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Showing posts with label Al Haymon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Haymon. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2013

UNDEFEATED DEONTAY WILDER FACES FORMER HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION SERGEI LIAKHOVICH IN SHOBOX: THE NEW GENERATION MAIN EVENT THIS FRIDAY, AUG. 9, LIVE ON SHOWTIME®

 UNDEFEATED DEONTAY WILDER FACES
FORMER HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION SERGEI LIAKHOVICH IN SHOBOX: THE NEW GENERATION MAIN EVENT THIS FRIDAY, AUG. 9, LIVE ON SHOWTIME®
FROM FANTASY SPRINGS RESORT CASINO IN INDIO, CALIF.
 Tripleheader Features Two Outstanding 10-Round Co-Featured Fights -
Francisco Vargas vs. Brandon Bennett and Jermall Charlo vs. Antwone Smith
(Photo Showtime Boxing) 
Telecast Begins at 10 p.m. ET/PT
Undefeated heavyweight Deontay Wilder, most would agree, is a work in progress. He's not your typical work in progress, however -- unless you consider his record of 28-0 with 28 knockouts run of the mill.
 Still, the question on most everyone's mind: Does the former amateur standout and the last male American to medal in the Olympic Games possess the skills and talent to one day became a world champion?
The 6-foot-7, 27-year-old Wilder, of Tuscaloosa, Ala., will try to extend his winning and knockout streaks when he faces former world heavyweight champion Sergei "White Wolf" Liakhovich (25-5, 16 KO's), of Scottsdale, Ariz., by way of Vitebsk, Belarus, in the 10-round main event of a tripleheader this Friday, Aug. 9,on ShoBox: The New Generation live onSHOWTIME® (10 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the West Coast) from Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio, Calif.
 In two excellent 10-round co-featured scraps, Francisco "El Bandito" Vargas (16-0-1, 13 KO's), of Tijuana, Mexico, takes on southpaw Brandon "The Untouchable" Bennett (16-0, 7 KO's), of Cincinnati, Ohio, in a clash of unbeaten junior lightweights with almost identical resumes, while up-and-coming unbeaten junior middleweight Jermall "The Hitman" Charlo(14-0, 10 KO's), of Houston, Texas, gets tested for class when he opposes world-ranked Antwone Smith (23-4-1, 12 KO's), of Miami, Fla.
 ShoBox expert analyst Steve Farhood is looking forward to Friday's triple treat, particularly the two televised fights that will precede the heavyweight bout.
"The jury is still out, of course, on Wilder, who is taking at least a baby step up by fighting a former world champion,'' Farhood said. "The other two fights are really good, solid matchups, with the two unbeatens fighting their toughest opponents to date.
 "Vargas is clearly taking a step up in class. He turned pro at 25, which is obviously much older than the usual Mexican prospect, but he is very exciting and throws a lot of punches. Bennett is a lefty who's been brought along carefully. This is definitely a step up for him, too. But both guys are highly schooled and have looked very good in their fights. This is a prototypical ShoBoxmatchup.
"Jermall Charlo is beginning to emerge from his twin brother, Jermell's shadow. It is inevitable that they are going to be compared because they fight in the same division. This is a big step up for Jermall, facing a fighter who has made a career of beating unbeaten prospects This should be a supreme test for Charlo, who has never gone past six rounds while Smith has been six rounds or more 13 times.''
 Wilder, who didn't start to box until he was 21, only had 30-35 fights in the amateurs but earnedthe bronze medalist at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China. He was the least experienced member on the U.S. team yet was the only one to medal.
 Since turning pro in November 2008, Wilder has feasted on his foes, mostly demolishing each and every one of them. He has not gone four full rounds in a fight. Sixteen of his fights have ended in the first round, including a 70-second destruction of 2000 Olympic super heavyweight gold medalist Audley Harrison in his last start on April 27. Six of his fights were over in the second, three were done in the third and three were finished in the fourth.
Currently ranked No. 6 in the WBA and WBO, No. 15 in the IBF and No. 30 in the WBC, Wilder has had one scheduled 12-round fight and three scheduled 10-rounders. This will be his third start in 2013 after fighting six times in 2010, 2011 and 2012. To his credit, he doesn't take long layoffs between outings.
 "I honestly don't have any time off,'' he said. "I'm always up in the gym. When people call somebody a 'gym rat,' I am definitely that. This is my job and I take it seriously whether I'm outside the ring or inside. The only way to get better is to train and practice hard. The most time I'm off after a fight is maybe a week. After that, I'm training and waiting on the next fight. When I go to camp, I don't go to camp to get in shape. I go to camp to put shape on top of shape. I'm never out of shape.''
 Wilder has been trained since the outset of his pro career by Mark Breland, the 1984 Olympic gold medalist and former two-time WBA welterweight world champion.

