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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Casamayor
vs. Seda
Moorer
vs. Castillo

July
3, 2004
American
Airlines Arena
Miami,
Florida
9
PM ET/PT*
Jr.
Lightweight Bout (10 Rds)
Joel
Casamayor (30-2,
19 KO's) vs. Daniel Seda (20-0-1, 16 KO's)
Heavyweight
Bout (10 Rds)
Michael Moorer (46-3-1,
36 KOs) vs.
Eliseo Castillo (17-0-1,
14 KOs)
---------------------------------------------
NEW YORK (June 9, 2004) - One night before Americans celebrate
Independence Day, a Cuban
defector-turned
world boxing champion, who celebrates his independence every day, will be
featured in the
main
event on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING.
"I want all the people in Cuba to have what I have, so I fight for
their freedom," said Joel Casamayor (30-2,
19
KOs), a
former World Boxing Association (WBA) junior lightweight champion and
current WBA No.
3/International
Boxing Federation (IBF) No. 5 and World Boxing Council (WBC) No. 11
contender.
"I have many friends and family in Cuba who never will know what it
is like to be free, to be able to do what
they
want, when they want. It is sad. But I pray that one day all of them can
experience what I have since I
came
to the United States. I support all the Cuban people in their quest for
freedom.''
In a dangerous assignment, Casamayor meets undefeated former North
American Boxing Organization
(NABO)
featherweight champion Daniel Seda (20-0-1, 16 KOs) in a 10-round
fight Saturday, July 3, on
SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING (9 p.m. ET/PT*). The co-feature from the American
Airlines Arena in
Miami,
Fla., will pit former two-time heavyweight champion Michael Moorer
(46-3-1, 36 KOs) against
unbeaten
Cuban Eliseo Castillo (17-0-1, 14 KOs) in a 10-round heavyweight
battle. Team Freedom
Promotions
with Northeast Promotions, in association with Cedric Kushner Promotions,
LTD, will promote
the
SHOWTIME doubleheader.
"Seda is unbeaten, confident and does not think he can lose,"
Casamayor said. "It will be a great fight.''
A forward moving, no nonsense hard-puncher, Seda has won two in a row
since his match with then-WBA
featherweight
champion Derrick Gainer Aug. 24, 2002, on SHOWTIME ended in a second-round
technical
draw.
"This is exactly the kind of high-profile fight that I want and have
been waiting for a long time," Seda said.
"After
it became apparent I would not get a rematch with Gainer, I became
disillusioned with boxing. I retired
for
a year. But, now I am back and totally committed to re-establishing myself
in a sport I truly love.
"Casamayor is an excellent boxer, and he needs to win, too. But
styles make fights, and his style is perfect
for
me. He made a big mistake by agreeing to this fight. I am very confident I
will win July 3.''
Born in Guantanamo, Cuba, Casamayor was perhaps the most prolific amateur
boxer in history (380-30). He
won
a gold medal as a bantamweight at the 1992 Olympic Games and was a
prohibitive favorite to repeat in
1996.
Prior to the opening ceremonies, however, he walked away from the Cuban
compound in Guadalajara,
Mexico,
and left a five-year-old daughter, a girlfriend and his parents in
Guantanamo.
"I never got to say goodbye to anyone," Casamayor said.
"But I wanted to be free. I have experienced a lot of
success
in boxing, but the greatest feeling in my life was coming to
America."
One reason Casamayor defected was that he felt slighted by Fidel Castro,
who presented him with a bicycle
as
his reward for bringing home the gold. The boxer sold the bicycle for a
pig to feed his family.
Still, Casamayor agonized over what would be the most difficult decision
of his life -- to leave or stay.
"When I had doubts (in Guadalajara), I thought of the pressure they
put on me to make 119 pounds," the
sensational
southpaw said. "It was very difficult for me to make that weight, but
they threatened me. 'If you
do
not make weight, we will send you back to Cuba.' That stayed in my head.
That made me strong.
"People knew I was supposed to win a gold medal in '96. But, I made a
decision. You cannot eat off of gold
medals.
I missed my daughter so much. I did not want to leave her, but I had
to."
So, one day, Casamayor told his chaperone that he was going to walk down
the street to buy a bottle of
water
and would be right back. "He is still waiting for me, I think,"
Casamayor cracked.
