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SHOBOX
on Showtime
Reyes
vs. Burton
Kaddour vs.
TBA

July 22, 2005
Chumash Casino Resort
Santa Ynez, California
11:00 PM ET/PT*
Line-up:
NABO Lightweight Title Bout
(12 Rds)
Rolando
Reyes
(24-3-2,
15 KOs)
vs. Courtney Burton
(21-3, 11
KOs)
Jr. Middleweight Bout (8 Rds)
Ahmed
“Hollywood” Kaddour
(18-2, 9
KOs)
vs. T BA
__________________________________
"ShoBox: The New Generation" To
Feature
First Post-"Contender"
Appearance and
NABO Lightweight Title Fight
NEW YORK - Ahmed “Hollywood” Kaddour, who recently
appeared on “The Contender,” will become the
first
contestant from the NBC reality series to return to boxing when he takes
on an opponent to be
announced
in the eight-round junior middleweight co-feature Friday, July 22, 2005,
on “ShoBox: The New
Generation.”
In the
main event, California State Junior Welterweight Champion Rolando Reyes
will take on International
Boxing
Federation (IBF) No. 14 lightweight contender Courtney Burton for
the vacant North American
Boxing
Organization (NABO) lightweight title from Chumash Casino Resort in Santa
Ynez, Calif. Both
fighters
will make their second “ShoBox” and Chumash appearances.
SHOWTIME will televise the Gary Shaw Productions doubleheader at 11 p.m.
ET/PT (tape delayed on west
coast).
The telecast represents the 64th in the popular “ShoBox” series, which
debuted on SHOWTIME in
July 2001.
Kaddour
(18-2, nine KOs), of Humble, Texas, proved to be one of the more popular
figures on “The
Contender”
despite losing consecutive five-round decisions in 2004 at the hands of
Ishe Smith (Aug. 24) and
Alfonso
Gomez (Sept. 15).
Engaged to
a television host, Kaddour aspires to be a top model, movie star and world
champion boxer.
Described
as “good looking, yet extremely vain,” the 23-year-old fighter embraces
the nickname “Hollywood”
because he
is Hollywood personified. Never one to be accused of being soft spoken,
Kaddour believes his
opponents
do not take him seriously because he is “so pretty.”
Born in
Lebanon and raised in Denmark, Kaddour went 81-1 during a stellar amateur
career. The supremely
confident
fighter turned pro three months prior to his 19th birthday and won his
initial 18 contests.
In just 20
fights, the well-traveled boxer has fought overseas in Germany, Wales,
Hungary, Denmark, Italy
and
Finland, as well as in Maryland, New Jersey and California. During his
globe trotting, Kaddour has
learned to
speak French, Danish, English, German and Arabic.
Reyes
(24-3-2, 15 KOs), of Oxnard, Calif., captured the vacant California State
junior welterweight crown at
Chumash
and broke his opponent’s eight-bout unbeaten streak by scoring a
ninth-round knockout over Jose
Antonio
Ojeda April 22, 2005, on “ShoBox.”
The pride
of Oxnard won his fourth consecutive bout and 18th out of the past 19 in
capturing his first pro title.
Undeterred
by fighting in front of a pro-Ojeda crowd, Reyes floored his opponent with
less than one minute
remaining
in the second round by landing a crippling left-right combination to the
head. The referee, Dr.
James
Jen-Kin, stopped the bout after the conclusion of the ninth on the
advice of Ojeda’s corner.
In one of
his biggest pro contests, Reyes earned a 10-round unanimous decision over
former Mexican
lightweight champion Omar Bernal on Sept. 20, 2003, from Anaheim,
Calif. The judges scored it 97-93 and
95-93
twice. In the eight-round rematch on July 23, 2004, Reyes again prevailed,
this time by scores 79-71
and 78-72
twice.
Burton
(21-3, 11 KOs), of Benton Harbor, Mich., returns to the ring for the first
time since his thrilling contest
against
Ebo Elder at Chumash on the Dec. 17, 2004, edition of “ShoBox.” Burton
was ahead on two of the
judges’
cards going into the final round of the “Fight of the Year” candidate.
Despite boxing with both eyes
nearly
swollen shut, Elder rallied dramatically to score two knockdowns and
retain his NABO lightweight
belt.
Nearly one
year earlier, Burton secured the NABO lightweight championship with a
12-round split decision
over
Francisco Lorenzo on Dec. 5, 2003, from St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
Two judges had Burton winning
115-114
and 116-113, while the third judge gave the nod to Lorenzo, 115-113.
After
turning pro at age 18 in July 1996, the three-time Silver Gloves United
States champion and two-time
Junior
Olympic U.S. national champion defeated his initial 16 opponents. In his
17th outing and pro title
debut,
Burton lost for the first time when Eleazar Contreras scored a
fifth-round knockout and won the
WBC
Continental Americas lightweight title on Nov. 7, 2002, in New Orleans. An
unfazed Burton rebounded
in 2003 to
defeat former world champions Gabriel Ruelas and Angel Manfredy,
as well as Lorenzo en
route to
compiling a 4-0 record with three KOs.
Nick
Charles will call the action from ringside, with Steve Farhood
serving as expert analyst. The executive
producer
of the telecast is Gordon Hall, with Richard Gaughan
producing.
For
information on “ShoBox: The New Generation” and SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING telecasts,
including
complete fighter bios, records, related stories and more, please go the
SHOWTIME website at
http://www.sho.com/boxing.
The Chumash Casino Resort is located in Santa Barbara County, Calif.,
between Los Angeles and San
Francisco in the heart of the
Santa Ynez Valley. In its 190,000 square-foot facility, the Chumash Casino
Resort offers Las Vegas-style
gaming, 24 hours, seven days a week. Tickets for the exciting night of
boxing
are priced at $70, $50, $40
and $30 and can be purchased at the Chumash Casino Resort box office or
through Star Tickets Plus by
calling (800) 585-3737 or
http://premier.ticketplus.net/TicketsPlus.default.asp.
*Tape
Delayed on the West Coast
-
Press Release issued by Showtime's Shobox (with a little editing from us -
color, highlights).
(7/6/05)
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