"Deontay is great to work with, he does what I tell him to and he's willing to try anything I say, which is all I can ask,'' Breland said. "He's sparring 10 rounds and we're coming off a great camp. He's really improved a lot since we started. Honestly, we did not anticipate the knockouts; in fact, we are trying to get him to box and move more, which he's beginning to do. He's got good power in his right hand and a great 1-2 punch. So we're trying to develop his jab. But his power his just overwhelming right now.
"Two greats thing about Deontay are his willingness to learn and his work ethic. He knows he's still learning and has the right attitude. He's hungry and works hard in the gym. His shoulders are too tight when he boxes; once he relaxes a little and is able to loosen his shoulders, he will be even more dangerous. It's all about relaxing, but that comes with experience.  
"This is another stepping stone, but there's no way we take Liakhovich lightly. There are still little things he can do that Deontay's never seen. Deontay knows he has to be at the top of his game every fight." 
Wilder, who went pro at age 23 in November 2008, will be making his ShoBox debut. He won the WBC Continental Americas heavyweight title with an eye-opening third-round knockout over previously undefeated Kelvin Prince last Dec. 15 on SHOWTIME EXTREME.
"I'm excited to be in the main event on ShoBox on SHOWTIME,'' Wilder said. "I was on the (network) when I broke Price's jaw. We're just trying to reach our goal. I'm glad to have a great opponent. I can't wait to perform on Aug. 9. It's the Bomb Squad!''
Liakhovich won the WBO heavyweight title with a 12-round decision over Lamon Brewsteron April 1, 2006, and lost it on a 12th-round TKO to Shannon Briggs the following Nov. 4. He's fought only five times since and is coming off a ninth-round TKO loss to Bryant Jenningson March 24, 2012.
The 6-foot-4, 37-year-old Liakhovich, who'll be making his first start for trainer and former WBA super welterweight, WBA middleweight and WBC light heavyweight world championMike "The Body Snatcher" McCallum, didn't perform well against Jennings. But the usually tough and durable 14-year-pro is confident he still has what it takes and has enough left to score what would be a major upset.
"I've been working with Mike McCallum in Las Vegas for over two months,'' said Liakhovich, who's counting on his vast advantage in experience and natural athletic ability to take Wilder into unchartered waters. "My main sparring partner is a tall guy like Wilder. I've fought a lot of tall guys - (6-foot-6½-inch unbeaten RobertHelenius, (7-foot-tall, former WBA heavyweight champion NicolayValuev. You need to find the key how to do certain things for this kind of opponent, but it's not so difficult.
"Wilder is a good fighter, his record speaks for itself. But I'm not looking over him, I'm looking forward. On Aug. 9, I will put everything on the line, and I'm coming to win."
Vargas and Bennett will be making their ShoBox debuts. Both have similarities besides their records. They are close in age (Vargas is 28, Bennett is 25), both were terrific amateurs (Vargas was a 2008 Olympian for Mexico, Vargas won the majority of his 300 bouts), both have about the same amount of experience as professionals, both are stepping up in class and both need to win this kind of fight, by far their toughest to date, to take the next step in making the transition from prospect to contender. 
One major difference between the fighters: Vargas is known more for his punching prowess, Bennett for his boxing ability.
The 5-foot-9 Vargas didn't turn pro until he was 25. But the three-year pro has been kept busy, fighting four times in 2010, five times in 2011, six times in 2012 and twice this year. Three of his fights were aired on SHOWTIME EXTREME, the most recent last Jan. 26 when he knocked out Ira Terry in the second round. Vargas, the WBC's No. 25-ranked contender, scored three knockdowns en route to a third-round TKO over Christian Arrazola in his last outing on May 17.
"Francisco usually comes to L.A. to train, but he trained in Mexico for this fight,'' manager Joel De La Hoya said. "It's always complicated fighting a southpaw, but hopefully everything comes out all right. I think Bennett's going to be a little slicker than the last guy Francisco fought, but I don't think Bennett has faced anyone like Vargas. It will be a great fight for both kids."
Said Vargas, an eight-time Mexican national amateur champion, "I like to dominate the ring. I plateaued a bit after my pro debut, but we're making up time, ready to take that place we seek. We are on track. I love Mexico, but work is in the United States. I will not waste more time. I'm ready for success."
The 5-foot-6 Bennett is a stablemate and lifelong friend of Adrien Broner and Rau'shee Warren.  All are co-managed by Al Haymon and Mike Stafford, and trained by Stafford. This will be his third outing in 2013 after one fight in 2011 and 2012. Bennett's been triumphant via points in his last four starts, including a unanimous six-round decision over Arturo Santiagothis past July 5. 
Bennett, a natural right-hander who turned pro at the age of 20 in May 2008, describes his style "like Pernell Whitaker mixed with a little Sugar Ray Leonard.'' He's always felt his style was better suited for the pros. "I felt like I would be a better pro than amateur because I'm a counterpuncher,'' he said. "When a person makes a mistake, I counter off of it. I just feel like it was a better style for the pros.''
Bennett is hopeful 2013 is his breakout year. "I've been in camp a long time, this whole year, and haven't had a break,'' he said. "I went right back to work after my last fight. I've had two fights this year, and I'm with Adrien when he's in training camp. I'm real excited to get on SHOWTIME. I'm ready.''
Regarding his opponent, Bennett says, "I've seen Vargas fight. He just tries to bring the pressure. I know that's what he's going to try to do. We've got a game plan for that. He's going to bring the pressure, but I'm going to bring the pressure back to him. 
Charlo, who is one minute older than Jermell, has won eight consecutive fights by knockout. The virtually untested 6-foot-tall, 23-year-old will be making his ShoBox debut after two appearances on SHOWTIME EXTREME. This is his first scheduled 10-round match.
A top amateur before going pro at 18 in November 2008, Charlo dropped Luis Hernandeztwo times in the first round and won by second-round TKO in his last fight on June 1.
"I didn't take any time off after my last fight,'' Charlo said. "I've been sparring with my brother, too, this camp. We haven't sparred in a long time - probably five years. We don't spar much because it gets kind of intense and a little bit over-the-top, so (trainer) Ronnie (Shields) doesn't let us spar that often. I've probably done 30 rounds with Jermell; we've been getting it on. It was real good work.''
Shields is delighted with the brothers' progress. "They're absolutely great to work with, and they're both doing great,'' he said. "I'm very happy with their progress. Jermall is making a name for himself, which is good, and with him going with Al Haymon only makes it better. They're totally different fighters. Jermall is more of a puncher than a boxer. But both are very focused.''
The trainer acknowledges that Smith, a solid veteran, will likely present Jermall with his toughest test but that these are the kinds of fights all young up-and-comers have to take at some point. "Antwone Smith is a tough fighter but we have to fight tough fights to get to the upper echelon,'' Shields said. "This is the latest step for Jermall, a stepping stone that we have to go through.''
Charlo is looking forward to the challenge. "I think Antwone's full of experience,'' he said, "but everything is an experience to me. He has a lot of tricks and stuff, so I'm going to fight him off of how I've been training and keep the game plan with Ronnie. I'll go at him.''
The 5-foot-8 Smith, 26, is the IBF's No. 9-ranked junior middleweight. The seven-year pro has won two fights in a row, including a 10-round decision over former two-time WBC lightweight champion Jose Luis Castillo last Feb. 1.  In his outing before last, Smith scored one of his career-best victories, a 10-round decision over previously undefeated, hometown favoriteRonald Cruz on Sept. 21, 2012.
Smith is 2-1 on ShoBox, winning a 10-round decision over Richard Gutierrez and by ninth-round TKO over previously undefeated Henry Crawford in May and November 2009, respectively. He lost via TKO 9 to Lanardo Tyner in July 2010.
Unlike other young fighters, Smith came up the hard way -- an underdog matched tough, and he only reached his current level by winning a number of fights he was expected to lose (he defeated Aaron Torres, 2004 Colombian Olympian Juan Novoa, previously undefeated former Mexican national amateur champion Norberto Gonzalez and Gutierrez to name a few).
"I've added a strength program to my training since I moved up from 147,'' Smith said. "This time, it's been my whole camp. I'm real pumped-up to see how I feel and how my power and stamina increases. I feel like I've been born again. I'm more alive. I haven't felt this good, mentally and physically, in years. I'm focused and ready. Charlo is taller than me, but everybody is taller than me. That's not a factor.
"Charlo's a little arrogant, but I love that. I'm here to give him a reality test. He thinks everything comes easy. Basically, he's been fighting a bunch of cab drivers, a bunch of bus drivers. He thinks he's done something. He's talking big noise, but he's never been past six rounds, and they're worried about that.
"He's looking to go in, get in a couple of hard shots and get the guy out of there. But you hit a guy with experience and he doesn't go anywhere, you've got a problem and the rounds keep going on and on. You're in water you've never been in. When the water gets deep, we're going to see if he can swim.
"I'm just hyped up with his arrogance. He's got a video on YouTube - 'Oh, I'm fighting Antwone Smith. He's ranked number 10 in the world, but I'm going to take that.' Well, I didn't get here easily and he won't take it from me easily. Every day I walk in the gym, I watch that video. It pumps me up for my training session. It motivates me. He ain't been in what I been in.''
Those in attendance will get the opportunity to get up close and personal with Three-Division World Champion "Sugar" Shane Mosley, who will meet and greet ticket holders, sign autographs and take pictures from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT.
Barry Tompkins will call the ShoBox action from ringside with Steve Farhood and former World Champion Raul Marquez serving as expert analysts.  The executive producer is Gordon Hall with Richard Gaughan producing and Rick Phillips directing.
♔EL Boxing Empress & MMA Princess♔, See you at the Fights and Thank You for your time. EL Boxing Empress Online @ Twitter http://www.twitter.com/Keishamorrisey ©®™ 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 All photos other than those specified by "EL Boxing Empress & MMA Princess" Keisha Morrisey, for ♔Impress Photo-Studios♔ and KCKMT for Bloodline Boxing Communications Entertainment and ★Starlite★ Boxing's Sweetscience Blog-Online Publication all rights reserved.

Friday, July 19, 2013

ShoBox & Mayweather Promotions: The New Generation tomorrow, Friday, July 19, live on SHOWTIME®



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Two of Mayweather Promotions’ most talented boxers, lightweight Mickey “The Spirit” Bey Jr. and world-rated super middleweight Badou Jack, will try to keep their unbeaten records intact when they face John “The Gladiator” Molina Jr. and Far...ah “Quiet Storm” Ennis, respectively, in co-featured fights on ShoBox: The New Generation live on SHOWTIME® this Friday, July 19 (10 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the West Coast) from The Joint At Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.
♔EL Boxing Empress & MMA Princess♔, See you at the Fights and Thank You for your time. EL Boxing Empress Online @ Twitter http://www.twitter.com/Keishamorrisey ©®™ 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 All photos other than those specified by "EL Boxing Empress & MMA Princess" Keisha Morrisey, for ♔Impress Photo-Studios♔ and KCKMT for Bloodline Boxing Communications Entertainment and ★Starlite★ Boxing's Sweetscience Blog-Online Publication all rights reserved

Saturday, April 20, 2013

CANELO ALVAREZ VS. AUSTIN TROUT AND UNDERCARD FINAL PRESS CONFERENCE QUOTES; Canelo Alvarez vs. Austin "No Doubt" Trout Official Weights‏; ALAMODOME SOLD OUT FOR AN UNBELIEVABLE NIGHT OF BOXING IN SAN ANTONIO HEADLINED BY CANELO ALVAREZ VS. AUSTIN TROUT


CANELO ALVAREZ, WBC Super Welterweight World Champion
"I want to thank everyone for their support...all of the media and everyone that's helped me get here.
"I'm very happy to be here and I wish the fight was here already.
"I think words mean very little.  On April 20th, we will fight and the best fighter will win.
"To be honest, I don't feel any pressure.  I believe that if you're scared or anxious it's because you're not ready.  I'm ready.  I'm confident about this fight.  As a matter of fact, I've never felt this ready in my life.
"I'm the kind of fighter that knows how to adapt.  I can adapt to my opponent's style anytime.
"On Saturday, expect to see two champions fighting with everything they have.  I'll be fighting with everything I've got.
"Knockouts are unpredictable.  I can't say that I'm going to knock Trout out, but I also can't say I won't.
"I'm always trying to better myself.  I've been training very hard, and God willing, I'll come out victorious on Saturday.  I'll show my fans what I'm made of.

"This fight is a great test for me, but it's a difficult one.  Trout is a complicated fighter with a complicated style, but I like challenges.  I enjoy challenges and that's why I've accepted this fight, because it's a big challenge.
"I feel good.  I feel as good as I've ever felt.  I'm ready.
"I feel the adrenaline.  I'm eager to walk into the ring and hear that bell."
AUSTIN TROUT, WBA Super Welterweight World Champion
"I want to thank Canelo Alvarez for being a hungry fighter, making his demands known and putting his foot down to make this happen.  I'm a hungry fighter and I want to fight the best.
"I'm not worried about the officials or the judging.  I'm not worried about being in a hostile territory.  All I can worry about is the opponent that I have in the ring.
"We've worked hard in this camp because we know who we're going up against.  It's not going to be a walk in the park, but we never asked for easy.  We want these challenges to prove our worth to the boxing world and that I'm the best 154-pound champion.  On Saturday, we're going to let our fists do the talking and I have no doubt that my hand will be raised.
"It's all about the experience.  He may have more fights, but I feel like I have more experience than he does between my amateur career and the opponents that I've faced.  My last fights, aside from Miguel Cotto, everybody has been bigger.  I've fought some middleweights and super middleweights.
"This is something that I've been dreaming about, literally, for the last two months.  I wake myself up boxing him, throwing punches and what not.  I'm a very visual person so it's been something that I've been visualizing and now we get to see it come to real life.  I believe it's going to play out the way I've been seeing it in my head.
"Trout Nation is a lot bigger than they [Team Canelo] thought.  We have a lot of fans that are here and excited about me fighting in San Antonio.  The love is very heartfelt and I'm just soaking it all in.
"I'm expecting to see a win in my favor.  I'm expecting to see a good fight, I'm expecting nothing but the best from Canelo.  We're just excited to go in there and get this WBC title that we've been looking for.
"He's never fought anybody my size.  The fighters he's faced have been welterweights and even junior welterweights.  He's done what he's supposed to do with everyone that they've put in front of him, so I give credit to him for that, but, at the same time, I'm not cut from the same cloth as those guys."
OMAR FIGUEROA JR., Top Lightweight Contender
"This is a great fight card.  I think the main event will be the best fight of 2013.  I'm as excited for the main event as I am for my own fight.   I'm not going to say I'm going to win my fight, I'm not going to say I'm going to lose my fight, the only thing I can promise is that I'm going to fight with the heart and the passion that I always fight with, and hopefully, we come out on top.
"I don't think he [Abner Cotto] will be the toughest opponent I've faced.  I think Michael Perez was the most formidable opponent I've had and we all know how I came out in that one.  We're hoping for the same result in this one.

