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Thursday, January 17, 2008

A look inside ALEX “THE TECHNICIAN” BUNEMA; Who will face Roman "Made in Hell" Karmazin on the Trinidad vs Jones Under card

ALEX “THE TECHNICIAN” BUNEMA

Former World Boxing Association Continental Americas Champion
Born in Kinshasa, Zaire, July 28, 1975
Height: 5’9” – Weight: Super Welterweight (154)
Record: 26-9-2, 14 KOs

ALEX “THE TECHNICIAN” BUNEMA


Alex Bunema was born in Kinshasa, Zaire, nine months after the city hosted the legendary “Rumble in the Jungle,” Muhammad Ali’s stunning upset knockout of George Foreman in October, 1974.

Before and long after the fight, an unprecedented boxing buzz engulfed Zaire and Alex was immediately drawn to the Sweet Science.

“The thing that really got me into boxing was the Ali-Foreman fight in ’74,” said Alex, who tallied a 39-1 amateur record before turning professional in August 1996. Growing up, everybody was talking about that fight.

“That was one of the greatest fights of all time and it happened in Zaire. For months and years, that was the only thing people were talking about. It inspired a lot of kids to pick up the gloves and pursue a career in boxing.”

While the Ali-Foreman fight pushed Alex to learn the nuances and intricacies of one of the most difficult individual sports, it was his father’s calming influence that helped him stay motivated and dedicated to the sport.

“My dad used to be a boxer,” said Alex, who stormed out of the professional gates winning his first 13 fights. “He fought as an amateur. He would tell me about his fights and that would inspire me. I started boxing when I was just eight years old.”

Alex quickly turned heads with his advanced skills and strength. He would dispatch opponents with one-part finesse and one-part power.

He would become a four-time national champion in Zaire. He did it in 1992 at 132 pounds, and from ‘93-‘95 he would terrorize the 139 pound division.

Alex’s hard work and determination led him to qualify for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Ga., but, through no fault of his own, Alex was unable to compete.

“I was one of the youngest fighters to make it to the national team,” Alex said. “I won the Central African tournament. I was ready to go to Atlanta, but the sports federation wanted my family to give them a certain amount of money, and they didn’t have it.”

Alex would now focus on his professional career.

At the age of 21, on Aug. 30, 1996, Alex said goodbye to the amateur world and said hello to professional boxing. Alex would knockout his first opponent, Scan Ione, in the opening stanza.

Alex Bunema attends the Press conference for Trinidad vs Jones.


Alex would face his toughest challenge only a year after turning professional. On Sept. 9, 1997, in Bay St. Louis, Miss., Alex got in the ring with former National Golden Gloves amateur champion Orlando Hollis.

Alex didn’t waste anytime as he got off to a hot start and never looked back. He scored one knockdown in the second round. He dropped Hollis a second time in the third, latter stopping him at 1:48, registering a technical knockout victory.

On March 2, 2000 in Las Vegas, Nev., Alex proved he was capable of winning a tough, close fight against a quality opponent. Alex took home a 10-round split decision victory against former world-title challenger Tony Marshall, who came into the fight with more experience and ring savvy than Alex.

Marshall kept the busier pace, but Alex was the harder puncher. He rocked Marshall in the fifth round and staggered him in the eighth. His hard-hitting style won him fans in the audience and points from the judges. Alex won a split decision where two judges favored him 96-94, and the third judge gave it to Marshall, 97-93.

By now, Alex was gaining experience and momentum. He had only two losses on his resume and a handful of quality wins against tough opposition.

His next challenge would come in an International Boxing Federation (IBF) junior middleweight title eliminator on Oct. 26, 2001 in Temecula, Calif. against the veteran and crafty Bronco McKart.

It was an exciting fight which earned a standing ovation from the crowd as there were many give-and-take rounds that were close and hard to score. Both fighters were exchanging leather as if it were going out of fashion.

Alex stood a great chance of winning since he applied constant pressure throughout. The judges, however, didn’t see it that way. Alex lost a hard-fought 12-round split decision with one judge favoring him 115-113 while the remaining judges saw it for McKart 116-112 and 117-111.

After the fight McKart admitted, “I almost went down in the fifth. He hit me hard with a body shot and I was very close to going to a knee. Bunema can box and punch with the best of them.”

To date, Alex’s most visible fight came against former world champion Jermain Taylor.

On March 27, 2004, Alex challenged Taylor for his World Boxing Council (WBC) Continental Americas title in Little Rock, Ark. At the time, Taylor was an undefeated, rising contender.

Alex would come out aggressively in the early rounds in an effort to wear down the harder-hitting Taylor. Alex is known for his incredible stamina that wears out even the most conditioned athletes.

Taylor was able to keep a busy pace and consistently landed the harder punches.

Taylor scored two knockdowns in the seventh round, both coming after a series of right hands, and the referee stopped the fight without a count with 44 seconds left in the round.

After the fight, Alex said, “I’m very disappointed. I felt like the referee let me down. I take a knee and he stops the fight. I’ve been down before and have come back to win the fight.”

Alex rebounded nicely after the Taylor loss, having won four of his last five fights.

In his last appearance, Alex dispatched the veteran Steve Walker with a second round TKO on Nov. 10, 2007 in Ridgefield, Wash.

The Zaire native managed another nifty victory nearly two months earlier. Alex delivered a fourth round knockout against the young and tough Farid Shahid on Sept. 21, 2007, in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Alex is set to challenge former IBF 154-pound champion Roman “Made in Hell” Karmazin for his World Boxing Association (WBA) Intercontinental Super Welterweight title on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008 at Madison Square Garden on the HBO pay-per-view under card of the highly anticipated showdown between future Hall of Famers Felix “Tito” Trinidad and Roy Jones, Jr.

Alex is married and has one daughter.

A look inside ANDREW “POWERFUL POLE” GOLOTA; Who will face Mike Mollo on the Trinidad vs Jones Under card

ANDREW “POWERFUL POLE” GOLOTA
Heavyweight Contender
Born on Jan. 5, 1968, in Warsaw, Poland, now living in Chicago, Illinois
Height 6’ 4” – Weight: Heavyweight
Record: 40-6-1, 33 KOs

ANDREW “POWERFUL POLE” GOLOTA


Andrew Golota began boxing at age 13 and captured an unprecedented seven Polish national amateur championships. He won a bronze medal at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. Golota relocated to Chicago and turned pro in 1992, winning his first 27starts—24 by knockout.

He first garnered national attention, however, when he bit Samson Po’uha en route to a fifth-round technical knockout victory in May 1995.

In his biggest victory as a pro, Golota battered Emanuel Steward-trained Danell Nicholson en route to an eighth-round TKO in March 1996, despite nearly getting himself disqualified for a head butt.

The Warsaw native would not be so lucky facing former undisputed heavyweight champion Riddick Bowe, against whom he twice fouled out of high-profile bouts he was winning in 1996. The first meeting between the two on July 11 stands on its own as a fight that will go down in history due to the mayhem that engulfed Madison Square Garden following the proceedings.

A determined Golota performed better than most could have imagined. His combination punching looked like the best in the division, and his ability to slide to either side and deliver punches left Bowe, one of the great heavyweights then or any time, confused and covering up on the ropes. Golota was on his way to registering a shocking upset before things turned sour.

Golota was rocking Bowe in the fourth round when a low blow interrupted the action. The referee penalized Golota a point and gave Bowe time to recuperate. The same thing occurred late in the sixth round and a second point was deducted. Midway through the seventh, Golota struck below the belt for his third point deduction. Inexplicably, with 27 seconds remaining in the round, Golota was disqualified after landing his final illegal blow that left Bowe lying on his back in agony.

A wave of spectators stormed the ring, catching Madison Square Garden security off guard. As Golota returned to his corner, he was attacked by members of Bowe’s entourage and was struck on the back of the head with a portable phone.



For the rematch five months later, Golota’s handlers took extra steps to insure that their charge’s blows would stay in the legitimate target area. A pair of specially-made trunks were fixed to a rounded “body punching” bag at the gym where Golota trained. He spent many an afternoon pounding home his shots above the waistband.

The extra measures taken did not help. A battered Bowe, down twice in the fight and out on his feet in the closing rounds, won by ninth-round disqualification after Golota struck low again. This, after being docked two points for infractions earlier in the bout.

Golota had a chance to redeem himself after being disqualified in back-to-back fights. In October 1997, he got a shot at World Boxing Council heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis. In a shocking result, Lewis knocked out Golota at 95 seconds of the opening round. Golota came out tentative and went down the first time at the one-minute mark. He gave his best to be competitive, but never recovered and went down again. The referee stopped it shortly thereafter.

