as he did. I figured he would be trying to take me down. I
kicked
him so hard I think I might
have broken my left foot.”
Kleinbeck graduated from the
University of Arkansas College of Medicine with a MD in 2001.
But don't let
the higher
education fool you. A fighter skilled in Muay Thai, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu,
submission grappling and
wrestling, he
is dedicated to becoming a MMA star.
The mauling
medic has a 1,200 square foot gym by his house. “It's at the end of my
driveway,’’ he said. “I’ve
got weight and
cardio equipment and a 15x20 matted grappling area.’’
Kleinbeck, who started his MMA
training during his last year of medical school, has experience and a
successful record but, aside
from Jara, has faced mostly lesser competition.
A doctor knows his body though
and Kleinbeck sees good days ahead. “If you’ve got a young body and you
haven’t had a lot of injuries
you could fight deep into your 30s,” he said. “I’d hate to get out of
fighting without
getting in the ring with
somebody in the top 10.”
Kleinbeck, who has been known
to assist commissions in administrating pre-fight physicals (he once gave
a physical to his
opponent), knows he cannot afford to overlook any foe.
“Every fight is important,’’
he said. “I want to step up to the next level, but I have to beat who they
put in front
of me first. Noke has fought a
couple tough guys. He is a well-rounded fighter who does everything really
good. There is no way I look
past him or anybody.’’
Noke (kylenoke.proelite.com),
of Queensland, Australia, by way of Sydney, trains at the Australian Zoo,
which was started by Irvin.
The Irwin family built an MMA cage for him so he could train while working
at the
Zoo as a security guard.
Considered by some to be one
of the best pound-for-pound mixed martial artists in Australia, the well-
conditioned, six-foot-two-inch
27-year-old has won titles in multiple weight classes since getting
involved in
MMA at the age of 22.
A well-rounded fighter who
does not have any glaring weaknesses, Noke is 5-1-1 in his last seven
starts. In
his most recent outing and
lone effort in 2007, he fought to a three-round draw with top Judoka and
former
PRIDE fighter Hector Lombard
on July 28, 2007.
Noke, who may be most
effective when he can counter, has fought the majority of his fights at
170 pounds.
But his last three outings
have been at 185.
Silva, who is six-feet-four
and has weighed upwards of 300 pounds, is hard to miss. But do not blink
once he
enters the cage. All but one
of his victories has come by knockout. None of his fights have gone
one full
round.
One of the most talked-about and feared up-and-comers in MMA, Silva’s
freakish size is matched with brute
strength and surprising speed,
brutal ground and pound striking skills. Factor in
that he also is surprisingly
nimble-footed and
effectively combines
Shotokan Karate and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, and
you seemingly have
all
of the ingredients of a future superstar.
Nicknamed “Bigfoot’’ for his huge, intimidating stature, Silva
scored a 3:49, first-round TKO
(strikes) over
Wesley “Cabbage” Correira on
Feb. 10, 2007, on SHOWTIME.
The victory came in his
first start since suffering his only pro loss on a controversial
first-round TKO to Eric
Pele on Dec. 12, 2006.
“I don’t know what the referee was thinking when he stopped the fight,’’
Silva said.
“I
was doing fine, biding my time, waiting for the moment Pele would slow
down because I knew he was
getting
tired. But the referee decided to call the fight.’’
Silva (antoniosilva.proelite.com),
who is dropping down in weight, is looking to continue his rise, but he
understands it won’t be easy.
“Wiezorek is a good fighter who wants to take the fight to
the mat because
he’s good
at submissions,’’ he said. “But I’m training very well and have a good
strategy that will surprise
him if he
goes to take me down.
“Physically, I am
great. I don’t have to worry about him. He has to worry about me. It has
been eight months
since I last
fought. I am very hungry for a victory.’’
A winner of five straight,
Wiezorek will be fighting for the first time since registering a
second-round TKO
(strikes) over Tim Persey on
June 2, 2007, at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
“That was a great experience for me,” Wiezorek (jonathanwiezorek.proelite.com)
said.
The
six-foot-three-inch
Wiezorek came out working
Persey with punches and knees, trying to force him
down. A grappler, Wiezorek’s strength lies on the mat, where he tries to
get all his opponents. “If I could get
a
guy to the ground, I have a great chance to win the fight.”
Wiezorek
put down Persey for good early in the second, got his back and threw
punches until the ref
stepped
in. It was his eighth submission victory. Also a master of avoiding
damage, Wiezorek’s victories
have
mostly come in the first round by various chokes.
Mauro Ranallo
will call the cageside action with former wrestling superstar Bill
Goldberg and Stephen
Quadros, The
Fight Professor, serving as color analysts. The executive producer of the
telecast is David
Dinkins, Jr. with
Bob Dunphy directing.
About ProElite, Inc.
ProElite Inc.
[PELE.PK] delivers the most exciting
entertainment experience in the world of mixed martial
arts (MMA) with live
arena-based entertainment events, cable television programming on Showtime
Networks
and community-driven
interactive broadband entertainment via the Internet. ProElite embraces
MMA with the
highest levels of honor,
integrity, discipline and self-esteem all the while remaining inclusive
for fighters, fans
and schools. ProElite’s
live fight division, EliteXC, delivers spectacular live MMA fight events
that showcase
the world’s top fighters
[elitexc.com]. ProElite’s interactive business, ProElite.com, capitalizes
on the
growing popularity of
the sport of mixed martial arts by building a community of mixed martial
arts
enthusiasts. In
addition to streaming the most exciting live fights to the web, ProElite
expands the fan
base of the sport by
providing a comprehensive set of online social networking tools for fans,
fighters and
organizations.
ProElite.com – Empowering the Fight Community
TM
About Showtime Networks Inc.
Showtime
Networks Inc. (SNI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBS Corporation, owns
and operates the
premium
television networks SHOWTIME®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ and FLIX®, as well as
the multiplex
channels
SHOWTIME® TOO™, SHOWTIME® SHOWCASE, SHOWTIME EXTREME®, SHOWTIME
BEYOND®,
SHOWTIME NEXT®, SHOWTIME WOMEN®, SHOWTIME FAMILYZONE® and TMC XTRA.
SNI also
offers SHOWTIME HD®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL HD™, SHOWTIME ON DEMAND™ and THE
MOVIE
CHANNEL ON DEMAND™. All SNI feeds provide enhanced sound using Dolby
Digital 5.1. SNI is
also an
owner and manager of SUNDANCE CHANNEL, a venture of NBC Universal, Robert
Redford and SNI.
SNI also
manages Smithsonian Networks, a joint venture between SNI and the
Smithsonian Institution. SNI
markets
and distributes sports and entertainment events for exhibition to
subscribers on a pay-per-view
basis
through SHOWTIME® PPV.
- Press Release issued by
ProElite\Showtime
with a little editing from us (color, etc...)
Subject to change
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(11/6/07)
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