"Hook
City"
Roy "Captain Hook" Jones
Jr. Battles Jeff "Left Hook" Lacy On August 15 at the
Mississippi Coast
Coliseum in Biloxi Live on Pay-Per-View
Danny "Green Machine" Green Battles Julio Cesar "La Furia" Dominguez
In
Featured Cruiserweight World Championship Bout
BILOXI,
Miss. (July 15, 2009) – In “Hook City,” two of boxing’s dominating left
hookers, 8-time world champion Roy Jones Jr. and 2-time world champion Jeff
Lacy, go to battle on Saturday, August 15 at the Mississippi Coast Coliseum in
Biloxi to determine the most powerful hooker and the NABO Light Heavyweight
Champion. “Hook City,” presented by Square Ring Promotions in association
with Left Hook Promotions and Beau Rivage Resort & Casino, will be broadcast
live on pay-per-view.
“Hook City”
tickets, priced at $150, $125, $100, $75, $50 & $25 are on sale and available
at the MS Coast Coliseum Box Office, all Ticketmaster locations, by calling
Ticketmaster at 800.745.3000 or on-line at Ticketmaster.com.
“I have watched
Lacy throughout his career,” said Jones. “I know he will come to fight just
as I will. We are both power punchers with both hands so this should make for
a great match-up. There is going to be all these hooks, but on August 15, I,
‘Captain Hook’ will prove to be the better hooker.”
“I've been a
fan of Roy Jones Jr. for a long time,” said Lacy. “He's one of the great
fighters and has challenged all fighters. Roy is still one of the most feared
fighters in the game and like myself, loves to fight the best in the business.
We both come to fight and that will make it one of the most exciting fights of
the year. I'm looking forward to August 15.”
“We are very
excited to be promoting “Hook City” on August 15 in Biloxi to settle the
question, once and for all, of who is the best professional hooker in the
sport of boxing,” said John S. Wirt, CEO of Square Ring Promotions. “While
Jeff claims to have the best left hook, come the morning of the 16th, I think
he may well be in the market for a new ring name.”
It wasn’t that
long ago that Roy Jones Jr. (53-5, 39 KOs), born and bred in Pensacola, FL,
was the consensus “pound-for-pound” champion. Jones blew through the 90s and
well into the 21st Century in unstoppable fashion, stunning his
opponents with blinding quickness and brutal power, winning world titles at
middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight. Among
his prey were the top names in the sport, including Bernard Hopkins, James
“Lights Out” Toney, Mike McCallum and Lou Del Valle.
Jones made
history on March 1, 2003 when he stymied then-heavyweight champion John Ruiz
to become the first former middleweight champion to win the heavyweight title
in more than 100 years. Following the Ruiz triumph, Jones next planned foe
was to be “Iron” Mike Tyson, but the deal fell through and Roy lost
twenty-five pounds of solid muscle in six weeks to drop not one, but two
weight classes to regain the light heavyweight championship from Florida rival
and nemesis Antonio Tarver on November 8, 2003 in an unprecedented feat. No
one had ever won world titles at middleweight through heavyweight then
returned to light heavyweight to win the world title once again.
The
weight loss eventually took a toll on Jones’ body and he lost consecutive
bouts against Tarver (twice) and Glen Johnson. Down, but not out, Jones came
back to score wins in his next two fights, setting up a highly-anticipated
dual with Puerto Rican legend Felix “Tito” Trinidad at Madison Square Garden
on January 19, 2008. A renewed Jones was sharp and focused, flooring Trinidad
twice, in capturing a hard fought unanimous win.