After the crushing first-round knockout, Golota won six consecutive bouts, including hard-fought, unanimous 10-round decision victories over Corey Sanders and “Terrible” Tim Witherspoon in July and October 1998, respectively.

The Sanders slugfest was a bloody, one-sided war. Golota dominated, but could never relax as Sanders, despite fighting with a nasty gash over his left eye from the third round on, showed plenty of spunk by continually trying to fight back. At the end, Golota, who had suffered a smaller cut in the third, won by scores of 100-90, 99-90 and 97-93.

Golota had an even easier time out-pointing Witherspoon, the former world heavyweight champion. In what figured to be a tough assignment, Golota boxed magnificently while avoiding ‘Spoon’s once-vaunted right hand to win by scores of 100-91, 99-91 and 98-93.

In January 1999, Golota won his third consecutive unanimous 10-round decision, this one over Jesse Ferguson; however, he suffered a come-from-ahead TKO 10-round loss to then-North American Boxing Federation (NABF) heavyweight champion Michael Grant on Nov. 20, 1999.

Golota had Grant down, and almost out, twice in the first round, but Grant fought on and floored Golota in round 10. Golota got up fast and appeared steady on his feet before the referee asked him if he wanted to continue. Although he appeared to be ready and able to continue, he said “no” twice and the bout was halted at the 1:31 mark of the 10th round. Golota was ahead by scores of 87-80, 86-81 and 85-83 at the time of the stoppage.

Golota registered a third-round TKO over Marcus Rhode on April 22, 2000, in China. Golota had his way with Rhode, knocking him down three times. He dropped Rhode twice in the second round, the first time with a hard right and the second with a double combination. In the third, Golota landed a hard right followed by two combinations that drove Rhode through the ropes. The bout was stopped at 2:49 of the round.

On June 16, 2000, Golota built up an early lead and withstood a late rally to win a unanimous decision over former world champion Orlin Norris. The heavyweight contender captured the contest 99-91, 98-92 and 97-94 to win for the eighth time in nine starts.

On October 20, 2000, Golota fought Mike Tyson in Auburn Hills, Mich. Golota was cut over the eye and knocked down in the first round. After not answering the bell for the third round due to injuries, the fight was declared a no-contest.

After an almost three-year hiatus, Golota fought twice in 2003. On Aug. 14, he stopped Brian Nix (TKO 7) in Dover, Del., and on Nov. 14, beat Terrance Lewis (TKO 6).

On April 17, 2004, Golota had his second chance to win a world heavyweight championship—this time Chris Byrd’s IBF crown. Byrd’s slick boxing style was the stylistic opposite of the brawling Golota.

Andrew Golota


Most boxing experts felt going in that Byrd would frustrate Golota by using his superior boxing skills to wear the big man down, but the Polish strongman gave his best performance since his 1996 heyday when he faced Bowe in those two epic clashes. He avoided fouling, kept his composure, boxed efficiently and many people thought he won the match.

The fight went the 12-round distance, but the judges could not determine a winner. Steve Weisfeld scored it 113-115 for Golota; Melvina Lathan had Byrd winning the fight 115-113; and Tony Paolillo couldn’t break the tie at 114-114.

Golota’s fine performance earned him another world title fight against WBA champion John “The Quietman” Ruiz on Don King’s huge heavyweight Rendezvous with Destiny: Battle for Supremacy card in Madison Square Garden on Nov. 13.

Golota made the most of his opportunity by taking the fight to Ruiz early. After Ruiz landed a solid shot in the second round, Golota answered with a counter punch that floored Ruiz. Still wobbly after regaining his feet, Golota dropped Ruiz again and the end seemed near. While Ruiz survived the round, he would have to overcome a round scored 10-7 by all three judges.

Ruiz fell farther behind in the fourth round when referee Randy Neumann deducted a point from him for hitting on the break. Golota showed great restraint throughout the fight avoiding any fouling tactics that would have cost him points.

Golota was clearly the more highly skilled boxer, but Ruiz’s burrowing, clenching style makes for ugly fights that are difficult to score. For instance, all three judges had Ruiz winning two of the lat three rounds although none of them had the combination.

Although Ruiz’s performed better in the middle and late rounds, many were shocked when a unanimous decision was announced in favor of Ruiz. Frank Lombardi scored it an understandably close 113-112, but the two other judges, Tom Schreck and Oscar Perez scored the fight a less comprehensible 114-111. Many thought Golota had won the fight, including Golota himself.

“I thought I won the fight,” Golota said. “He went down twice. I controlled the fight. I am confused here. I am upside down. This is very confusing to me. Maybe the judges were watching the fights outside the ring [in the arena] and not inside the ring.”

Golota was given the third chance in a row to win a world heavyweight title when he faced World Boxing Organization heavyweight champion “Relentless” Lamon Brewester at the United Center in his adopted hometown of Chicago on May 21.

More than 20,000 fans, mostly from Chicago’s huge Polish community, came to root for the hometown favorite.

Brewster stormed at Golota from the opening bell and landed a devastating left hook just 10 seconds into the fight. Golota came to his feet but staggered before regaining enough composure for referee Gino Rodriguez to allow the match to continue.

For Brewster, this feat was even greater when considering Golota had just gone 12 rounds with WBA champion John Ruiz and 12 rounds against IBF champion champion Chris Byrd without being knocked down in either contest.

Seconds later, Brewster landed another pulverizing left hook that sent Golota down and through the ropes. Golota refused to quit. He struggled and regained his feet long enough to experience the third and final left hook that caused Rodriguez to halt the action at just 53 seconds into the fight.

Golota got back on the winning track by scoring a second-round technical knockout Jeremy Bates in Katowice, Poland, on June 9, 2007.

His last ring appearance was against Mike Tyson conqueror Kevin “The Clones Colossus” McBride in Madison Square Garden on Oct. 6.

Andrew Golota and Kevin “The Clones Colossus” McBride, square off in the ring on Oct. 6.

Often a slow starter, McBride took a page out of Lamon Brewster’s and Mike Tyson’s scouting report on the Pole and rocked Golota with several shots in the opening stanza. Golota used his veteran skills to weather the storm and maintain his composure, buying time to establish a rhythm in what turned to be a highly entertaining slugfest that saw the Garden crowd on its feet during much of the contest.

While both fighters exchanged power shots at will, Golota opened a nasty gash over McBride’s left eye in round five. With McBride having trouble seeing out of his eye, Golota pounded McBride in the sixth until referee Arthur Mercante Jr. stepped in and stopped the contest with 18 seconds left in the round.

“Kevin was winded,” Mercante said. “He took a lot of shots. He can fight on another day.”

Golota praised his opponent.

Andrew Golota exits the ring after his victory over Kevin McBride on Oct. 6.


“Kevin surprised me,” Golota said in the ring after the fight. “He was faster than I thought he would be and he didn’t get tired. I proved tonight that I can still fight with anyone.”

McBride thought he could have fought on but was pleased with his performance.

“No, I didn’t think the referee should have stopped it but I was having trouble seeing out of my eye,” McBride said. “He really didn’t hurt me until the end.

“I thought that I had him out in the first round. It was close. I’m okay now.”

MAIN EVENT TRAINER ROUNDTABLE; Alton Merkerson and Papa Trinidad


NEW YORK— Subtle barbs continued to fly between Roy Jones Jr. coach Alton Merkerson and Tito Trinidad trainer and father Papa Trinidad during today’s main event trainer roundtable in the media center at a hotel near Madison Square Garden.

“Tito doesn’t need any help from Roy Jones,” Papa Trinidad said. “We want to fight him at his best.”

Merkerson reached back to Monday’s trainer media conference call to launch this salvo with Papa Trinidad sitting right next to him. “I heard Trinidad Sr. say Tito is going to knock out Roy. If they come in with that strategy, it’s going to be an early night. Roy will take him out early with that game plan. I don’t see this fight going the distance.”

Felix Trinidad Sr. (Father, trainer and manager of Felix “Tito” Trinidad) “Tito had said he might be interested in fighting again even before Don King called. Roy Jones was on the list then.

“Tito did not show his skills against Winky Wright. Winky is very difficult, as you know.