"Being able to fight in front of this many fans is an honor, but being able to do it in your own home state is a blessing.
"We worked hard for this fight and it's hard to believe it happened.  I used to be in that back row [on the dais] and now I'm sitting in the front with the champions.  It's just a dream come true. 
"I'm looking forward to a good fight.  I want the best for the fans.  They're what make this sport happen, so I just want to give them my best."
ABNER COTTO, WBC FECARBOX Lightweight Champion
"I can tell you that I'm ready for this fight.  This is biggest fight of my career. 
"We know our opponent Omar Figueroa Jr. very well.  We know that he's a very strong fighter, but I'm ready for this fight and will bring the victory home to Puerto Rico.
"We love challenges and Saturday is going to be a prime example.
"I want to thank my team, all the fans that bought tickets and everyone watching on television.  It's going to be a great fight."
JERMALL CHARLO, Top Super Welterweight Prospect
"Saturday is going to be crazy with 40 thousand people in the stands.  I'm part of the future of boxing.  Everyone needs to tune in."
JULIAN WILLIAMS, Top Middleweight Prospect
"I'm really excited to be on this card.  It's a blessing.  I want to fight one of these guys someday [pointing to Canelo and Trout]. 
TERRELL GAUSHA, 2012 United States Olympian
"I'm blessed to have the opportunity be on this big stage around so many great fighters.  I want to put on a great performance.
"One day I'm going to be sitting in one of these front seats [pointing to Canelo and Trout]."
RAUL MARTINEZ, Top Bantamweight Prospect
"It's a great feeling to be in the presence of fighters like Miguel Cotto and Oscar De La Hoya and to be trained by Jesse James Leija.
"Being on a card with Canelo and Trout, both great champions, is what boxers dream of.  It's so motivating for me.  I'm in the gym everyday training hard and it's paying off. 
"I want to welcome everyone to the Alamodome.  Get there early and watch me get a great knockout."
OSCAR DE LA HOYA, President of Golden Boy Promotion
"Neither one of these guys [Alvarez or Trout] had to take this fight.  This is great for the sport that we love dearly.
"Austin Trout is willing to take on any comers.  It goes to show you Austin Trout's character.  He isn't afraid to go into his opponents' backyards.  He's a fighter that went into Miguel Cotto's backyard in New York City and had a tremendous victory against a tremendous champion.
"You don't see fights like the one you're going to see Saturday night [often].  Fighters are usually too afraid to take on the best in their division, but not these two.
"[On Omar Figueroa vs. Abner Cotto] This is the type of fight we look forward to...young, undefeated guys that aren't afraid to take a risk.
"If you're going to go out there and take a risk and fight hard, then there is no loser.  Win or lose, great fighters will be back for more.  This is what makes boxing the sport that it is.  These fighters are going to come out and fight with their hearts.
"[On Canelo vs. Trout] When you put two young hungry fighters together, you get the best.  The fans will be the winners because they know they will see a great fight.
"We call Canelo the total package, not only for his abilities, but because he wants to face the best.
"This is a testament to Canelo's confidence in his skills.  We are truly excited to be working with Canelo."
JESSE JAMES LEIJA, Former World Champion and Texas Boxing Legend
"The history of the Alamodome and boxing goes back 20 years, since 1993 when Julio Cesar Chavez fought Pernell Whitaker.  Don King had six months to get that fight together.  We had about six weeks.
"We have 40 thousand people coming and that is because of these amazing fighters and the fight card on Saturday night.
"Mike Battah and I have been working very hard to make sure everyone comes out and acknowledges that we have two great fighters and one great night."
MIKE BATTAH, President of Leija and Battah Promotions
"We're building boxing again in Texas in a big way and it's happening this Saturday night.
"We're very happy, proud and honored that fans support us here.  This is what boxing is about.
"I want fans to keep coming to the fights and I will work until I die to make this sport the best."
STEPHEN ESPINOZA, Executive Vice President & General Manager of SHOWTIME Sports
"Events like this are a pleasure to work because of the excitement and visibility they generates by themselves.
"I'd like to thank Leijah and Battah Promotions.  SHOWTIME has a long relationship with Jesse James Leija going back to some of his biggest fights and it's a pleasure to be working with you again.  Most of all, I'd like to thank these two young superstars that we're going to see on Saturday night. 
"Canelo Alvarez and Austin Trout are two of the biggest young stars in boxing today and they didn't have to fight each other.  These are two champions at the prime of their careers and they deserve credit for taking a difficult fight
"This is one of the most highly anticipated fights on SHOWTIME since the days of Mike Tyson.  I can't tell you how much attention, how many calls, how many ticket requests I've received.  Nothing else compares to it since the Mike Tyson's fights." 
NICHOLAS LANGELLA, Alamodome General Manager
"Oscar De La Hoya is an institution here in San Antonio.  The Alamodome is very excited to be bringing this highly coveted match-up to our city.
"San Antonio has long been a host to many championship events.  Saturday night continues that long tradition.  Welcome to San Antonio.  We are going to have a great time on Saturday night."
JOSE "CHEPO" REYNOSO, Canelo's Manager
"At this time, there's not much to say.  I don't have many words.  All I can say is that on Saturday, Canelo will come out victorious and we'll be dedicating this win to Rigoberto [Canelo's brother]."
EDDY REYNOSO, Canelo's Trainer
"We have a our work cut out for us as always.  We're very focused on our work.  We're ready for battle.
"A champion that is at this level made it here because of a lot of hard work and dedication.
"We've worked really hard to show that Canelo is the best 154-pound fighter in the world and that he's ready for the fight.
BOB SPAGNOLA, Trout's Manager
"I just want to give thanks to Greg Cohen and
Al Haymon.  I want to thank Austin Trout and his trainer Louie Burke, who I include in Austin's small circle of family.
"We've traveled all around the world trying to find opponents for Austin.  It's a tough business, but we're here now."
HECTOR SOTO, Vice President of Miguel Cotto Promotions
"Golden Boy Promotions and Miguel Cotto Promotions have a very important alliance.  Oscar De La Hoya and Miguel Cotto have great names in boxing and we've joined forces to make the best fights in boxing.
"Abner Cotto is hungry and he's ready for this fight on Saturday.  He'll become champion someday.
JOSE SULAIMAN, President of the WBC
"I have a special place in my heart for San Antonio.  I lived here about a year, my first year at Trinity University.
"I haven't been traveling much because I've had some health problems, but I had to come to this fight.
Canelo Alvarez is the number one champion in the world and the biggest Mexican superstar." 
Canelo vs. Trout Super Welterweight World Championship Unification Fight
Saturday, April 20, LIVE on SHOWTIME® from Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas



WBC, WBA & VACANT RING MAGAZINE SUPER WELTERWEIGHT TITLES - 12 ROUNDS
CANELO ALVAREZ – 153 ½ Pounds
AUSTIN TROUT – 153 ¼ Pounds
OMAR FIGUEROA – 134 ½ Pounds
ABNER COTTO – 133 ½ Pounds
SHOWTIME EXTREME:
JERMALL CHARLO – 154 ¼ Pounds
ORLANDO LORA – 154 ¼ Pounds
JULIAN WILLIAMS – 156 ¾ Pounds
DASHON JOHNSON – 156 ¾ Pounds
ABOUT "CANELO VS. TROUT":
Canelo vs. Trout, a 12-round Super Welterweight World Championship Unification fight for Canelo’s WBC title, Trout’s WBA title and the vacant Ring Magazine title, is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, Canelo Promotions and Leija & Battah Promotions and sponsored by Corona and AT&T. The co-main event will be a 10-round fight between undefeated prospects Omar Figueroa Jr. of Weslaco, Texas and Abner Cotto of Caguas, Puerto Rico for the vacant WBC Silver Lightweight Championship which is presented in association with Miguel Cotto Promotions. The fights will air live on SHOWTIME at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT with Canelo vs. Trout being presented in association with Greg Cohen Promotions. SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING® is available in Spanish on secondary audio programming (SAP). Preliminary fights will air on SHOWTIME EXTREME at 8 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the West Coast).
ALAMODOME SOLD OUT FOR AN UNBELIEVABLE NIGHT OF BOXING
 IN SAN ANTONIO HEADLINED BY CANELO ALVAREZ VS. AUSTIN TROUT
 