In his next
bout, on November 8, 2008 in “Battle of the Superpowers,” Jones fought
undefeated and the No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter in the world, Joe
Calzaghe. Jones started out strong, knocking Calzaghe down with a left-right
combination in the first round and had “Super” Joe practically out on his
feet. To his credit, Calzaghe mustered the strength to get through the round,
gaining strength in the next few rounds until Jones rocked him in the sixth
with a deadly uppercut. The fight made a significant turn in the seventh when
Jones was cut for the first time in his career from a Calzaghe right
hand. Jones’ pace had slowed considerably as his corner was unable to stop
the bleeding and the steady stream of blood running over his eye was wreaking
havoc on his vision and Calzaghe went on to win a unanimous decision. Roy
rebounded quickly, this time with a fifth-round stoppage of Omar Sheika on
March 21 in front of a full house at the Pensacola Civic Center to win the
NABO light heavyweight crown. It was the fist time Sheika had been stopped in
his professional career.
Jeff “Left
Hook” (25-2, 17 KOs) from St. Petersburg, FL has brought fear to his foes
throughout his nine-year professional career. It all began on January 13,
2001 when Jeff was to make his professional debut along with a group of fellow
2000 USA Olympic boxing team members. His scheduled opponent bolted the
building undetected after witnessing the rock-solid Lacy get on the
scales. His pro debut was delayed, but a legend born, without a ‘left hook’
being thrown. One month later on February 2, Lacy did make his pro debut in
stunning fashion with a KO one minute and nine seconds into the fight. The
powerful Lacy went on to win his first eight bouts by knockout, six of them in
the first round. The “young” Lacy continued his decimation of the super
middleweight division and on November 9, 2002, in just his twelfth
professional fight in less than three years, won the WBC Continental Americas
title with a unanimous decision against thirty-two fight veteran Ross
Thompson. On July 15, 2003 Lacy added the USBA and NABA super middleweight
titles with a win over Richard Grant.
On October 2,
2004, in his only his 17th professional bout, Lacy became the
International Boxing Federation (IBF) Super Middleweight Champion by stopping
Syd Vanderpool (TKO 8). Lacy made four successful defenses of the IBF title,
including a wing over Omar Sheika, while adding the International Boxing
Organization (IBO) title on November 5, 2008 with a second round knockout of
Scott Pemberton. Lacy then challenged fellow undefeated nine-year champion
Joe Calzaghe on March 4, 2006 in what was to be the biggest professional fight
for each. The bout took place in the United Kingdom and Lacy succumbed to
“Super Joe” Calzaghe in a decision for his first loss.
Lacy rebounded
with four consecutive wins prior to battling former Undisputed Middleweight
Champion Jermain Taylor on November 15, 2008. Lacy lost a decision against
Taylor but rebounded quickly, winning his last fight on April 10, 2009 against
Otis Griffin in front of his hometown fans at the Sun Dome in Tampa, FL.
Jones is
currently rated No. 2 by the WBO, No. 4 by the IBF and No. 6 by the WBA at
light heavyweight. Lacy, ranked No. 7 by the WBO at light heavyweight and No.
5 by the IBF and No. 7 by the WBC at super middleweight, moves up to fight at
light heavyweight for the fist time.
In a 12-round
featured bout Danny “Green Machine” Green (26-2, 23 KOs), the pride of
Australia, battles South American light heavyweight king Julio Cesar “La
Furia” Dominguez (20-4-1, 14 KOs) for the vacant International Boxing
Organization (IBO) cruiserweight crown. Green, former World Boxing
Association Light Heavyweight Champion, fights in the United States for only
the second time and Dominguez has won the WBA Intercontinental and South
American Light Heavyweight crowns.
Lightweight
contender Verquan “The Show” Kimbrough (21-1-2, 7 KOs), former NABA and USBA
champion, is also scheduled to fight on the PPV card in a 10-round bout.
The “Hook City”
pay-per-view show is being distributed by Square Ring Promotions, Inc.
at 9:00PM
ET/6:00PM PT in North America on cable and
satellite via iNDemand, TVN,
DirecTV and Dish
Network for a suggested retail price of $34.95.
Questions? Comments? Post them in BRC's new Message Board...
5-72009