“Tito has shown no difficulty moving up in weight. He brings his strength and his punch with him. Tito doesn’t need any help from Roy Jones. We want to fight him at this best. Roy has been a great champion. Tito has defeated fighters of all styles.
“I weigh 22 pounds less now. My health was not good. Now, after medical treatment, I am 100 percent well. At that time and today, my knowledge of boxing remains. Nothing has been erased. I recovered my potential, my strength and my energy, the same as it was at the beginning of Tito's career. And, thanks to God, what was in my past is to the side. I feel 100 percent and I have concentrated on preparing a technical team. Everybody has his specific duty, and so we feel prepared to defeat one of the greatest trainers of all time.”

Alton Merkerson (trainer for Roy Jones Jr.)

“Tito is normally a slow starter, but in reference to this fight, I think that Trinidad Sr. knows he has to try to start off faster than he usually does. Our strategy is not going to change that much, because I consider Tito to be somewhat one-dimensional, so we know basically what to expect.

“I heard Trinidad Sr. say Tito is going to knock out Roy. If they come in with that strategy, it’s going to be an early night. Roy will take him out early with that game plan. I don’t see this fight going the distance. What Roy does in the ring is to his advantage. But through the hype in this fight, and the darts thrown at each other, I don't think there's going to be too much boxing. It's just my philosophy, and knowing Roy, knowing his demeanor through all the years of training him, I see something in him for this fight that I haven't seen before. I relate it more to the second fight with Montell Griffin.”

Former world champion DeMarcus 'Chop Chop' Corley has stepped in to fill the void and will face Alexander

Undefeated 140-pounder Devon Alexander "The Great" was to have faced Miguel Callist, who, unfortunately, has suffered a training injury.

Trinidad-Jones Featured Pay-Per-View Matches Destined to Produce Slugfests

NEW YORK— Two of the greatest boxers in history, Felix “Tito” Trinidad and Roy Jones Jr., will face each other in a battle boxing fans have been waiting for years to see at New York’s famed Madison Square Garden on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008. The event has been dubbed “Bring on the Titans” and will be produced and distributed live by HBO Pay-Per-View (9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT).

But before Trinidad and Jones square off, there will also be three bouts featured at the Garden and live on the pay-per-view telecast including heavyweight Andrew Golota taking on the emerging Chicago heavyweight “Merciless” Mike Mollo;
Former 154-pound champion Roman “Made in Hell” Karmazin squaring of with Alex “The Technician” Bunema; and undefeated super lightweight Devon Alexander “The Great”—Don King’s top young prospect—will face his toughest opponent yet in former world champion DeMarcus “Chop Chop” Corley.

DeMarcus “Chop Chop” Corley


Devon Alexander “The Great"


In a match where two titles will be on the line, Golota (40-6-1, 33 KOs) of Chicago by way of Warsaw, Poland, the current International Boxing Federation (IBF) North American champion will face the young and hungry World Boxing Association (WBA) Fedelatin titlist Mollo (19-1, 12 KOs) in a Chicagoland showdown.

Preceding Golota-Mollo, Karmazin (36-2-1, 23 KOs), from St. Petersburg, Russia, now living in Los Angeles, will defend his WBA Intercontinental super welterweight title against Bunema (26-9-2, 14 KOs), from Kinshasa, Zaire, now living in Atlanta.

The opening of the telecast will showcase the 20-year-old phenom Alexander (13-0, 9 KOs), from St. Louis, Mo., taking on Washington, D.C., veteran and former World Boxing Organization (WBO) 140-pound titlist Corley, who has stepped into the ring with the likes of “Pretty Boy” Floyd Mayweather, Zab “Super” Judah, Miguel Cotto, Junior Witter and Jose Alfaro.

Golota, the greatest Polish heavyweight ever and one of the best heavyweights to have never won a world title, has won his last two contests via technical knockout and continues on his quest to win an elusive world crown. His most memorable fights came against some of the best heavyweights of his era including former world champions Lennox Lewis, Mike Tyson, Riddick Bowe, Chris Byrd and John Ruiz.

His last ring appearance was against Mike Tyson conqueror Kevin “The Clones Colossus” McBride at the Garden on Oct. 6, 2007. Golota can often be a slow starter, so McBride took a page out of Lamon Brewster’s and Tyson’s scouting report on the Pole and rocked him early in the match.

Golota used his veteran skills to weather the storm and maintain his composure, buying time to establish a rhythm in what turned to be a highly entertaining brawl that saw the Garden crowd on its feet during much of the contest.

Golota opened a nasty gash over McBride’s left eye in round five and finished him off with just 18 seconds to go in the sixth when referee Arthur Mercante Jr. halted the contest.

Mollo, 27, is still building his reputation as a legitimate heavyweight contender. A win over Golota would help catapult him into the upper echelons of heavyweight contenders seeking a world-title shot.

Mollo needed only two rounds to knock out Art “The Polish Warrior” Binkowski in his last outing on Oct. 13, 2007, in Hoffman Estates, Ill. Mollo turned in a dominating performance, battering the former Canadian Olympian from pillar to post. He dropped Binkowski three times in the second round before the referee stopped the carnage.

When asked how he felt after the fight, Mollo exclaimed, “Unbelievable, super-aggressive like a pit bull. Now I want Golota.”

Look for the young Mollo to come out swinging early, and the proverbial chips—or possibly the fighters in this case—will fall where they may.

Karmazin is coming off a sterling third-round knockout over former two-time 154-pound world champion Alejandro “Terra” Garcia on Friday, Nov. 23, 2007, at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles.

Karmazin, 35, proved why he has always been considered one of the best junior middleweights in the world in an absolute destruction of Garcia where the Russian looked fantastic.

He lived up to his Made in Hell moniker when he dropped Garcia with a devastating body shot in the opening round. The assault continued until Karmazin disposed of the Mexican with a four-punch combination punctuated by a stinging left hook to the body in the third round that earned him a knockout.

“I knew the fight was going to end early after the first round,” Karmazin said. “I’m a boxer, I’m a thinking fighter, and I knew I was faster and punched harder.”

Bunema is also coming into this fight with plenty of momentum. In his last appearance, the 32-year-old dispatched veteran Steve Walker with a second round TKO on Nov. 10, 2007, in Ridgefield, Wash.

The Zaire native managed another nifty victory nearly two months earlier. Bunema delivered a fourth-round knockout against the young and tough Farid Shahid on Sept. 21, 2007, in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Alexander is scorching hot, having scored an opening-round TKO over Cory Peterson on Oct. 13, 2007, at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Ill.

Fighting out of the Cory Spinks camp under the tutelage of trainer Kevin Cunningham, his promoter Don King thinks it’s time to show Alexander’s skills to a wider audience.

“I insisted on putting Alexander The Great on the Jones-Trinidad pay-per-view because he is emerging and ready to become the top welterweight in the world,” King said. “Now is Devon’s time and I want everyone to see this young talent display his skills.”

Standing in the way of Alexander’s quest for glory is the always dangerous Corley. Now 33, Corley has a vast experience advantage over his young opponent and would like nothing more than to spoil Alexander’s first appearance in a televised pay-per-view match.

The Trinidad vs. Jones domestic pay-per-view telecast will begin at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT and is being produced and distributed by HBO Pay-Per-View, available in more than 61 million pay-per-view homes.

This domestic telecast will be available in HDTV for those viewers who can receive HD. HBO Pay-Per-View is the leading supplier of event programming to the pay-per-view industry. For your Trinidad vs. Jones fight week updates, log on to http://www.hbo.com/.

The event will be distributed internationally by KingVision, available through DK International Sales, a division of Don King Productions, Inc.

The event is being promoted by Don King Productions in association with Madison Square Garden.

Alan Hopper Don King Productions

A look inside DeMARCUS “CHOP CHOP” CORLEY; Who will face Devon Alexander "The Great" on the Trinidad vs Jones Under card

DeMARCUS “CHOP CHOP” CORLEY

Former World Boxing Organization Junior Welterweight Champion
Born on June 3, 1974,
Height: 5’ 7” Weight: Junior Welterweight (140)
Record: 31-7-1, 17 KOs

If cockiness were a true measure of a boxer’s ability, DeMarcus “Chop Chop” Corley would have already retired as an undefeated, undisputed champion. But confidence is only a part of the mix. One must also bring boxing skills to the table, and there is also the ability of the opponents to consider.

Bernard Roach trainer, DeMarcus Corley (C) and Team Corley Member.


On all accounts, Chop Chop passes the test. He has unquestioned ring skills, fought some of the best fighters of his era, and confidence that some might call cockiness.

“If you don’t have confidence in yourself, you are in the wrong business,” Corley said. “Some people may be turned off by the way I come across sometimes, but it is all about believing in yourself.”