TOP TALENT TO STEP INTO THE RING 
IN FRONT OF 38,000 FANS
SATURDAY'S BOUTS INCLUDE OMAR FIGUEROA JR. VS. ABNER COTTO,
JERMALL CHARLO VS. ORLANDO LORA, JULIAN WILLIAMS VS. DAHSON JOHNSON AND TERRELL GAUSHA VS. WILLIAM WATERS
 The 38,000 fans in the sold out Alamodome tomorrow night are in for non-stop action as the undercard for the WBC Super Welterweight World Champion Canelo Alvarez and WBA Super Welterweight Austin "No Doubt" Trout showdown is now complete.  Unbeaten prospects Jermall Charlo and Julian Williams will be joined by 2012 U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha in the SHOWTIME EXTREME bouts that will lead into the SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecast featuring undefeated lightweights Omar Figueroa Jr. and Abner Cottofollowed by the highly anticipated Canelo vs. Trout 12-round Super Welterweight Title Unification bout.
In the SHOWTIME EXTREME headliner, Houston's Charlo, twin brother of top contender Jermell, puts his perfect 12-0 (8 KO's) record on the line when he battles veteran Mexican contender Orlando Lora (29-3-2, 19 KO's) in a super welterweight bout scheduled for eight rounds.
Plus, an eight-round middleweight contest between Philadelphia phenom Williams (11-0-1, 6 KO's) and Escondido, California's Dashon Johnson (14-10-3, 5 KO's) and in a four round middleweight swing bout, 2012 U.S. Olympian Gausha (3-0, 2 KO's) of Cleveland meets up with Valley, Alabama's William Waters (2-3, 2 KO's).
In an eight-round flyweight contest, unbeaten Ivan Morales (20-0, 13 KO's), the brother of legendary Erik Morales, will continue to make a name for himself when he faces Chihuahua, Mexico's Raul Hidalgo (17-7, 13 KO's).
The vacant WBC Silver Super Bantamweight title will be up for grabs as well when Queretaro, Mexico's Andres Gutierrez (25-0-1, 21 KO's) faces countryman Salvador"Sal II" Sanchez (30-5-3, 18 KO's), the nephew of the late Salvador Sanchez.
Local San Antonio hero Raul Martinez (29-2, 17 KOs) continues his comeback in bantamweight action, as he takes on Omar Gonzales (5-8, 1 KO) in a four-round battle. In the four-round junior lightweight opener, unbeaten Houstonite Miguel Flores(10-0, 6 KO's) meets Weslaco's Guadalupe De Leon (8-13, 4 KO's).
  ♔EL Boxing Empress & MMA Princess♔, See you at the Fights and Thank You for your time. EL Boxing Empress Online @ Twitter http://www.twitter.com/Keishamorrisey ©®™ 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2021, 2013 All photos other than those specified by "EL Boxing Empress & MMA Princess" Keisha Morrisey, for ♔Impress Photo-Studios♔ and KCKMT for Bloodline Boxing Communications Entertainment and ★Starlite★ Boxing's Sweetscience Blog-Online Publication all rights reserved.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Danny Garcia vs. Zab Judah & Peter Quillin vs. Fernando Guerrero Media Conference Call

