The hottest young heavyweight in the world,
Samuel “The Nigerian Nightmare” Peter, and one
of the craftiest pugilists in history, James
“Lights Out” Toney, will meet in a World Boxing
Council-ordered re-match on Saturday, Jan. 6, in
the Hard Rock Live at the Seminole Hard Rock
Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla.
The main event will be televised on SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on
the West Coast) and is being promoted by Duva
Boxing, Goossen Tutor Promotions, Warriors
Boxing Promotions, and Don King Productions.
Tickets priced at $500, $300, $150, $100 and
$50* go on sale Friday at 5 p.m. at the Hard
Rock Live Box Office (open daily from noon until
7 p.m. ET), all Ticketmaster outlets,
www.ticketmaster.com or charge by phone:
Miami-Dade (305) 358-5885, Broward (954)
523-3309 and Palm Beach (561) 966-3309.
*Additional fees and/or service charges may
apply.
The first meeting between Peter and Toney on
Sept. 2 was an action-packed affair that
featured excellent exchanges and few clinches.
The match aired live on SHOWTIME from Staples
Center in Los Angeles and was an elimination
bout to determine who would be the mandatory
challenger to the WBC heavyweight champion.
Toney-Peter I will be available for fans to
relive on SHOWTIME On Demand beginning in
mid-December.
While Peter won the contest by split decision,
the WBC Board of Governors voted 21 to 10 on
Sept. 26 in favor of an immediate re-match. In
their ruling, the WBC cited divided opinions
among the media and fans—not to mention the
judges. Two scored the match for Peter 116-111,
while the final judge had it 115-112 for Toney.
Peter vs. Toney II will also have the added
intrigue of being an elimination bout with the
winner becoming the WBC mandatory challenger to
the winner of Oleg Maskaev vs. Peter Okhello
without any intervening bouts.
“We are very excited about this highly
anticipated rematch between Samuel Peter and
James Toney being held at the beautiful Seminole
Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Showtime with the
Seminole Indians and our co-promoters, Don King,
Goossen Tutor, and Warriors Boxing,” Duva Boxing
President Dino Duva said. “This is going to be a
historic event and the outcome of the
Peter-Toney rematch will be extremely
significant to the heavyweight division.”
Co-promoter Dan Goossen thinks Toney deserves
the re-match.
“We are looking forward to starting 2007 with
the Toney-Peter rematch, Goossen said. The
media, fans and all of us were convinced that
Toney was victorious in their first match. Come
January 6, I promise James will be quicker and
stronger, resulting in typical James Toney
fashion “Light's Out” for Peter.”
Co-promoter Don King is looking forward to
promoting the event in sunny and warm South
Florida.
“This is the biggest prizefight ever staged at
the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino and I
think the Seminole Indians and boxing fans in
South Florida deserve it,” promoter Don King
said. “It will be a spectacular fight inspired
by the unconquered lifestyle of the Seminole
Warrior.”
For everyone who has been waiting for the next
Mike Tyson, Peter could be that heavyweight.
His lone loss came by decision last year against
Wladimir Klitschko after Peter had knocked him
down three times. Every time he enters the
ring, Peter exemplifies unsurpassed courage and
delights fans with intoxicating excitement.
The 26-year-old from Akwaibom, Nigeria, now
living in Las Vegas, felt he clearly won the
first fight with Toney. Regardless, fighting
the Old School boxer may have been the best
thing that ever happened to the young puncher if
it helps his boxing skills catch up with his
proven punching power. If that were to occur,
Peter could become the dominant heavyweight in
the world.
“The first fight was not even close,” Peter
(27-1, 22 KOs) said. “I won by five points on
two of the scorecards—and that included me
losing a point. Toney never hurt me.
“No boxer, including Toney, can deal with my
power. Toney likes to talk but I am going to
shut him up once and for all. I am solid like a
rock and will do whatever it takes to become
world champion. If that means beating Toney
again, I will. Nothing has ever come easy for
me, but I will beat Toney easier this time.
Toney (69-5-3, 43 KOs), of Los Angeles by way of
Ann Arbor, Mich., said, “Justice has been
served. No way he beat me last time and he knows
it. The only times he hurt me was when he hit me
on the back of the head.
“He did not do a thing. I took everything away
from him. I showed I was not old or fat and out
of shape. I beat him up. He did not leave a mark
on me. I will whip Peter worse this time.”
At age 38, Toney has probably forgotten more
about boxing than his young Nigerian nemesis has
had time to learn. He is a living relic from
the past, his ring skills learned over a
lifetime. They have served him well from
middleweight to heavyweight.
His boxing abilities as well as his
accomplishments are unquestioned: The Ring
magazine Fighter of the Year in 1991;
International Boxing Federation middleweight,
super middleweight and cruiserweight world
champion; USA TODAY and The Ring 2003 Fighter of
the Year (for knocking out Evander “The Real
Deal” Holyfield and defeating Vassiliy Jirov);
and World Boxing Association heavyweight
champion after defeating John Ruiz by unanimous
decision in 2005 (later ruled a no contest for
banned substances, which Toney disputes).
One of the reasons this re-match is highly
anticipated is because it appeared both fighters
were wobbled by each other in their first
meeting, most notably the notoriously durable
Toney. Will Peter be able to finish him this
time? Did Toney learn ways to deflect Peter’s
sledgehammer right hand?
Those questions will be answered before an
audience filled with celebrities Don King is
inviting to South Florida’s most anticipated
social event of 2007 and many more watching on
SHOWTIME across the country.
For more information on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING and “ShoBox: The New
Generation” including complete fighter bios and
records, related stories and
more, please visit www.SHO.com.
Don King Productions has promoted over 500 world
championship fights with nearly 100 individual
boxers having been paid $1 million or more. DKP
also holds the distinction of having promoted
seven of the 10 largest pay-per-view events in
history, as gauged by total buys, including the
top four: Holyfield vs. Tyson II, 1.95 million
buys, June 1997; Tyson vs. Holyfield I, 1.6
million buys, November 1996; Tyson vs. McNeeley,
1.58 million buys, August 1995; and Bruno vs.
Tyson, 1.4 million buys, March 1996.
DKP has promoted or co-promoted 16 of the top 25
highest-grossing live gates in the history of
the state of Nevada including the top five:
Holyfield vs. Lewis II, paid attendance: 17,078,
gross: $16,860,300 (NOTE: Also highest live-gate
gross for any event in the history of the
world.), date: Nov. 13, 1999; Holyfield vs.
Tyson II, paid attendance: 16,279, gross:
$14,277,200, date: June 28, 1997; Holyfield vs.
Tyson I, paid attendance: 16,103, gross:
$14,150,700, date: Nov. 9, 1996; Tyson vs.
McNeeley, paid attendance: 16,113, gross:
$13,965,600, date: Aug. 19, 1995; De La Hoya vs.
Trinidad, paid attendance: 11,184, gross:
$12,949,500 (Also garnered the most pay-per-view
buys for a non-heavyweight fight at 1.4
million).