Corley has an outgoing personality and is a true showman. He once dreamed of becoming a model. He also is expert at fashion design, and is proud of his tailoring skills. Since learning to sew in a high school home economics class, Corley has made his own ring “outfits.”

“I swore when I left the amateurs that I would never fight in standard trunks again,” he said. For one fight, Corley entered the ring wearing a shiny red mini-skirt with six inches of white fringe and a snug little jacket to match. He had a horned, green dragon mask on his face. “It is all about entertainment and making a name for yourself,” Corley said.

Corley started boxing when he was 12. “I got into it to win trophies because win or lose, you get a trophy,” he said.

In the amateurs, he got his nickname. “We had gone out of town for the Silver Gloves in Mississippi,” Corley recalled. “I was supposed to weigh 65 pounds. When we came back from dinner, I weighed 75 pounds. My coach said to me, ‘you sure chopped up that food.’ So from that day, Chop Chop stuck with me.”

Corley turned pro in May 1996 in his hometown, Washington, D.C., and scored a first-round TKO over Aaron Smith. “I was very excited to be in there with all my friends and family cheering me on,” Corley said.

He went on to win his first 16 starts, going 6-0 in both 1996 and 1997. After winning his first four outings in 1998, he suffered the first blemish on his record when a December bout with Dillon Carew ended in a third-round technical draw.

Corley suffered his first defeat in March 1999, a shocking 10-round split decision to Daniel Lujan (13-7-2 going in). In a wildly exciting bout, Corley won four of the first five rounds. Lujan came back and floored Corley early in the ninth. Both boxers were hurt later in the session, and Lujan was all but out on his feet in the 10th and was lucky to survive the round. At the finish, Lujan got the disputed decision when two judges saw it 95-94 with the remaining scorer in favor of Corley 96-93.

DeMarcus Corley and Team Corley Cornerman


In a career-best performance three starts later, Corley won a 12-round split decision over Ener Julio to capture the United States Boxing Association junior welterweight title on Sept. 24, 1999. Performing in front of his hometown fans, Corley out-pointed Julio, who went on to become the World Boxing Organization junior welterweight champion. Two judges favored Corley 117-110 while the remaining judge gave it to Julio 115-111.

Corley won all four of his starts in 2000 by knockout. He began 2001 by exacting some revenge against Carew by winning a 10-round decision.

Corley was tapped to fight North American Boxing Organization and North American Boxing Association junior welterweight champion Felix Flores, a Puerto Rican fighting out of the Felix Trinidad stable and trained by Papa Trinidad, for the vacant WBO junior welterweight title. Flores had been scheduled to face champion Ener Julio, who was stripped of his title after cataracts were discovered in his eyes during a pre-fight medical screening the week leading up to the fight. Corley was all too happy to step in for this first world title shot.

Flores had floored the crafty veteran Sharmba “Little Big Man” Mitchell in a losing effort in 2000, so nobody expected this to be an easy fight for Corley. In actuality, it was Corley who was seen to be coming in at a disadvantage after taking the fight on just days notice.

Corley sensed early in the first round that Flores was not adjusting well to his southpaw style. He seized the opportunity and landed a crushing right uppercut that dropped Flores midway through the initial round. Corley knocked Flores down again shortly thereafter, and referee Jay Nady wisely ended the punishment at 2:49, just before Corley was about to send Flores down for the third time. Chop Chop had become a world champion.

Corley welcomed a re-match with Julio after the Colombian’s vision problems had been corrected by surgery. Julio had always claimed he was the victim of a hometown decision when the two met in Washington, D.C., in 1999. Chop Chop wanted to put an exclamation point on his first victory and earn the right to face the other 140-pound world champions. Their second meeting took place at Miami Jai Alai on Jan. 19, 2002.

Always a slick boxer, Corley stunned Julio with a powerful straight left that sent him to the canvas in round two. Corley dropped Julio again in the third round, this time with a right, but the challenger survived the round. It became apparent by the fifth round that Corley had progressed as a fighter while Julio seemed to be fading.

Julio tried to brawl with Corley for the remainder of the fight, and it became evident that Corley had increased his power-shot arsenal, appearing more comfortable than ever in their power-shot exchanges. In the end, the judges gave Corley a unanimous decision with scores of 119-105, 118-107 and 117-107.

Corley then agreed to face the top knockout artist in the sport, Randall Bailey, on Jan. 4, 2003, in Washington, D.C. All of Bailey’s 26 wins had come by knockout, and the only fighters able to best him had been Julio and the tough Cuban Diosbelys Hurtado.

Chop Chop’s boxing skills caused fits for the headhunting Bailey, and Corley walked off with a lopsided unanimous decision.

DeMarcus Corley and Yano


Never one to duck a challenge, Corley jumped at the chance to face another one of the sport’s best in Zab “Super” Judah in Las Vegas on July 12, 2003. Corley was up against one of the fastest and most fleet-of-foot boxers in the game.

While Corley displayed fine skills and landed his fair share of the punches, Judah had the edge in punching power. Judge Duane Ford favored Corley 115-113, but Michael Pernick preferred Judah 115-113 as did Chuck Giampa at 115-112.

The non-stop string of fights against top-notch competition continued when perennial pound-for-pound king ”Pretty Boy” Floyd Mayweather Jr. decided to move up to the 140-pound limit to face Corley on May 22, 2004, at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City.

Corley entered the ring wearing shredded battle fatigues and a gas mask. He tested Mayweather's chin in the third round with an overhand left that staggered Mayweather.
In the fourth round, Corley appeared to receive another boost when Mayweather appeared to hurt his always-tenuous right hand.

Chop Chop stung Mayweather again in the fifth round with a big right followed by a left that buckled Mayweather's knees. For a moment, it appeared Corley was about to achieve what many felt was impossible. Mayweather appeared to be out on his feet, but Mayweather rallied and appeared to score a knockdown when Corley went to one knee following a barrage of punches. Referee Benji Estevez ruled that Corley had been pushed down by Mayweather.

Mayweather appeared to score another knockdown in the sixth round, but Estevez ruled that Corley had slipped. Pretty Boy finally got his knockdown in the eighth round with a left-right combination that was preceded by a double right uppercut that stunned Corley. He went down again in the ninth round from a blistering five-punch combination that must have taken all of two seconds to deliver.

Mayweather went on to win a unanimous decision, but Corley had earned his respect.
"Chop-Chop was tough, a solid fighter," Mayweather said after the fight.
After rebounding with a win over Darryl Tyson, Corley traveled to Bayamon, Puerto Rico, on Feb. 26, 2005, to take on the up-and-coming champion Miguel Cotto, a native of the island and the owner of Corley’s former WBO belt.

Corley surprised the heavy-handed Cotto from the outset by standing toe to toe with the young lion. Corley paid for this strategy when Cotto landed a right just 30 seconds into the fight that sent him to the canvas. Cotto unleashed a torrent of blows on his wounded foe, but the experienced Corley responded with shots that buzzed Cotto.

Round two started with Corley deploying his boxing skills to confuse Cotto, who uncharacteristically kept his hands low, causing him to be hit cleanly by the Washington D.C. native. Corley responded by throwing an unintentional low blow that caused referee Enrique Quinones Falu to forego the normal initial warning in favor of a point deduction. Cotto augmented his problems by underestimating Chop Chop’s power.

Perhaps trying to make up for lost ground, Cotto came out punching in round three where he was caught by a devastating right cross that landed squarely on his temple. The young champion was hurt badly and the hometown crowd watched in horror as their star’s legs turn to spahgetti. While Cotto’s mistakes got him into trouble, he did have the wherewithall to tie up Corley, saving himself from a knockdown or knockout.
The fight had reached a fever pitch heading into the fourth, when just after the one-minute mark, Corley landed an unintentional low blow. Cotto recovered after a few seconds and indicated to the referee that he was ready to resume. Falu suddenly decided, again without a warning, to deduct a point against Corley, apparently feeling that if hadn’t warned Cotto earlier, he couldn’t warn Corley at this point.
Cotto landed a huge left hook midway through round five that wounded Chop Chop. Cotto responded with a punching barrage that penetrated through Corley’s guard. Finding himself in dire straits, one of Corley’s gloves touched the mat precipitating a standing eight count.

Once the action resumed, Corley, still stunned from the previous assault, found himself in deep trouble. The veteran wisely chose to take a knee in an attempt to regain his strength. Falu stunned everyone by waving off the action, leaving all to wonder what would have happened had the match continued.

Corley dropped a unanimous decision to the once-beaten Brit Junior Witter in a hard-fought battle in London, England, on Sept. 15, 2006.