We are doing this call to talk about the big fight coming up April 27th, the main event is Danny Garcia vs. Zab Judah, and also featured co-main event is Peter Quillin and Fernando Guerrero.  And just for the little homework purposes we will start with Peter and Fernando, and then Danny Garcia and Zab Judah will be joining us immediately following, so we appreciate your patience and hanging in there while we do this call. 
Before I introduce and turn it over to David Itskowitch with Golden Boy, I wanted to just mention to everybody that we do have a solid really busy April month for three great fights; and just from a media note, we will be doing a lot of conference calls, a lot of media days supplying you with plenty of information about all of those fights, so please watch your inbox.  We don't mean to inundate you with information, but due to the schedule, there will be a lot happening for those events. 
But today we're really focused on a great event that I look forward to seeing.  At this point I'm going to go ahead and turn it over to David Itskowitch, Chief Operating Officer of Golden Boy Promotions.
David Itskowitch       
Thank you everyone for joining us today.  We are really excited about this show.  We've been waiting for it for a long time, as everyone has been.  As you know, originally was scheduled for February 9th, but was postponed after Danny Garcia suffered a rib injury, we have Danny Garcia versus Zab Judah in a 12-round unified super lightweight world championship fight.  Our co-main event is Peter "Kid Chocolate" Quillin versus Fernando Guerrero in a 12-round fight for Quillin's WBO middleweight world championship, Saturday, April 27th at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.  The event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, sponsored by Corona and AT&T.   rclays Center box office. 
The event will be televised live on Showtime Championship Boxing beginning at 9 p.m. Eastern and Pacific Time.  We urge everybody to get out there and get their tickets, and if you can't get your tickets, tune in live on Showtime. 
Now I want to introduce the fighters.  First up to say a few words a young man from Salisbury, Maryland, who had an impressive 2012: scored three wins, one over Jason Naugler in Mexico; the other over Jose Medina in Las Vegas; and J.C. Candelo in Texas.  On April 27th the hard-hitting southpaw finally gets his chance at a world title, which he's been waiting for for a long time.  With a record of 25-1 with 19 KOs, Fernando Guerrero. 
Fernando Guerrero     
Hey, how y'all doing?  I want to say hello to everybody that's listening and Fernando Guerrero is going to be a champion.  
Itskowitch
Thank you, Fernando.  Now I'll say a few words before we open up questions from the media.  He became the WBO Middleweight World Champion by defeating World Champion Hassan N'Dam in a really, really exciting fight at the opening night for boxing at Barclays Center on October 20th of last year.  He scored six knockdowns in the fight, really got the crowd going.  It was really electrifying.  April 27th will be his first defense when he fights Fernando Guerrero.  He has a record of 28-0 with 20 KOs from Manhattan in New York City, Peter "Kid Chocolate" Quillin.
Peter Quillin   
How's everybody is doing?  Thank you for allowing me to grace the phone with you guys.  I just want to thank everybody that's made this fight possible: Barclays Center; my promotion team; Golden Boy; my advisor, Al Haymon; my management, John C., Jimmy McDevin; my trainers Eric Brown, Robert Garcia and Brad Bowes; manager, Johnny Berez; my two assistants, Tiffany Carter and Lisa Mahoy.  I'm just very blessed and make sure that y'all stay tuned to be able to watch Never Guerrero, because he's never going to be the champ like me.
Q
Peter, you fought a steadily improved caliber of opponents; Jesse Brinkley, Craig McEwan, Ronald White and of course Hassan in your last fight.  Can you talk about how that progression has kind of improved you and improved you experience-wise as a fighter?
Quillin
Yes, you know just the thrill of victory, the thrill of me having the will to want to be able to be better.  Roberto Duran said it best, "Once you stop trying to learn and be better, then you're no longer good enough anymore," so I just think I take every task I do in boxing to try to make myself a better fighter.  And not only that; outside of the ring, I'm trying to work on myself to be a better person; spiritually, physically, and mentally. 
Q
You talk about how the Winky Wright fight, would you consider that kind of a transition that really helped you to prepare for the atmosphere that you faced against Hassan N'Dam when you're fighting in your hometown? 
Quillin
Well, we can all look at it like that, but I look at everything as a challenge in my life.  Winky Wright was just only a starter where I was going to go in.  I'm not up the ladder yet where I want to be.  I want to be a unified champion.  I want to be all these other things and whatever comes my way I just make sure that I bust the challenges down to become just a better fighter, a better champion.  The Winky fight was only a practice towards where I wanted to be.  I know before the fight a lot of the hear sayers would say that I wasn't, you know, will make it look like an ugly fight; that Winky Wright will outclass me, and all these things were said about me.  To put on the performance that I did against Winky I couldn't do it without him at the same time; but most importantly, I just take everything for the experience to be where I'm at right now.
With this fight, fighting Guerrero, he's a southpaw and I got super lots of experience with a lot of camps fighting southpaws.  I just feel comfortable in the ring and like I said, everything you got to use to be a practice to wherever you want to be. 
Q        
Compared to you-and this is my last question for you, has he, you feel that Fernando has faced the kind of competition or the atmosphere that you've faced and had to be tested against?  You think that'll be an advantage for you, your experience in those types of situations? 
Quillin
Well, all I can say Fernando having a large sense of amateur background and I can probably just imagine that everybody in his corner will always tell him he was going to be a champion all his life, so being able to go out there and have the amateur record that he had and be able to go out there and perform as a professional the way he did, fighting at home, main event in his home town of Salisbury and just having just the crowd behind him in the push, only can make a person better, if not, make him weaker. 
As far as me, I was never told I was going to be anything like them.  So every time I step out there, I just had to prove to myself-not to the people that told me I couldn't do it, but to myself that I was able to do these great things that I'm doing in boxing right now.  So with that being said, you know what I'm saying, like I don't have any pressure, as far as knowing that I'm able to go out there and perform.  Geez, I just fought Hassan, who some would consider the fighter of the year, whereas he was dropped six times.  He got back up and he fought his heart out and then now I know with the experience that I've got 12 rounds of hard fighting underneath my belt, so I'm only as good as my last fight.  I'm looking here to capture new moments.  And I'm very happy to be able to do that on Showtime and do it at the Barclays and just have all the people that's been supporting me support me for all the right reasons.  Like I said, come April 27th, I'm only looking to create more great moments in boxing.
Q
Thank you very much, Peter.  Now, for Fernando, like Peter said, he had to really step up in his last fight and like I was saying, he's faced a lot of experienced guys in his career just recently.  Do you feel like you are making a huge step up?  Would it be accurate for me to tell you that going into the Barclays Center in such a big atmosphere?  And what kind of a challenge is that for you, personally? 
Guerrero         
Well, basically every fight that I step in is a big step up and now this is gonna be my first fight of the year, and it's gonna be the biggest step up for this year.  Fighting in a large crowd doesn't faze me because I've been doing it for the longest.  Just like he said, I was always told that I was going to be a champion.  I never expected anything less.  People never expected anything less, but once when you get out in the real world, it's not that easy.  You're not going to be a champion just because people tell you that you're going to be a champion. 
So now I'm here to prove it to the world and especially to myself.  I heard it before.  I want to make it true, and do it for everybody that believed in me and then just keep it going. 
Q
How far are you away mentally from the loss to Grady Brewer?  What did it take to come back from that and how well do you think you've done winning four straight fights like you have?
Guerrero         
Well, the thing is it was one the hardest things in my life.  When I was a kid I never even thought about death or anything like that, because you know how kids, they never think they can die, because they don't understand where do you go and everything like that.  So when you lose a fight like that, when you're undefeated and everything like that, it's hard, you know; and you go through those breakdowns.  But the thing is it's like that's when they show your real colors, it's easy.  I was knocking everybody out, I'm the strongest. 
Even in the amateurs, I always felt like I was the strongest.  I never fought anybody that was stronger than me, but God always tested me.  I think it's because He wants to make sure that everything that He's going to give me I really want it.
So how far am I from all that?  I'm not far at all.  I don't want to be far from.  Every fight, every position, every place that I've been it made me where I am now and who I am now.  So the thing is, it's just basically is written.  I don't really care about what's going to happen or anything.  It's already written and if I'm meant to be a champion, I'm meant to be a champion. 
All I'm doing is just I'm going with the flow.  I'm going to go in there and just broadcast my talent and broadcast my speed.  If he hits me hard, I'm going to hit him harder.  If he's fast, I'm going to be way faster.  If he's better, I'm going to be way better than that, so it's just going with the flow.  And if that wasn't good enough, at least it will be good enough for me, because I know that I'm doing everything by the book and everything that I'm supposed to do; and all I'm supposed to do is just try my best.  And with all of that, I will be the champ. 
Q        
I don't know anybody who-very few people who didn't see Peter's last fight, so I imagine you saw that.  You just said that if he hits you hard, you're going to hit him harder; you're going to be faster.  I would wager if you asked him it took everything he had to win his last fight.  If you find yourself in a fight like that with Peter, do you think you can wage that kind of a war where you have to get up and really answer blow for blow, second for second the whole fight through? 
Guerrero         
Well, a lot of times a lot of boxers don't like-it's funny that you ask that question.  It would be an honor to fight that way.  I would love to fight just like that because as a fighter, I mean I've been seeing it for so long, we want those historical moments.  We want to make those historical moments.  I'm a fighter.  I'm Guerrero. 
So the thing is is like I've never been bullied and I've never been in that aspect.  A lot of times things happen and you just got to overcome them and I'm still here.  I still know that I'm the best and I still feel like I'm the best and I feel like I'm a champion.  So it's not like I just woke up yesterday and that's my job and said, hey, I'm going to start boxing.  No, I've lost before in the amateurs and once when I lose, I just get way better and I beat the guy up the next time, so I've been through it all.  And like I said, it's already written.  If it's not for me, it's not for me, but I'm here and I'm just going to take it and I'm going to go as far as I can with it. 
Q
Okay, and my last question, you had mentioned that how low you were after the Grady Brewer fight.  When you said you thought about-were you saying you actually thought about death, or were you just saying that you were low?  I didn't understand that reference. 
Guerrero         
No, no, no, no, low as in like of course you're going to be low, especially with the type of-it's like I'm the type of person that it's all about the craft, because that's all I had.  I mean as an amateur I had 9,000, 10,000 people surrounding me all the time in Salisbury; and being a Dominican and being in Salisbury and being the type of person that I was, I was always named like I was the only one.  From my home town, there's only one person that came out of and did something; that was the girl from Terminator.  So other than that, I was it, so it's just when I meant that I was low, it just crushed me that I let a lot of people down.  But then once when you grow up, you got to understand, too, that it's my life in the ring, and they really didn't care about that and they showed me that.  A lot of people showed me that they don't even care if I box or not.  They only want me to just keep pushing and keep being that person that I am. 
I'm never-a lot of people don't understand I've never been in the streets.  I've never been the type of person that had a bad life or anything.  Yes, my life was difficult, but it doesn't matter.  I had a good household.  I stayed in school, straight A's and all that stuff, so for me it's like boxing was just something that I was just good at; and then I emerged, but other than that, man, it's not everything.  It's not everything. 
My everything is the people.  My everything is the youth.  Every time when I go to the schools, when I went to the clinic, when I did my races for cancer and everything like that, that's my everything; providing for them, providing for my people, providing for the people that provided for me when I came to America and made me feel good and made me feel like I'm at home.
Q        
Peter, are you anxious to get back in the ring because of the delay of the original date back in February? 
Quillin
Well, let's just say this, this is my whole life.  The only way I feel like I'm getting my therapy is being in that ring.  So with that being said, I learned a lot of things about myself within the last camp in; it being cancelled the week before I was well prepared for and it tells a lot about me when I had to step out and learn how to deal with that situation, which long agonizing days and nights training hard.  But most importantly, you got to think positive and I'm going to be even more super more prepared to be able to take this fight April 27th. 
Q        
And Fernando, as you all know, you are Dominican.  The Dominican team won the World Baseball Classics.  Congratulations.  How much do you want this fight to add another championship for the Dominican Republic? 
Guerrero         
Hey, look, man.  It brought a smile to my face that you even recognize that.  I don't really wear a steady hat, so whatever anything like that, because I don't really get into all that, but I had to buy my hat, man.  I'm like oh man, like I had to get it.  Everybody has their day.  Every country has been having their day.  You see once with Pacquiao and then the Filipinos and then Mexico and then Puerto Rico.  Then a lot of people in the back burner, they're always laughing at us a little bit, like how many Dominicans have you ever seen with a Tito Trinidad title and all that other stuff, all the Cubans and everything like that?
But the thing is it's like, I mean we're small and we're coming up.  And little things like that even back in the day people didn't understand when I tried to tell them the only person that I had to look up was Sammy Sosa.  But they're like, oh, he's not from boxing.  I was like, yeah, but that's my idol.  I want to be the Sammy Sosa of boxing. 
But now we have a few other Dominicans that are winning their championships, it makes me feel good.  It makes me feel proud of my country and I just want to be an addition to that and I want all those other people just to know that yes, we're doing some things and we're going to keep it going. 
Q
Do you feel there is pressure to become a champion as a Dominican?
Guerrero         
It's no pressure at all.  It just makes me feel good and all I want to do is just add to what we need too to our country.  Boxing is pressure; so anything else is no pressure at all.
Q        
Peter, how do you feel physically and what do you want the fans to know for April 27th? 
Quillin
Well, let's just say I feel very, very good.  I just found myself in a place where in my life where it's just like I'm just feeling physically, mentally strong.  I just I'm very happy to be where I'm at right now.  I don't take anything for granted.  I don't take what Fernando was trying to do for his country away, because within ourselves, that's very powerful.  But at the same time, I have my own reasons why I should be doing what I'm doing.  I'm doing this for just not being a Cuban-American, I'm a ... I'm saying like a lot of Cubans that's back in Cuba, they sit on the beach and it's like a sad thing to watch.  People just want to get out of that country and fight for opportunity. 