The cool and classy southpaw boxer-puncher has done little wrong since
turning pro, and remains at the
peak
of his game. Both his losses came on disputed 12-round split decisions in
world title fights.
"In my heart, I know I won those two fights," said Casamayor,
who will be making his first start since getting
narrowly
outpointed by Diego Corrales in a rematch for the vacant World
Boxing Organization (WBO)
130-pound
title on March 6, 2004, on SHOWTIME.
Casamayor, who fights out of Luis DeCubas' Miami-based Team Freedom
boxing stable, won the first
meeting
when a brawl was stopped at the end of the sixth round with Corrales
bleeding badly from the
mouth.
He spotted Corrales a big early lead in their return encounter, but
rallied strongly to floor Corrales in
the
10th. It was too little, too late, however, as he fell short by the scores
114-113 and 112-115 twice.
In their first bout on Oct. 3, 2003, Casamayor twice knocked down
Corrales, and hit the canvas once himself
in
a drama-filled slugfest that drew cheers when the boxers went at it, and
"boos" when it was stopped.
Despite
losing a point for a foul, Casamayor was ahead on all the judges'
scorecards at the finish.
Casamayor won the WBA interim 130-pound crown with an easy decision over Antonio
Hernandez on June
19,
1999. In his 21st start, he became the first U.S.-based Cuban defector to
capture a world title, taking the
WBA
belt with a devastating fifth-round TKO over Jongkwon Baek on May
21, 2000. He made four
successful
defenses
before the controversial points loss to Freitas Jan. 12, 2002, on
SHOWTIME.
Seda, of Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico, displayed class and enormous grit in the
bout against Gainer. A former
WBA
No. 1 126-pound contender, Seda got decked in the first round, but
appeared to recover. The Puerto
Rican
was competing on even terms in the second when an unintentional collision
of heads left Gainer with a
bad
cut under his left eyebrow and prompted the ringside physician to halt the
proceedings at 2:13.
In his most recent outing, Seda won a unanimous 10-round decision over Anthony
Martinez on March 12,
2004,
in San Jose, Calif. The crowd-pleasing Seda, who also is a former
FEDELATIN champion, is currently
ranked
by the WBO (No. 12) and WBA (No. 13).
Moorer, of Monessen, Pa., is 7-1-1 with five knockouts since returning to
the ring in November 2000. The
former
WBO light heavyweight champion captured the IBF/WBA heavyweight titles
with a 12-round decision
over
Evander Holyfield on April 22, 1994, in Las Vegas. In his first
defense on Nov. 5, 1994, in Las Vegas,
George
Foreman rallied to knock out the champion in the 10th round. Moorer
regained the IBF title with a
12-round
decision over Axel Schulz on June 22, 1996, in Dortmund, Germany, and made
two successful
defenses
prior to losing to Holyfield in their rematch on Nov. 8, 1997, in Las
Vegas. Moorer did not fight
again
until Nov. 17, 2000, when he registered a fourth-round TKO over Lorenzo
Byrd. In his last start on Jan.
17,
2004, in Coconut Creek, Fla., the former champion scored an eighth-round
TKO over Arimatea Da
Silva.
Castillo, of Havana, Cuba, escaped from his home country to the military
base at Guantanamo at age 17.
Following
approximately 90 amateur bouts, the then-20-year-old turned pro on Feb.
24, 1996, and registered
an
opening-round TKO over Anthony Mack in Miami Beach, Fla. The brother of
WBC No. 15 heavyweight
contender,
Eliecer, has tallied five first-round, three second-round and three
third-round knockouts in 18 pro
outings.
After opening with 11 consecutive victories (10 via knockout), Castillo
suffered the only blemish on
his
record when he fought to a 10-round draw against Terry Pitts on Nov. 13,
1998. Since the draw, Castillo
has
won six consecutive contests, including a third-round knockout over Drexie
James on May 1, 2004, in
Miami.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's Steve Albert and Al Bernstein
will call the action from ringside
with
Jim
Gray serving as roving reporter. The executive producer of the
SHOWTIME telecast will be Jay
Larkin,
with David
Dinkins Jr. producing and Bob Dunphy directing.
*Tape
delayed on the West Coast
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Championship Boxing (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights).
Card
subject to change
(6/24/04)
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