At the 16th edition of the WBA’s KO Drugs Festival charity event on May 12, 2007, Corley met up-and-coming Nicaraguan puncher Jose Alfaro (who became a world champion in Germany on Dec. 29, 2007) in Managua.

Chop Chop got off to a strong start, flooring Alfaro in the first round. Alfaro survived the round and was able to come back in the match and stop Corley in the eighth round.

In his last appearance, Corley met Dairo Esalas on Nov. 30 in Tampa, Fla. It was a spirited effort by both fighters in a close fight. Corley ended up on the short side of an eight-round split decision. Two judges favored Esalas 76-75 while the third judge preferred Corley by 76-75.

“I felt I had done enough to win,” Corley said after the fight. “In my heart, I know I won that fight but two of the judges didn’t see it my way. It was close.”Corley’s favorite all-time boxers are “Sugar” Ray Leonard, Marvelous Marvin Hagler and Pernell “Sweet Pea” Whitaker.

“If I could do just half the stuff Sugar Ray could do, such as knock a person out going backwards, I would be happy,” he said. “Hagler was just an all-around great, a hard-hitting fighter who had very few losses. In addition, he took very little punishment in the ring. Whitaker, he was quick and slick and just didn’t get hit.”

A Look Inside DEVON ALEXANDER “THE GREAT”; Who will face DeMarcus Corley on the Trinidad vs Jones Under card

DEVON ALEXANDER “THE GREAT”

Undefeated Former World Boxing Council Youth Welterweight Champion
Born in St. Louis, Missouri,
Height: 5’ 8 ½” – Weight: Super Lightweight (140)
Record: 13-0, 8 KOs

DEVON ALEXANDER “THE GREAT”



There is no stretching of the truth when it is said of Devon Alexander that he was a child prodigy in boxing or grew up in the sport. At age 7, Devon’s older brothers Lamar, 12, and Vaughan, 8, ventured across the street from a basketball court they were playing on in St. Louis to go inside Kevin Cunningham’s Hyde Park boxing gym. All three would go on to box professionally.

“My gym was in the basement of an old police station in Hyde Park, one of the highest crime districts in the city at that time,” Cunningham said. Serving as a police officer in St. Louis’s fifth district at the time, Cunningham would know such a things.

“It turned out to be a good thing for the Alexander brothers, Cory Spinks and all the kids in the program because it kept them off of the streets. As a boxer, I always knew Devon was special.”

Soon after the Alexander brothers had begun learning the basics of the art of pugilism, St. Louis and boxing royalty walked in the gym one day in the form of Spinks. Cory had left the sport of boxing after his beloved brother died, but Cunningham had seen him around town and kept nudging him to stop by his gym.

Kevin Cunningham, trainer and Devon Alexander


The following year, the 2-0 teenager took part in boxing history. He defeated Donovan Castaneda by unanimous decision in front of 22,370 spectators, the second-largest crowd in history to witness a boxing event in an indoor arena at Savvis Center in St. Louis. Alexander’s mentor, Cory Spinks, headlined the card opposing Zab Judah.

Alexander had been quiet—not to mention awestruck—during the media frenzy leading up to the history-making card. After his victory, he opened up a little bit.

“I did not really feel any pressure fighting in front of all these people in my hometown,” the southpaw said. “I am a tad disappointed with my performance.

“No excuses, but truth is, I had to pace myself a little and I was trying to get some air. This was my first six-round fight and I got a little tired in the fifth and sixth rounds. But I learned a lot in there. He was a strong guy and seemed way bigger than I was. But everything is cool. I know you can’t knock out everybody. Down the line, going six rounds will be a good thing for me.”

Still a senior in high school but with enough credits to graduate, Alexander was able to make arrangements at Vashon to send in his homework from Las Vegas where trained with Spinks for a month prior to the event.

“I wanted to get the ceremony,” Alexander said. “I wanted to graduate with my friends. Education is very important to me. Boxing can’t last forever. If I have an education, I can do other things.”

After running his record to 8-0, Alexander was again fighting at home with Spinks on Don King’s Gateway to Glory card at Savvis Center on July 8, 2006, featuring Cory’s successful move up to 154 pounds to dethrone then-International Boxing Federation junior middleweight champion Roman “Made in Hell” Karmazin.

Keisha and Cory Spinks


Alexander, too, moved up in competition by taking on an 8-3 fighter in Tyler Ziolkowski, who had been in the ring with some notable opponents. The pair had earned the right to vie for the World Boxing Council youth welterweight title, designed for those 23 years old and younger.

“Cory is the king of St. Louis boxing,” Cunningham, who trains and manages both Spinks and Alexander, said. “And basically Devon is the heir-apparent to Cory’s throne. He’s starting to mature into a real pro. It’s a big difference between being and amateur and a pro.”

Amateur scoring values the number of punches landed, not the damage they do. Many pitter-patter amateurs have their gloves full when they hit the pros.

“That’s why I haven’t had as many knockouts,” Alexander said (with three at the time). “I used to be all flick, flick, flick. But now I’m turning my punches over, keeping my fist balled up all the and punching harder.”


“You don’t have to baby-sit him in training,” Cunningham said. “If anything, you have to slow him down. He loves training and he loves boxing.”

Alexander also benefited from three full months spent in preparation, with Spinks, at Don King’s legendary King Training Camp in rural Ohio just outside Cleveland.

Keisha and Devon Alexander


He shocked Ziolkowski by scoring a technical knockout at just 2:40 of the first stanza.

“He knocked Ziolkowski out with a right hook,” Cunningham said of his southpaw. “That’s a good sign that the work we did in camp, focusing on slowing down and developing his power, is working. He’s sitting down on his punches more and landing power shots.

“That guy [Ziolkowski] fought Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. He’s a tough little guy.”

Alexander was pleased as well.

“My winning the WBC Youth Welterweight championship is the just the beginning. It feels good.

“My trainer and I focused on slowing down and turning over my punches so I’ll have more power. I’m still transitioning from amateur to pro but the power is coming.”

Alexander scored a fourth-round technical knockout over Maximinio Cuevas in Hard Rock Live at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Jan. 6, 2007, before making his first television appearance on SHOWTIME’S popular Sho Box series opposing Scott Ball (8-2) in Belterra Casino and Resort in Indiana on March 2, 2007.

In his toughest test of his young career, Alexander dominated Ball. In round four, Alexander knocked out Ball’s mouthpiece with a barrage of punches. In the sixth, he broke Ball’s jaw.

In round seven, Alexander scored two knockdowns and Ball was counted out.

Alexander scored another knockout over Marcus Luck in Bridgeport, Conn., on July 7, 2007.

Alexander The Great lived up to his moniker in his last appearance by overwhelming previously undefeated (7-0) Cory Peterson with a first-round technical knockout in Hoffman Estates, Ill., on Oct. 13.

Devon has moved back to 140 pounds for his next fight on Jan. 19.

When not in the ring, Alexander, a friendly and out-going person, is also known for his sweet tooth.

“That’s his vice,” Cunningham said. “If you put a cupcake in front of him, oh man!”

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Alton Merkerson Roy Jones Jr.'s trainer and Tito Trinidad's father Papa Trinidad, square off before Trinidad vs. Jones


Much strategy was divulged in the Trinidad vs. Jones trainer media conference call that took place on Monday with Roy Jones Jr.'s trainer Alton Merkerson and Tito Trinidad's father Papa Trinidad, including this from Merkerson:
'I saw some things in this camp that I haven’t seen in 3 or 4 years. I see the old Roy; some of things that I saw back when I had him in the Olympics in 88. I saw some of the things out of Roy in this training camp that I saw when he beat Bernard Hopkins with one hand. I saw some of the things in Roy at this camp how he dominated against John Ruiz as a heavyweight. So those things that I saw in him during this training camp are the same things that I saw in him as a young Olympian in 88. Actions speak louder than words. I can’t say anymore. You’ll see it in the fight as it comes up.”

Alton Merkerson



And this from Trinidad Sr.:

“Tito is prepared to go all the way. He will win by any means. He can knock him out at any time, or he is prepared to win by decision.”

Papa Trinidad


Fight info: http://www.donking.com/events/post24_media.htm

Watch today’s press conference and face-offs and other fight-week videos by clicking the link below.

http://www.emcevents.com/TrinidadJonesFIGHTPAGE.html

Trainer for Tito Trinidad – Papa Trinidad (training in Rio Piedra near San Juan, Puerto Rico):
“Tito is prepared to go all the way. He will win by any means.
He can knock him out at any time, or he is prepared to win by decision.”