So now that I'm here and I know that it's very important to be able to say yo man, it ain't about the sand.  It ain't about nothing else besides myself.  Like I hear Fernando talking about he's doing it for the fans and he's doing it for everybody.  But to be able to do it for somebody else, you have to be able to do it for yourself first to be able to prove to other people that, you know what I'm saying, you're doing it for yourself; and that's what the fans are going to support, you doing it for yourself. 
So, me doing this, it's more than just like for Cuba and my father, who came over here with just a pair of pants and a shirt with no shoes on and come over here to make a-
Guerrero         
I'm sorry to cut you off, Peter. 
Quillin
I didn't cut you off.
(Overlapping voices)
Guerrero         
I could never do it for somebody else.
Quillin
I respect what you're doing.  I respect what you're doing, but when I gave the opportunity to talk and you gave your long answers, I respect that, but now it's my turn to talk.  I'm the champion; respect the champ.
Right now I'm telling you that whatever you're doing and for whatever reasons you're doing it, you're finding the wrong reasons and I'm going to exploit those reasons why you're doing this for the wrong people.  The only thing amounts to when he's talking running from a cat is when you run into this whole thing and he's mad that he ran from the cat.  All right, when he comes out of the hole and he decides that he's going to fight the cat and be able to put up a fight and he decided it's a fight that he can't win, he runs back to the hole. 
Listen man, we both fought older guys.  We both had those kind of things in our life to say what we at, why we are at now in life, and right now I'm trying to prove to myself that I'm the strongest champion out there.  You will not beat me April 27th.  The only thing you're going to know how to do is run back in that hole like you did with Grady Brewer.  You know how to lose.  Me and you fighting from two different points of views; you fighting not to want to lose again.  I'm fighting to keep my undefeated record and be the powerful champion that God sent me here to be. 
Guerrero         
Are you done?
Quillin
Yes, let's keep it short and straight to the point because that's what I'm going to do when I fight you.  We're going to keep it straight, straight to the point. 
Guerrero         
The only way we can keep it straight and short to the point is in the ring, my man, you know. 
(Overlapping voices)
Quillin
I'm going to prove that April 27th. It is already said and done man.
Guerrero         
You just started yesterday and God has blessed you and there's no doubt, but I don't respect nobody because I'm the champ. When you get into the ring, you're not going to fight ....
Quillin
No, you're fighting an animal, a hungry little animal, that's what you're fighting.  The only thing you're going to be in this fight is ...
Guerrero         
Every animal has his day and you're not an animal until you face me. 
Quillin
I'm the champ.  I'm the champ.  I'm the champ. 
Q        
Fernando, I know you have a huge following in Salisbury, Maryland.  I was just wondering what type of a response you're expecting when you step into Barclays, you know, tapped into the Dominican community from New York City. 
Guerrero         
Well like I said, the following has always been great, but all I need is one or two people.  Like I said, all I need is one or two people, and they always come through for me not just because I'm doing it for myself or anything.  I fight for different reasons.  Boxing, it's not just about boxing.  It's about what boxing means to those people, what I have achieved, and that's what I do.  I just get in there for those people because those are the ones that made me and I'm going to put my life on the line. 
I don't care about the fight with this dude.  I've lost ... amateur.  That's nothing new to me.  Life is not, it's like a lot of people try to make it seem like because I was in the Dominican Republic and I had no shoes and I had-Peter, you don't know anything about having no shoes or nothing.  You probably never even been to Cuba.  Your dad told you. 
Quillin
I said boxing is fighting through the struggles.  It's not fighting for two or three people.  Boxing is fighting through the struggles.  I have been to Cuba.  I witnessed my family living in the same house that my father lived in over 32 years ago.  I've been to the Dominican Republic.  I've seen how people live in DR.  I've been to China; I've been everywhere. 
The thing that's important to me is that I'm doing this for myself and nobody else, so once I step in there on April 27th the only thing Fernando Guerrero is going to be able to do is run back in that hole because I'm going to be a cat on his ass.
Guerrero         
Yes, okay.  Well, he already said what I was going to do, so I can't say anything about that, but we'll see it in the fight.  I've never been the type of person that I don't even know what he's talking about rat and mouse or whatever and all that stuff and the cat.  I just know that I know what made me.  I know what I fight for and my purpose, my purpose and that's what I'm going to go with, my purpose, my heart. 

I don't see this just myself.  I see it from everybody.  I see from all that energy everything, that's what keeps me alive and that's where I'm going to put and that's what I'm going to show the whole world over there.  If you fight for yourself, if you do it for yourself, y'all gonna be ... yourself, by yourself.    
That was the last question for Peter and Fernando, thank you so much for joining us today.  That was very exciting.  I can't wait to see the fight, so we are now going to say good-bye to you.  Thank you for taking your time to join us and we will see you fight week here in Brooklyn, New York.
Quillin
I'm looking forward to that.  I'm looking forward to that. I want to make a closing comment. I want to say make sure that y'all go tune in to this fight April 27th.  I going to be only on animal status and I hope and I just pray that he's ready when he comes, they should allow him every last allow him to wear headgear because I'm coming straight for you, homie.  I'm done with this call.  Have and nice and blessed day.  Hit up www.kidchocolate.com.
Thank you. Now we have our main event fighters on the line, so I am going to one note of homework, Danny Garcia will be having his media day in Philadelphia this Thursday.  The alert will go out after the call.  Now I'm going to turn it back over Dave Itskowitch to make the opening introductions, and here we go.  Dave. 
Itskowitch      
Thank you, Kelly.  Introducing now, I want to say a few words; this young man is one of New York's most accomplished fighters of all time.  He's a former five-time world champion, that's super lightweight and welterweight, former undisputed welterweight world champion on swings over Cory Spinks, Lucas Matthysse, Micky Ward, Junior Witter and DeMarcus Corley, has also shared the ring with Floyd Mayweather, Miguel Cotto and Kostya Tszyu.  He's won six of his last seven bouts, most recently in ninth round technical knockout win over then unbeaten Vernon Paris last March. 

