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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Lacy vs. Reid

August 6, 2005
The St. Pete Times Forum
Tampa, Florida
9pm ET/PT*
IBF\IBO
Super Middleweight Unification Title Bout (12 Rds)
IBF Champ Jeff Lacy
(19-0, 15 KOs) vs. IBO Champ Robin Reid (38-4-1, 27 KOs)
__________________________________________
Showtime
Championship Boxing To Present IBF\IBO Super Middleweight Championship
and
Jeff Lacy's First Pro Hometown Appearance
NEW YORK – With a world title unification showdown against World Boxing
Organization (WBO) 168-pound
titleholder Joe Calzaghe
all but set for later this year, International Boxing Federation (IBF)
Super
Middleweight Champion Jeff
Lacy will first have to defend his crown against former world champion
and
current International Boxing
Organization (IBO) super middleweight kingpin, Robin Reid, on
SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING Saturday,
Aug. 6, 2005, at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast). Lacy, who
has battled opponents in nine
different states, as well as England and Wales, will fight in front of his
hometown fans for the first
time as a pro when he makes his third and toughest title defense to date
against
Reid at the St. Pete Times
Forum in Tampa, Fla. Gary Shaw Productions, LLC, will promote the world
championship bout.
“Ever since I became
professional, I have wanted to fight the best and really prove myself,”
said Lacy in an
interview with the BBC in
early June. “It is my goal to beat Calzaghe and become undisputed
champion.
But…first I have to get past
Reid.”
“When I fight Reid, you are
going to be on the edge of your seat,” Lacy told IcWales, the national
website of
Wales. “I know he comes to
fight and he is going to bring it to me. “But, I love that. I am not
scared.”
Lacy (19-0, 15 KOs), of St.
Petersburg, Fla., will make his 13th SHOWTIME appearance and third defense
of the IBF 168-pound belt he
won with an impressive eighth-round TKO over Syd Vanderpool Oct. 2,
2004,
on SHOWTIME. The first 2000
Olympian to win a world title, Lacy retained his title the first time with
a 12-
round unanimous decision over
Omar Sheika Dec. 2, 2004, on SHOWTIME from Las Vegas.
“I just want to fight often
and win,” said Lacy, who outpointed Sheika 117-111 and 115-113 twice.
“Reid is
coming to take something away
from me, and it is my job to keep him from doing it.’’
Lacy was leading a fast-paced,
terrific action fight on March 5, 2005, against Rubin Williams by
the scores
59-54, 59-55 and 58-57 when it
was stopped 47 seconds into the seventh round on SHOWTIME.
"I got stronger and stronger
as the rounds went by," Lacy said after his ninth TKO in 19 bouts.
"Williams
was determined. He was a bad
boy. I have to admit he has a great chin, but I can dish it out and I can
take
it."
One of nine children, Lacy and
three of his siblings were raised in St. Petersburg by their father,
Hydra. A
former boxer, Hydra competed
in the 1968 U.S. Olympic Trials and went 13-4-1 in the pros. Two of Lacy’s
older brothers spent time in
jail.
“Watching my brothers and my
father made me want to stay away from trouble,” Lacy said.
Lacy steered clear of the law,
but could not avoid fighting, especially at school. So, his father sent
the then-
eight-year-old to a gym.
“They put headgear and the
gloves on me,” the younger Lacy recalled. “I thought, ‘This is punishment?
This
will be fun.’ They put me in
with a kid smaller than me. I thought, ‘You cannot beat me. I am bigger
than
you.’ I started throwing
punches and he was moving around. I kept waiting for him to stop, but he
did not.
When I got tired, he came at
me. He beat my butt.’’
Lacy went 209-12 in the
amateurs, won numerous competitions and made it to the second round of the
2000
Olympics.
Reid (38-4-1, 27 KOs), of
Runcorn, England, captured the World Boxing Council (WBC) super
middleweight
title by knocking out
defending champion Vincenzo Nardiello in the seventh round on Oct.
12, 1996. He
successfully defended the
championship three times during his one-year reign before losing it to
Thulane
Malinga via a 12-round
decision on Dec. 19, 1997.
Following a non-title victory
in 1998, Reid, whose four losses have been by decision, took WBO Super
Middleweight Champion Calzaghe
to the edge of defeat before dropping a controversial 12-round split
decision on Feb. 13, 1999. Two
of the judges scored it 116-111 for the champion, while the third had it
116-
111 for the challenger.
After capturing the World
Boxing Federation (WBF) 168-pound crown and making four successful
defenses,
Reid again forced a world
champion to go the distance before losing a 12-round decision. On Dec. 13,
2003,
then-WBA/IBF champion Sven
Ottke retained his titles by the scores 115-113 twice and 117-112.
Reid has won 12 out of his
last 13 bouts, including a 12-round decision over Brian Magee on
June 26, 2004,
in Belfast, Ireland, to claim
the IBO super middleweight title. Reid sent his opponent to the canvas
four times
and triumphed by the scores
115-111, 114-111 and 113-112.
In his last outing, Reid
pitched a six-round shutout over Ramdan Serdjane on Feb. 13, 2005.
The referee
scored the fight 60-54.
At the age of 21, Reid slugged
his way to a bronze medal at the Barcelona Olympics.
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.
For information on upcoming
SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING and “ShoBox: The New Generation” telecasts, including
complete
fighter
bios and records, related stories and more, please go the SHOWTIME website
at
http://www.sho.com/boxing.
*
Taped Delayed on the West
Coast
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
card
subject to change
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(6/23/05)
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