Trainer for Roy Jones - Alton Merkerson (training in California, Pa., just outside Pittsburgh):
“I saw some of the things out of Roy in this training camp that I saw when he beat
Bernard Hopkins with one hand.”

Question for Papa Trinidad, What did you see in Jones that you picked him as a comeback fight?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “A long time ago, we had been thinking that this would be a good fight for Tito. And now that Tito had a willingness to return, and Tito could make the weight, we saw that it was convenient to do a fight against Jones.”

Does Papa Trinidad see any weaknesses in Jones that you are looking at, or aiming out or training for?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “To the contrary, we have nothing… Jones is a very talented fighter. We want Tito to fight at his very best all the time, and this is why this is the fight of the Titans.”

Father and son training doesn’t normally work out, what is your magic formula?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “I have respect, since he has been my son and I’ve been his father; since he was kid. I taught him to be respectful, as he has been respectful to me; he respects me as a neighbor and if you have that, then everything flows.”

Much has made of the fact that Tito’s previous highest weight has been 160, and he is moving to 170. Much has been made of “will Tito carry his punch’ and” this will be his first time fighting at 170”. Can Papa explain in detail what training regime he has put him through in Puerto Rico? Why will Tito be at his best on Saturday night?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “The feeling has been that as Tito has been changing from weight to weight that all his skills have been there. For this time, you will see an identical Tito mentally, physically, and with the punch and the power. And you will see when he fights Roy Jones that the power will be there.”

Is Papa happy with his conditioning and is he at his best weight right now?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “I am at peace. I feel happy that Tito has so much support. And we are very confident that when the fight day comes Tito will do well.”

The question has been, some people are saying that he will not knock out in 4 and he will knock out in …

PAPA TRINIDAD: “Tito is prepared to go all the way. He will win by any means. He can knock him out at any time, or he is prepared to win by decision.”

What level do you think Tito going to be at with time off; as you know, there is always a problem with ring work on the one hand, and on the other hand, it means he has not been and is not used to being hit as often and has been preserved a little? Can you tell us how the layoff is going to affect Tito?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “In regards the layoff, Tito has been training hard for six months, so he is prepared. Regarding the physical condition and his health, Tito is in excellent physical condition. All the medical exams have been done, including MRI’s and all other tests that are required. They have all been filed before the New York medical commission, so Tito is ready and the best fighter will win, and I have no doubt that who will win is my son.

It’s been a while since Tito has been an underdog going into a fight, how does it feel to be the underdog?

PAPA TRINIDAD: “That gives us motivation, motivation to train and to work hard. Tito has the skill, the motivation, the condition and that adds up to Tito winning this fight.”

Alton Merkerson

How has the training been going?

MERKERSON: “It’s going great. I’d like to say hello to everyone out there. Roy has been training very hard. He’s been very enthusiastic during the training camp. We are just ready to go. Roy was very motivated during the training, he’s put a lot of money in the bank; did all the right things. I haven’t seen this in him in the last two or three years, maybe four years. Eat, sleep, thinking boxing. He is back on track, just like he was back when he was very hot in the boxing game.”

He’s been training for 3 months?

MERKERSON: “Yeah, you know, we started off camp back in Pensacola. We had a beginning stage, a progression stage, and a training stage. We are at the point now where we are ready to fight. We split the camp up into two parts. Did a lot of pre-training in Pensacola—just conditioning—then starting to box and move around in the ring. And once he started boxing, we went up to the mountains in California, Pennsylvania, to finish up the last four weeks and concluded our training at that point.”

Roy hasn’t gone away to training camp for a sometime?

MERKERSON: “It’s been a while. It’s been exciting for me. He’s been very energetic. We had a very small camp, a very productive camp. We didn’t have any problems in the camp at all. Everything went on as scheduled. And he’s just a very motivated guy, like I’ve known him to be over the years. And he’s ready to box.”

How was it getting the weight down?

MERKERSON: “No problem, no problem. I say no problem... if there was a problem, I wouldn’t tell you though (laughter). It’s all in the job. You do what you have to do. Roy will be 39 years old. It’s a little harder for him to lose weight than it was some years ago. But you know when you get a warrior who’s been in combat, he does whatever it takes and doesn’t complain about it.”

So many people remember Roy in his prime being the top…

MERKERSON: “From a training standpoint, those people who haven’t been exposed to it and deal with athletes you know, your body goes through certain transitions in life, especially when it comes with age. But with Roy, that hasn’t been a factor with him. What people fail to realize is that Roy came from a middleweight all the way up to heavyweight and won every title. And once he became a heavyweight—you have to do a lot to put on muscle to hold a solid 200 pounds to fight heavyweight—when he fought John Ruiz. So your body goes through some transitions. Now, you find a heavyweight at that weight, and within three months he came all the way back down to light-heavy, which is a much smaller weight, and you are not just losing fat, you are losing muscle because that’s what you put on. So your body is going to go through some stages that you really can’t explain to people how it is. They have to experience it. You know how people go on diets, and how hard it is to loose weight? And that’s fat, so when you have muscle, it’s that much harder. Now, his body has settled down, and he’s at a lower weight now, so it’s no problem and he’s back to where he used to be. I saw some things in this camp that I haven’t seen in 3 or 4 years. I see the old Roy; some of things that I saw back when I had him in the Olympics in 88. I saw some of the things out of Roy in this training camp that I saw when he beat Bernard Hopkins with one hand. I saw some of the things in Roy at this camp how he dominated against John Ruiz as a heavyweight. So those things that I saw in him during this training camp are the same things that I saw in him as a young Olympian in 88. Actions speak louder than words. I can’t say anymore. You’ll see it in the fight as it comes up.”

Tito Trinidad, who was generally a middle weight before this fight…Why Tito?

MERKERSON: “You talk about Sugar Ray Robinson, and you talk about all those guys in the old days, not trying to be historic, who came from a lower weight and came up to a heavier weight, to be successful. First of all, you’ve got to understand this: Tito is coming up in weight. You’ve got to look at Roy. You tell me one heavyweight who has won a heavyweight title in history, and came back down not only to light heavyweight but came to the weight of 170. So realistically, Tito is coming up. We are giving him an advantage. We are going down to 170 pounds. Do you know how hard that is to do? I’d like my client to concentrate on fighting in the ring, instead of making weight. When it comes to a case like this, Roy doesn’t have his cake and ice cream, too, like Tito does. So that balances things out. Roy has to work hard, and he has to be in shape and work very hard to be able to come down to 170 so he’s not fighting a smaller person. I think they are on even skill. And you’ve got to understand that both of these guys are legends, both of them are still energetic, both of them can still fight, both of them has had lulls in action. But every great fighter you’ve had out there in history, have had some downfalls and that doesn’t mean they didn’t come back. So I totally disagree with people who make those statements.”

In your opinion, how has Roy progressed since 2004? How has he improved?

MERKERSON: “He has improved a tremendous amount. Like I was explaining to everyone else and what people have to understand is that Roy made a big transition when he went up to heavyweight, and it took a lot of work on his part. He gained the weight to go up and fight Ruiz. Shortly after that he had to lose the weight to come back down because of the heavyweight fights that didn’t materialize. Mentally and physically, his body went into shock when he had to come down and fight light-heavy again. Not going back and trying to use it as an excuse but the first fight with Tarver when he came back down to light-heavy, his body was totally drained. He actually won that fight. It was a very ugly fight, and his body just didn’t look right and he didn’t have the stamina. But when he fought that fight, he was going through the transition of coming back down. Shortly after that, he had two fights back to back. After the last fight that he had with Johnson, his body had just started coming back around and now his body is used to holding the lower weight and he is doing very well. As I stated before, I’m very impressed with him. Mentally and physically he is very energetic and he is doing things in the gym that he hasn’t done in years and he feels comfortable doing them and now it works for him. So, I’m very pleased with his performance and progression over the past, especially, 8 weeks.”

What do you think he could have done differently, despite the weight loss, in the ring with Johnson?