On April 27th he's going to look to use his speed, wring savvy and vast experience to capture the unified title from the younger Garcia.  He's got a record of 42-7 with 29 KOs from Brooklyn, New York, Zab "Super" Judah.  Zab.
Zab Judah      
What's up, y'all?  Five time champion of the world, the last undisputed welterweight champion in the world. 
Itskowitch      
Now I would like to introduce the unified super lightweight world champion.  He was boxing's breakout star of 2012 and was a top candidate for 2012 Fighter of the Year honors as a result of his spectacular performances.  He won his first world title in March of 2012 by dropping and then decisioning the legendary Eric Morales for the WBC 140 pound title.  Garcia had unified the titles in July for the stunning fourth round knockout of the Amir Khan netting him the WBA Super and Ring Magazine world championships.  He helped to open Barclays Center for boxing business last October with a one punch knock-out of Morales in their rematch, which was really spectacular, and a candidate for 2012 knock-out of the year. 
He has a record of 25-0 with 16 KOs from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Danny Swift Garcia.  Danny?
Danny Garcia 
What's up, guys?  Thanks for having me on.  I just want to let everybody know I'm having a great camp, really motivated.  I'm 110% ready and I can't wait to show people my skills April 27th on Showtime.
Q        
I want to start with Danny.  Can you talk, Danny, just a little bit about what exactly happened to you with the injury and then your thoughts when it came to the point where you actually had to postpone the fight and move it from February to April?
Garcia 
Yes, it was three weeks out to the fight.  It was Saturday and I was fine.  I sparred three different guys.  I did 12 rounds.  After I got done sparring, I had a sharp pain on my side.  I thought maybe it was a cramp or something, but when I cooled down, I couldn't I put my hands past my head, because I couldn't stretch because the pain was so severe, so I went to the ER.  I got my ribs checked and they said I had a bruised rib.  They said that it would take four to six weeks to heal, so I tried to train with it another week, but I couldn't run or anything because it was taking my breath away.  So we had to make the decision I was supposed to spar that Saturday.  I couldn't spar, so I couldn't go through a championship fight not sparring for three weeks, because timing is everything. 
So we had to make the smart decision and we had to postpone the date, but now I'm 110% ready and we're about four weeks out and it's coming up faster than you know it.
Q        
So Danny, it hasn't given you any problems since you were able to go back and spar. 
Garcia 
No, I'm 110 percent ready.  We healed it right.  We started sparring at the right time.  We did a couple treatments.  We've done our physical training and I'm just strong and I'm ready to go. 
Q        
Okay, Zab, I wanted to ask you about that.  Can you talk just a little about the mental aspect of being very close to a very important fight and having it get postponed because you've already been probably at that point through,  probably well over a month of training camp and it comes sudden where you didn't do anything wrong.  You're still in good shape.  You're getting ready and your opponent gets injured and has to postpone the fight.  What's that like to deal with the disappointment and have to recharge and get back in there? 
Judah  
Oh, nothing.  I've been in the game.  I understand in this boxing sport that we're in, things happen.  I mean Danny got hurt, Danny got hurt.  I mean it's nothing to that.  I just got to, you know what I'm saying, put our cards right and keep on timing about the things that we're doing and keep a watch on our preparation and our preparation is great; and we just took a little bit of time off and came back at the right time, just stay sharp in gym.  And April 27th it's going to be an explosive night. 
Q        
How is that, how long did you actually take off, like while he was recovering from the injury, because the fight was postponed for a month and a half?  Did you take off a couple days, a month, a week, whatever? 
Judah  
I'm in that work zone again, you know what I mean, so I would take off days here and there, you know what I mean, so I don't know exactly.  I know I didn't take off no straight day, you know what I'm saying?  I kept it moving and kept-even if I was just doing conditioning, playing basketball or whatever it was, I was doing something. 
Q        
When Danny first got hurt and the fight was announced that it was postponed, you had made some comments, I think it was you made some comments that that you didn't believe that he was injured and that maybe he wasn't in shape and there was some talk that maybe he'd been seen out partying in Philadelphia leading up to the fight, celebrating the last victory against Morales and maybe not taking you that seriously; and that was the reason why the fight got postponed.  Is that still your opinion or do you believe that Danny got injured and, like you said, stuff happens in boxing? 
Judah  
I mean my opinion is my opinion; you know what I'm saying?  I mean what has to happen, you know what I mean?  I don't really know, but Danny has got one story.  We got another story, but Danny is a fighter, so Danny-who am I to say what really happened to him?  I can't judge that, man.  I mean April 27th we're going to find out everything. 
Q        
 Zab, you know you've been around.  That's an understatement.  This is actually his I guess fourth or fifth champion that he's fighting in a row and each time the guys he's fought has pointed to his inexperience as something they would exploit.  Out of all those guys, you are the most experienced and most accomplished that he will have fought.  What will you bring to the ring that he hasn't seen before? 
Judah  
I mean, everything, just me coming to the ring, period, you know what I'm saying, Lem?  Just from him being in Brooklyn and ... is something that he's never seen before, you know what I mean?  He's going to experience things that he's never seen.  Like I said, he did open up the Barclays Center.  He opened it up with me, you know what I'm saying, Lem?  That's my city.  You know what I'm saying?  I'm the king of that city and come April 27th we're going to show it. 
Q        
When you fought Vernon Paris you seemed as though you were-I mean it was like ten years previous.  I mean you really brought it and can you say what the difference between you that night and, say, you against Khan and you against maybe the latter half of the Matthysse fight, why were you so much on in that fight and can you be the same in this fight? 
Judah  
Yes, just that my whole focus is different, you know what I mean?  When they told me I was going to Brooklyn against the undefeated fighter, like Vernon Paris, I was excited.  See, people don't understand.  Fights and people don't give me, it's opportunity of things that gets me, you know what I'm saying?  I'm saying with me having the opportunity of being the only and last man to unify a weight division, a junior welterweight, because of what the WBC rules are now, so to my understanding there will be no more undisputed champion of the world after this fight is done.  So for me being that I did it at welterweight and I'll come back and do it at 140 again, that's going to be beautiful to me.  So it's the opportunity that excites me, not the people or the situation.
Q        
Okay, Zab, thank you very much and good luck in the fight. 
Danny, you already talked about your injury, and like I said before, each of the guys you fought, Campbell, Holt, Morales, ..., Khan, they all pointed to your inexperience and your father countered that saying that they weren't as good as they thought they were.  What did you learn and how does it kind of, I guess does it motivate you when you hear that kind of talk?  Does that bring out the best in you in those fights? 
Garcia 
I feel like the last fight ... they say they had more experience than me; but I feel like none of that matters when I step into the ring, because that don't matter when you're getting hit.  When you're getting hit, it don't matter how much experience you've got.  Can you take the punch?  That's the only thing that matters.  I'm in great shape.  I feel like I'm in great shape, I'm focused and I'm doing the right thing.  Nobody can beat me.  The only person that can beat me is me and that's like if I go in the ring not at 110% of shape and I'm focused, I'm ready to go; I feel strong and it's going to be an epic night April 27th. 
Q
Your last two knock-out victories over Khan and over Morales, was that a product of your improvement, or was that a focus?  What do you attribute those to, because you'd fought Morales, gone the distance with him before, and then Khan was knocked out by you after having you lost to Peterson? 
Garcia 
I guess I would just say growing as a fighter and getting more confident, believing in yourself and that's what I do.  Every time I step into that ring, I don't care who it is.  I always know that I'm going to win the fight no matter if I'm the underdog or if I'm picked to win.  I go in the ring with always knowing I'm a winner and that's what I bring into the ring every time. 
Q        
My last question for you is, you know Zab is a great fighter.  He's been a champion five times and he's fought great fighters.  Do you respect his skills and also what does he bring to the ring that does in fact pose a challenge? 
Garcia 
No doubt you've got to respect anybody who puts on gloves.  He's the world champion.  It's not easy to become a world champion in this game, especially with the politics, so anybody who is a world champion you got to give him respect and you got to respect him as a man.  I'm never going into the ring not respecting another fighter, because they got two hands just like you got two hands.  So any fighter that tells you they don't respect nobody going into the ring, that's a lie, because if you don't respect nobody you're going to get knocked out underestimating them, so I respect every fighter.  I don't underestimate no fighter.  I go into the fight 110% focused and ready and that's what I'm gonna bring April 27th.
Q        
But with Zab specifically, is he any different?  He's a southpaw, he's also very skilled.  Is he any different than the last four or five guys you fought? 
Garcia 
We'll just have to see.  We'll have to see.  Anything is easier said outside the ring than in the ring, everything that the story will be told April 27th.  You can say you're going to do this, you could say you're going to do that.  I can say he's different, I can stay he's faster.  I can say he's more experienced, but we won't know till we step in the ring. 
Q        
Danny, what did you see in Zab's fight with Amir Khan that he could bring up to this fight against you?  When you fought Amir, you know how he's a strong fighter, a quick fighter.  What do you see in that fight?
Garcia 
It was a good fight.  I think speed was a problem for him and he couldn't keep up with him, but this is a different style fighting.  It's a different style for this fight and it's going to be an explosive fight. 
 Q        
Zab, how about yourself?  You fought Amir ... before Danny.  Do you use that as a benchmark to see what you can do or what should you do to defeat Danny when the fight comes? 
Judah  
No, no, I'm a whole different style, a different fighter than Amir Khan is, you know what I mean, so Amir Khan and Danny Garcia, they fight, you know what I mean?  I think that means Danny is going to be a whole different type of fight than Amir Kahn and Danny Garcia. 
Q        
Danny, Zab spoke about the importance for him fighting in Brooklyn in his hometown.  There's a big Hispanic community in New York also.  You're from next door, from Philly.  How important is it to you to fight in a big venue like that where you fought Eric Morales in the rematch? 
Garcia 
I'm happy.  I'm very excited because I'm happy that I'm bringing a big fight back to the east coast and a lot of people on the east coast they're missing out on boxing, because there hasn't been a lot of big championship fights.  So just bringing a big fight back to the east coast for the Puerto Rican fans, the Philadelphia fans, the Brooklyn fans, all the fans in the east coast, that means the world to me, because we're bringing boxing back in the east today. 
Q        
Finally, Zab, you're a multi-new world champion.  You've been on the top.  You know how difficult it can be.  You know the pressure that comes from ... champion.  How do you see that as an advantage for you against a young fighter who's facing for the first time the superstardom where you've been before?  Could that be a detriment for him and affect his focus?   
Judah  
No.  I'm preparing for the best of Danny Garcia that can ever be.  You know what I'm saying?  When I train, you got to understand, I don't train for a regular Danny Garcia.  I train for like my own fight with oh Mike Tyson or somebody ... Mohammed Ali.  This is who I'm preparing for, you know what I'm saying; so when you prepare and get your mindset at a thing like this, you run into nothing but flying colors.  You know what I mean?  I mean I'm pretty sure Danny is going to come in there; he'll come in there swinging his hooks.  He'll start with his right hand and he's going to come in there doing what he's got to do.  You know what I'm saying?  And just super going to be ready.  But like I said, this is why the fans, to come on out, get your tickets or tune in live at the TV, get your popcorn and sit down and let's watch this process.    
Q
Hello, Danny.  How does it feel for people to question the legitimacy of the injury after it happened? 
Garcia 
Any time something happens, there's always going to be a controversy, but I can't do nothing else to prove it but get ready for April 27th and fight.  That's behind me.  I'm looking at the future and now that's the past and the future is April 27th.  I know ... everything is going great, no injuries, no nothing and it's going to be a great night. 
Q        
Zab, my first question is to you.  Pretty much I mean you're known worldwide.  You fought many fighters.  Looking at Danny, do you see anything any different in him, or is it just like another boxer? 
Judah  
No, I mean Danny really you respect him as a champion.  You respect the skills that he's bringing to the table.  He has youth on his side.  He's a young fighter, he's coming in.  He's very excited to be in this position and you know what I'm saying?  We know Danny Garcia is going to come in and fight hard, you know what I mean; so you got to take that and just prepare for it.  The old man showed you what to do, and that's ....  He showed you what ... how to go in there and annihilate these young boys, you know what I mean, and you just got to follow the game plan and follow through.  That's it. 
Q        
Can you talk to me a little bit about your training process, how have you prepared for this fight? 
Judah  
The training has been phenomenal, you know what I'm saying?  It's kind of funny; I went to three different training camps.  I was supposed to fight Lamar Peterson first, then the first Garcia fight and then now the second training camp, so it allowed me to get a lot in, you know what I'm saying, a lot of good sparring and a lot of good training, and sharpening up my skills.  I think as I sit here today I'm really sharp right now and I'm 100% ready and focused and I'm ready to go 12 rounds.  Let's get it on.  I just can't wait now. 
Q        
You also have elaborated how Brooklyn is your hometown and it's home field advantage, I guess, something very important for you.  Can you elaborate on how important it is fighting in Brooklyn for you? 
Judah  
It's somewhat like a basketball game or a sport games or a football game.  When you're home you got the fans behind you, cheering.  You got the momentum, you've got the energy.  You know what I mean?  It's going to be a lot of energy in that building that night and you know what I'm saying.  I think most of it is, I think most of it and all of it is going to be on my side, you know what I'm saying, but that's why I want to fight, you know what I'm saying?  ... is going there, and showing your skills. 
One thing overall, when people say you're Zab, ..., people say Zab wasn't in condition.  Nobody has ever questioned my skill level as a fighter; you know what I'm saying?  Everybody said if that Zab Judah we know get in shape and come in there fully prepared and focused 100% like he should, there's nobody on this planet that can beat him.  And I think April is going to show, you know what I'm saying?  Like I said, it's nothing personal against Danny Garcia.  It could have been any other fighter in this position.  Danny is the champion, and boxing you go for the championship, you know what I'm saying?  He got the championship and we're going to take it.  That's it, you know what I mean?  There's no hard feelings.  You know what I'm saying? 
Q        
And Danny, first of all, I know you don't speak Spanish.  I know every time I've interviewed you, it's always been through your dad, but if you could just tell me first of all, how are you doing after your injury?  How are you feeling right now 
Garcia 
I'm doing great.  I'm 110 percent ready and I'm training hard and we're four weeks out to the fight.  I feel good and I'm ready to go. 
Q        
What do you want the fans to know from Philadelphia, what do you want everyone, the Latinos, the community here in the southeastern Pennsylvania and around the world pretty much, what do you want everyone to know about your fight coming up? 
Garcia 
I want them to know, first of all, I want everybody to come out and ... Philadelphia ... there's already a whole bunch of people I know that's going out.  I bump into people in traffic when I'm going to the store, anywhere I go, people tell me, hey, I'm going to the fight.  I'm going to the fight; I already got my ticket, so already I know I got a lot of support coming from Philadelphia.  I'm pretty sure I got fans in New York, the Spanish fans, the hip hop fans, whatever.  I know they're going to come out and they just want to win.  It's a great night and I know I'm going to have the support.  I know I'm going to be ready and I know it's going to be a good night. 
Q        
Danny.  How is your training camp going and who are you sparring with? 
Garcia 
Training camp is going well.  I've been sparring with a couple local guys, a couple local guys.  I've got some new guys coming in today, so we're doing good.  You really don't have to go that far for work and we live in Philadelphia, especially the everybody brings their best in the gym and everybody is tough in Philadelphia.  Some of the best work is in Philadelphia and ...  We get new guys in today and we're going to finish our camp with them and be ready for the fight. 
Q        
Zab, Danny, who are you sparring with to get ready for this fight? 
Judah  
I have a couple ... same way, we got a couple of guys that we flew in and a couple guys from ... California.  We got a couple local Vegas guys here and you know.
Garcia 
And training camp has been phenomenal.  You know what I'm saying?  As far as sparring, I mean I don't have-I probably went through multiple trainings, I probably went through a total of ten guys already, you know what I'm saying?  So a lot of guys don't stay in camp long with me so they're in and out, you know what I mean?  Hey, we're prepared and ready to go for April 27th. 
Q        
Hey, my first question is for Danny.  Danny, Jose Soman made a statement about a month ago, and in the statement he said that you must either choose this organization's belt, which is WBC, or relinquish your title.  Have you made a decision on which belt you're going to keep? 
Garcia 
To be honest with you, I don't know nothing about that.  I don't worry about the policy side.  My job is to train for the fight.  I'm not worrying about what belt I got to keep going into the ring or the organization is going to restrict me or nothing like that.  I'm pretty sure I got this far for this long.  He knows how hard I work.  He knows the dedication and the fact that ... belt, so I'm just go into the ring and defend whatever title that I defend.  I don't really worry about the policy side of the thing and I just train. 
Q        
And your first training camp for the ... fight, you had ..., sorry, and he mentioned also in the media that your injury was actually a thumb injury and somehow the rib injury came out later.  Can you explain that situation? 
Garcia 
Well, I guess when I was hurt he didn't want to tell nobody it was a rib injury.  I'm just thinking how he would think just in case I did keep-just in case I did go into the fight, he didn't want nobody to know that I was probably injured on my rib.  But other than that, I want to know why he would lie, but I don't know. 
Q        
Okay.  And Zab, the last time that you fought in Europe for 140 pound title against a Puerto Rican fighter, the outcome wasn't so positive.  What have you done now to change the outcome for this fight?  