MERKERSON: “With Johnson, you have to look at it realistically. The fact of the matter is both of times he lost, to Johnson and Tarver, Roy was actually winning the fight. And he got caught with a shot. I know he was in shape because he had to be in shape to get down to the weight. But the thing is, if your body isn’t properly prepared, and ready to take those punches, if you are in good shape you can take a shot most of the time that you can’t take if you aren’t in shape. But like I said, during that time frame, Roy’s body was going through some transitions. I can’t explain it. It puzzled me also. I actually made a statement one time that Roy and I were going to have to sit down and talk and see if he really wanted to do this anymore. Because, the reason I say that, Roy, when he comes to the gym is a very motivated individual, and he’s not a guy who needs the motivation from his trainer to train. When he comes into the gym he is there because he wants to be there and he wants to have fun. But during that time frame, I noticed that he seemed as though he really didn’t want to be in the gym. I think it was from the administrative portion of boxing. I think it was from his body going through fatigue from the weight gain and back down to the weight loss. And he was expecting to fight another heavyweight and couldn’t fight a heavyweight so he had to fight at light heavyweight. I think it was all these things in conjunction that put him into a rut. You know for a fact that if you are studying for a test and you don’t study as you go along throughout the course and all of a sudden, at the end, you try to brainstorm to put all this stuff together at the last minute, you know what, you will draw a blank and it’s just not there. Now, he’s not doing that. He is not cramming. He is doing stuff constantly. He is absorbing it. He is training consistently. Things are not distracting him and he’s back to where he’s supposed to be.”

Why didn’t he fight Chris Byrd after Ruiz?

MERKERSON: “Let me say it this way, I really don’t get involved in Roy’s administrative decisions. If he asks me something, I’ll give him my input. And he accepts it or he don’t accept it. When you get to that level of competition in boxing and you are considered the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world everybody wants the business to be lucrative. ‘Do I want to be a world champion? Do I want to make a lot of money? I want to be known as a great fighter.’ So, that wasn’t a very marketable fight in Roy’s eyesight. And this is my perception of what I see. Now even though Tyson didn’t have a title, and he could have fought Tyson over fighting Chris Byrd, who do you think would have paid to see the fight? Chris Byrd knew it himself. He went through that turmoil and criticism. It’s not an exciting fight. And Chris Byrd is that, and I’m not saying he’s not a good fighter. Boxers make fights. We are very barbaric if you look at it realistically because people like to see fights. They don’t like to see people hit people and make people miss but don’t stay in there and bang it up. Roy is a boxer himself, right? And what is Byrd? Byrd is not a big puncher and he is not a guy that really bangs it out. I don’t think a lot of people would have been interested in seeing that fight. And that is my personal opinion of it.”

What are your thoughts about people’s perception of Roy having a glass jaw? And what are you doing in particular, with this opponent, to make sure he doesn’t get caught out there?

MERKERSON: “The thing about that - looking at the whole picture - everyone has a glass jaw. If you fight long enough in this game eventually you are going to go down. Look at Muhammad Ali and look at all the other great fighters that have ever fought. If you stay in the business long enough—just like a welder, if you weld long enough, you are going to get burned with the torch. That doesn’t necessarily mean you have a glass jaw because I can tell you right now if anybody—I don’t care how big they are, how athletic they are, and they let me, even if I haven’t been in the ring in years and years—if they let me hit them and I hit them right, they are going to sleep. I don’t consider him have a glass jaw but anybody in boxing couldn’t say that he has one since he’s been down only two times in his boxing career. So in reference to him avoiding getting hit, I can’t do anything to avoid that. He is on the top of his game.”

In Vegas, 2004, when Tarver knocked him out… How did that happen?

MERKERSON: “I was there when it happened and I remember it like it was yesterday. Roy squared up on the rope. Tarver told him to be more aggressive. They were playing cat and mouse and then Tarver became more aggressive and when Roy squared up on the rope, he moved into Tarver’s power hand and he got caught.”

Alan Hopper Don King Productions

'The Ultimate Showdown II' pro-am boxing show on Janury 26 in Mansfield, Massachusetts. Fiorentino fights for third world title

MANSFIELD, Mass.– Reigning IWBF featherweight and NABF super featherweight champion Missy “The Fury” Fiorentino, headlines “The Ultimate Showdown II” pro-am boxing show, presented by Peter Manfredo, Sr. in association with Bash For Cash, on January 26 at the Mansfield SportsPlex in Mansfield, Massachusetts. Fiorentino (16-1, 6 KOs), a Rhode Island Sheriff out of Cranston, fights for her third world title belt in three different weight classes having already captured the IWBF featherweight and lightweight titles. She has since relinquished the latter belt because of IWBF rules restricting champions to only one division. Roger Williams College graduate Fiorentino battles Ela “Bam Bam” Nunez (5-2, 1 KO), a single mother of four, in the 10-round main event despite Missy risking a mandated title shot against WBC super featherweight champion Jelena Mrdjenovich (21-2, 11 KOs).

Fiorentino earned that with a unanimous 10-round decision last July against previously unbeaten Cindy Serrano (15-0-1) in a WBC title elimination fight that was also for the NABF belt. “She (Mrdjenovich) has until April (to make her mandatory) and I haven’t fought since July,” Missy said. “I needed a fight in between as long as it was at 130 pounds. I want to win world titles in three different weight classes. It’ll be nice fighting close to home. Some people came to New York for my last fight but I’ll have a lot more support there this fight. Nunez is aggressive, comes forward, which is good. Her style is the same as mine and I’d rather fight somebody like than chasing ‘em around the ring. It’s going to be a good fight.” Three of New England’s brightest pro prospects are also on the card --

New Hampshire cruiserweight Rich Gingras, Whitman (MA) super middleweight Mark “The Italian Bazooka” DeLuca (3-0, 2 KOs), and Worcester (MA) middleweight Edwin Rodriguez making his pro debut. Gingras (7-0, 4 KOs), of Claremont (NH), was the 2006 Ringside World heavyweight champion before turning professional a year ago. He faces 18-fight veteran Carlos “The Headbanger” Jones in a six-round bout. DeLuca (3-0, 2 KOs), the 2004 National Silver Gloves champion, takes on Cory Jones (2-1) in a four-round match. The 22-year old Rodriguez, born in the Dominican Republic, is making his much-anticipated pro debut after winning 89 of 93 amateur matches, highlighted by gold-medal performances in the 2006 National Golden Gloves Championships and 2005 United States Championship.

Seven amateur matches also scheduled featuring four Master’s Division matches: Foxboro police officer David Fascaldo vs. Mass. Department of Corrections officer Eric Flaherty;. “Easy” Ed Nelson, of Brockton, vs. former New York City police officer Steve “The Steel” Gentile; retired U.S. Navy Seals Captain Tony “The Tiger” O’Brien, of Brockton, vs. Louisiana firefighter Bruce McDaniels; Foxboro police officer Frank Acevedo vs. Louisiana firefighter J.R. “The Lion” Moore. Other amateurs on the card are 29-year-old heavyweight James DeLuca, as well as 15-year-olds James Perella, of Mansfield, and Toka Kahn, of Pawtucket.

A portion of the proceeds will benefit the Wounded Warrior Project assisting U.S. armed forces men and women severely injured during conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other places around the world.Tickets are priced at $25.00 (general admission), $50.00 (open seating), $75.00 (ringside) and $175.00 (VIP invitation only). Call 401.723.1359, 508.509.3236 or go to http://www.bashforcashllc.com/ to purchase tickets or for additional information.

PRESS CONFERENCE QUOTES

Missy Fiorentino: “I’m training hard and looking forward to fighting for my third world title at three different weight classes. My last fight I won the North American title at 130 pounds. Peter’s (Manfredo, Sr.) is my trainer and he’s going to have me in great shape.”

Rich Gingras: “I’m not much of a talker but I bring a big game. I’m going to dominate the fight from the start. If it goes six rounds it’s up to him.”

Mark DeLuca: “I’m excited to be fighting locally instead of New York, Kansas or anywhere else we’ve fought as amateurs. I’m excited to be a New England fighter. We have some tough fighters here – Missy’s probably the toughest. I’m excited to be on this card with her, Edwin and Rich. I’m going to try and blast this guy out in the first round. I’m going to bring the heart back to Boston and New England.”

Edwin Rodriguez: “I’m looking forward to my pro debut. I’m ready. I’m dying to get into the ring and do what I do – box!

-PM-CONTACT: Bob Trieger Full Court Press

NO HOLDS BARRED: Roy Nelson, Ryan Schultz, Jay Hieron, Tim Kennedy,Papa Trinidad, Alton Merkerson On this edition of NO HOLDS BARRED


NO HOLDS BARRED: Roy Nelson, Ryan Schultz, Jay Hieron, Tim Kennedy, Papa Trinidad, Alton Merkerson On this edition of NO HOLDS BARRED, host Eddie Goldman begins previews of the first event of the 2008 season by the International Fight League (IFL), which will take place Friday, February 29, at the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, and the Roy Jones. Jr.-Felix Trinidad Jr. fight, scheduled for this coming Saturday, January 19, at Madison Square Garden in New York. On that IFL card, IFL lightweight champion Ryan Schultz fights John Gunderson, heavyweight champion Roy Nelson fights Fabiano Scherner,and middleweight champion Matt Horwich fights Tim Kennedy. We spoke with Ryan Schultz, Roy Nelson, IFL welterweight champion Jay Hieron, and Tim Kennedy on media teleconference calls about their plans for the new year. We also spoke with the longtime trainers of Roy Jones. Jr., Alton Merkerson, and Felix "Tito" Trinidad Jr., Papa Felix Trinidad Sr., ona media teleconference call about the fight this Saturday night. To listen to NO HOLDS BARRED, click the link below and just press the play button on the player: http://nhbnews.podOmatic.com/entry/eg/2008-01-15T03_40_14-08_00 You can also download it by scrolling down that page and clicking on the download link (right-click to save it). You can also listen to it through the NO HOLDS BARRED blog, athttp://nhbnews.blogspot.com/, and MySpace page, at http://www.myspace.com/nhbnews,also by pressing the play button on the player. Also, NO HOLDS BARRED is available through iTunes athttp://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=150801513&s=143441. The show is in MP3 format, so may take some time to download. The NO HOLDS BARRED theme song is called "The Heist", by musician Ian Carpenter (http://iancarpenter.com/). NO HOLDS BARRED is free to listen to and is sponsored by: Art of War (http://www.artofwarlive.com/), the undisputed arena fighting championship, promoted by SUN Sports and Entertainment,producing world class mixed martial arts events. For more information,check out their web site, ArtOfWarLive.com (http://www.artofwarlive.com). IFL, the International Fight League (http://ifl.tv/), the world'sfirst professional mixed martial arts league. Make sure to check out their regular TV shows on FSN (Fox Sports Net) (http://msn.foxsports.com/story/1636002) in the U.S., and to check your locallistings for dates and times. Check out the IFL web site (http://ifl.tv/), for a listing of IFL live events and their TV schedule, athttp://ifl.tv/TV-Schedule.html. Gladiator Challenge (http://gladiatorchallenge.com/), shaking up themixed martial arts world since 1999, and now with 30 shows per year.For more news and info, check out their web site, GladiatorChallenge.com (http://gladiatorchallenge.com/). BJJMart.com (http://bjjmart.com/), your premier source for all Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu gear, videos, books, and much more. Gladiator Magazine (http://gladmag.com/), for in-depth coverage of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, submission grappling, and MMA, as well as lifestyle articles on surfing, cars, movies, and more. Gladiator Magazine is available at any major bookstore and online at BJJMart.com(http://bjjmart.com/) or Jiu Jitsu Pro Gear (http://jiujitsuprogear.com/). FightBeat.com (http://fightbeat.com/), for news, results, interviews,and free exclusive videos from the worlds of boxing and mixed martial arts. Thanks, Eddie Goldman No Holds Barred bloghttp://nhbnews.blogspot.com/ No Holds Barred podcasthttp://nhbnews.podomatic.com/ No Holds Barred on MySpacehttp://www.myspace.com/nhbnews

Former Heavyweight boxer Mitchell Rose has released clips from his DVD on Youtube.


Former Heavyweight boxer Mitchell Rose has released clips from his DVD on Youtube. Rose has included a TV interview with court TV's Nancy Grace as well as his own recollection of the street fight at the Sugar Hill Night Club. To purchase the book, please contact MitchRoseBoxer@Yahoo.com or go to http://www.amazon.com/That-Beat-Butterbean-These-Streets/dp/0979779707/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1198692803&sr=8-1.


Mitch Rose Speaks On The Tyson Incident - http://youtube.com/watch?v=zgyDHMYk9mE

Mitchell Rose and Lawyer Sanford Rubenstein On Court TV - http://youtube.com/watch?v=AyFaxpaluRg&feature=related

Mitchell Rose: The Family Man - http://youtube.com/watch?v=1MP_mYOcia0

MAIN EVENTS SIGNS WORLD-RANKED CONTENDER TOMASZ ADAMEK

MAIN EVENTS SIGNS WORLD-RANKED CONTENDER TOMASZ ADAMEK


TOTOWA, NJ– Main Events has signed world-ranked cruiserweight contender and former WBC light heavyweight champion Tomasz Adamek, it was announced today by Main Events CEO Kathy Duva. Main Events and Warrior Promotions (promoter of O’ Neil Bell) have begun negotiations for a spring IBF-eliminator showdown between Adamek and Bell. The winner would become the mandatory to IBF champion Steve Cunningham.

Ike(l) and Steve Cunningham


“Main Events is proud to sign Tomasz,” said Duva. “He is a former light heavyweight champion and soon to be world cruiserweight champion

Adamek (33-1, 22 KO’s) has stopped 15 opponents within the first three rounds. The 31-year-old Zywiec, Poland native captured the vacant WBC light heavyweight championship on May 21, 2005, when he decisioned Paul Briggs (W 12). He defended the title twice before losing to Chad Dawson on Feb 3, 2007 (L 12). Since moving to cruiserweight he is 2-0, 1 KO. Adamek is also the IBO Cruiserweight Champion and is ranked #6 in the IBF and #7 in the WBA.

Main Events and Ziggy Promotions will co-promote Adamek.

For more info: Main Events (973) 200-7050 Donald Tremblay

Roy Jones Jr., Andrew Golota, Mike Mollo & DeMarcus Corley

Jones, Andrew Golota, “Merciless” Mike Mollo and DeMarcus “Chop Chop” Corley all performed a light workout and answered questions.

NEW YORK— Roy Jones Jr. worked the mitts and showed the blazing speed that made him the pound-for-pound best boxer on the planet for a decade during a media workout today at Kingsway Gym in New York featuring fighters from Saturday’s “Bring on the Titans” boxing event at Madison Square Garden and on HBO Pay-Per-View.

“Guess who’s back, Roy Jones Jr.,” Jones declared. “Ain’t nobody got the speed to handle me. Only Floyd Mayweather comes close to me and he’s still 10 miles an hour slower,” Jones quipped.

Jones will face Felix “Tito” Trinidad in the main event; the International Boxing Federation North American champion Golota will take on once-beaten World Boxing Association Fedelatin champion Mollo; and the former World Boxing Organization junior welterweight champion Corley will take on undefeated 20-year-old phenom Devon Alexander “The Great” to kick off pay-per-view telecast.

Roy Jones Jr. “The best birthday present for me would be a knock out on Saturday night. Tito’s fighting the toughest fight of his career. He picked me to get up for this fight. He knows I’m a guy who normally beats him so he knows what type of shape he’s got to get in to step into the ring with me. I understand that.
“Ain’t nobody got the speed to handle me. Only Floyd Mayweather comes close to me and he’s still 10 miles an hour slower. I feel good. Now is just the waiting. You fight the fight a bunch of times in your head and I think of different ways to do it. I have several options and every night I think of a different option.

Andrew Golota “Everybody is talking about Mollo’s speed and his offensive abilities. Why isn’t anybody talking about his defense? I guess we’ll know more after the first round. It shouldn’t go the distance. I can’t see it going the distance.
“He says he wants to start fast and be aggressive. I feel the same. It’s better for me because now I know what he is going to try to do. Mollo’s a good fighter and I know he wants to win. How is he going to win? Be there to watch me.
“Bernard Hopkins is my role model. I’m not too old yet. I stay in shape. I even got a hair cut to be more aerodynamic. I feel much lighter!”
Andrew Golota


Mike Mollo: “Golota’s an old fighter. He’s been great and I respect him. He’s fought in some tremendous fights that have slipped away from him for whatever reason.
“I feel like I’m younger and faster and should win the fight. Now I need to get in the ring to prove I’m ready to move to the next level. I fear no one. I have butterflies like I should but no fear.
“I’ve been to the Garden before for a basketball game but this will be my first fight there.”

DeMarcus Corley: “It’s do or die for me right now. I’m fighting on one leg. I’m like a dog with a broken leg. If I lose this one I’m out. I can’t call Don King and ask for another match if I lose another fight. “If I knock this kid Devon Alexander out it would help me. Just getting past him is not enough. I need to knock him out. He and his team have shown me a lot of respect. I appreciate that. After the stare down at the press conference, I told him to bring his “A” game. He asked for me. You gotta be careful what you ask for because you might get it.”
DeMarcus Corley (L) and Yano