Judah  
I prepared myself different for these fights.  Back then, I was never-I mean I ... train ... for all those fights, you know I'm saying?  But now my focus ... is totally different. 
Q        
And you're going to be in your hometown Brooklyn for this fight.  For everyone in Brooklyn and for everybody in the world-
Judah  
And for the record, I only lost to one Latino fighter, that was Cotto.  The other ones that I fought I knocked out.  Check the record. 
Q        
No, no, I know.  I just said that the last time you fought a 140 pound fighter in New York, that's what I said. My last question to you is what does it mean for you, what does it mean to Brooklyn for you to come out the victor in this fight? 
Judah  
It would mean a lot.  We're in Brooklyn; the city needs a great champion.  It need somebody to stand up for the city, you know what I'm saying?  That's for my American fans and Latino fans.  New York City is New York City is my city, you know what I'm saying, so I have a lot of Latino friends.  I have a lot of African-American friends.  I have a lot of friends, period.  I have a lot of all kind of friends, races, it's a lot of-I got everybody in my circle.  I just think that it's our problem again; you know what I'm saying?  Brooklyn once reined in the early '80s and the early '90s with Mike Tyson and now Zab Judah is gonna come back in and take over again.  This time we got an arena to represent it.
Q        
Danny, you opened up the Barclays Center for boxing this past fall, and there'll be a lot of fans from Philly making the trip to see you fight.  Do you feel like you'll be fighting at home come April 27th? 
Garcia 
Yes, definitely.  It's an east coast fight in the east.  Philadelphia is right next to New York.  There's a great atmosphere.  I think when I fought at the Barclays Center that was one of the best atmospheres I ever fought in.  It's a brand new arena.  Everything was nice.  The atmosphere was nice.  The people are nice out there.  I got a lot of love out there and they made me feel like I was at home and I'm looking forward to doing the same thing April 27th. 
Q        
Okay.  Absolutely, it was historical.  Okay, there have been some criticism over your last win over an aged Erik Morales, but Zab Judah is a resurrected fighter.  Is there anything you feel you need to prove against a seasoned veteran like Zab? 
Garcia 
I feel like I have nothin' to prove, I have to just go in the ring and I don't worry about what nobody say about me; how I fight, the way I fight, fighting older guys and none of that.  That's not my job.  My job is not to match make.  My job is not to worry about what people think.  My job is to train and get ready for a fight and give the fans of boxing a great performance no matter who is it against.  That's my job.  And that's what I'm going to bring into the ring April 27th, a great conditioned Garcia and he's gonna go in there and do what he does best. 
Q        
That's old school right there; I like that.  Okay, not to look past Zab, but I know you saw the Rios/Alvarado fight this last weekend.  You like to collect title belts these days.  What are your thoughts on possibly facing either Rios or Alvarado in the future?
Garcia 
As far ... I know it was a good fight.  It was a good fight for boxing.  You don't stop many fights, I mean they both like to fight and my focus is Zab Judah.  Other than that, I really can't talk about any other fighters.  Congratulations to Mike Alvarado.  He did his thing and now it's time for me to do my thing. 
Q        
All right.  Well, we look forward to seeing you do your thing on April 27th.  Okay, next questions are for Zab.  Zab, you fought in New York on a number of occasions.  However, this is the first time you'll be fighting in your home town, Brooklyn.  Do you feel any additional pressure fighting at home for the first time?
Judah  
It's my second fight ...
Q        
Oh sorry, okay, I'm sorry about that.  I didn't know that was actually in Brooklyn.  Okay, well, being that you're going to be fighting in the Barclays Center for the first time, is there any additional pressure fighting there for the first time? 
Judah  
No, I think it's going to be great because you get to have your peers finally get to come out and see me fight.  A lot of people always was kind of upset because they could never ever get to come to my fight, because it was always in Vegas.  All the big ones is in Vegas or other places.  I'm saying now they get to take a train or a bus or drive right there and walk and come check out Super Judah, so I think it's going to be a phenomenal atmosphere and it's going to be great.
Q        
You've been around for a long time despite being 35 years old.  Do you feel your experience is going to be the key factor in this fight? 
Judah  
I just think that my mindset is different right now and I know it and I know certain things that I do and choose to do, you know what I'm saying?  That my mindset is different.  And people always say, the fans have said it for years, is that focus, nobody that can beat him.  I think that finally I made it to that peak in life right now. 
Q
And one last question, you resurrected your career many times over the years.  You've stayed in top shape all these years and you still look like you're in your mid 20s.  What are some of the things you have done to help continue your legacy over these years? 
Judah  
Just hard work, you know what I'm saying?  I've always been an athlete.  Throughout the years, I've never been the type of fighter where I've never done nothing, I've just stopped doing other things, you know what I mean, so I'm always in good shape.  I don't know.  Just stay focused.  Understand since I was six years old, this is all that I've ever done in life; you know what I'm saying?  Boxing has only been my only job ever and it's a job that I love and I take pride in to it.  It's almost a gift and a curse.  Sometimes we're having talents and skills and that allowed me not to train as hard as I should have trained for certain fights, you know what I mean?  And I paid the consequences on that.  But at times when I did stepped in there and I did put 100% work in, it always came out with flying colors. 
Q        
Things got a little heated between you guys at your last press conference.  How's the postponement ease the temperaments of the any personal animosity that you guys had? 
Judah  
Oh no, never, this is all business; you know what I'm saying?  Things like that happen.  I think what ... did was beautiful because it allowed the fans and everybody to take place and to bring the light to the situation; you know what I'm saying?  It's probably something that I needed just to light the candle and the fuse under myself and it was great for boxing.  It was great for the sport.  As far as animosity or somebody like having like somebody really want to be sad, I mean I'm saying my mother sleeps good at night.  I'm pretty sure Danny's mother does, too, so it's not.  There's no beef. 
Q        
Danny, any hard feelings on your camp? 
Garcia 
I got feelings about this that ... no.  It was only for everybody to watch me and ... fighting it ... from the press conference to a great night in boxing and that's entertainment ....  Nobody wants to watch a boring press conference or a boring fight or nobody will watch it.  Like I said, they didn't know, now they know now. 
Garcia 
I want everybody to come out April 27th.  It's going to be a great night for the Philadelphia fans, the Brooklyn fans, the Puerto Rican fans.  I'll be on my A game and at the end of the fight and still champion of the world, Danny Garcia. 
Judah  
Yes, it's going to be a great night of boxing.  I just hope all the fans come out or be locked in by the TV if you're not coming out.  Brooklyn is back, keep God first.  Anything is possible and ... that's it. 
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