UNDEFEATED/UNDISPUTED WORLD
MIDDLEWEIGHT
CHAMPION JERMAIN TAYLOR AND
MIDDLEWEIGHT LEGEND
BERNARD HOPKINS SET TO REMATCH
SATURDAY, DEC. 3 AT MANDALAY
BAY RESORT & CASINO
IN LAS VEGAS
LIVE
ON HBO PAY-PER-VIEW
For months after the fact, boxing fans and the worldwide
media had only one topic on their minds – the July 16 middleweight
championship bout between Jermain Taylor and Bernard Hopkins. Who won? Who
lost? Who deserved to win? Who deserved to lose? But whether you sided with
the new champion - Taylor - believing that he ushered in a new era of
middleweight boxing on that summer night, or stuck to your guns and insisted
that the former champion – Hopkins - had done more than his share to earn the
victory and keep his crown, both fighters have demanded a rematch to set the
record straight.
In what is being called the most highly anticipated fight of the year, the
rematch between undisputed world middleweight champion Jermain
‘Bad Intentions’ Taylor (24-0, 17 KOs) and former undisputed
middleweight champion Bernard ‘The Executioner’ Hopkins
(46-3-1, 32 KOs) is set, Saturday, Dec. 3 at Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in
Las Vegas, Nevada. Taylor vs. Hopkins II, “No Respect”
is being presented by DiBella Entertainment and Golden Boy Promotions and will
be broadcast live on HBO Pay-Per-View beginning at 9 p.m. EST/6 p.m. PST.
"Jermain is the undisputed middleweight champion of the world, and will
prove again on Dec. 3 that he reigns in his division," said Taylor's promoter
Lou DiBella, the president of DiBella Entertainment. "We respect Bernard
Hopkins in the ring as a great champion, and he deserves the rematch.
December 3 will be a great night for boxing and for Team Taylor."
“We have seen some great fights this year and I can’t think of
a better way to cap off 2005 than to have the two premier middleweights in the
world squaring off again,” said Oscar de la Hoya, President of Golden Boy
Promotions. “Hopkins and Taylor both have a lot on the line on December 3 and
a fighter is never better than when the stakes are at their highest.”
"Hopkins and Taylor
established a great middleweight rivalry with their first fight", said
said Mark Taffet, HBO Senior Vice President of Sports Operations &
Pay-Per-View. "Their rematch will be a
highly-anticipated and exciting night for boxing fans."
Hopkins-Taylor I captivated the sports world, with its
drama and stirring outcome making it one of the most spectacular bouts in
recent history. They met July 16 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in front of a
sell-out crowd, setting a record for the largest walk-up crowd ever recorded
in the casino’s history. For Taylor, it is an opportunity to prove that his
split decision win over the long-reigning champion was no fluke. For Hopkins,
it is a chance to set the record straight with his spirited rival.
"Every boxer
that puts on the gloves dreams of someday hearing the words 'and new
champion...'”said Taylor. “I fulfilled that dream on July 16, and Bernard
would have to be crazy to think I'm going to give these belts back to him.
One dream is done, and now it ' s
on to my second dream—to defend my championship for years to come."
“Jermain knows what happened in the first fight and I think everyone else
does too,” said Hopkins. “There will be no respect for him this time and come
December 3, I will set the record straight.”
In July Hopkins—the long reigning middleweight champion—agreed to face the
young and hungry Taylor for the undisputed crown. With both fighters in
tremendous shape, Taylor used his conditioning and an aggressive jab attack
early to build a comfortable lead against the wily veteran. Yet all the
while, Hopkins stayed cool, using the savvy learned from over a decade atop
the middleweight division to feel the more inexperienced Taylor out.
Action in the middle rounds was a give and take with the ringside judges
splitting their scoring between the two fighters. Then, late in the fight,
Hopkins went on the offensive, scoring decisively over Taylor to capture the
final rounds on all but one of the judges’ scorecards. A slight controversy
stirred at the announced outcome of the fight, but in the end, it was too
little, too late for Hopkins, as Taylor won a split decision victory and
became the new middleweight world champion.
World champion Jermain Taylor is a 2000 U.S. Olympic Bronze Medalist who
has carried that success with him into the professional ranks. A versatile
boxer with a stiff jab and thudding power, the 27-year-old resident of Little
Rock, Arkansas worked tirelessly to get into the position to challenge Hopkins
for the title. Taylor gained his standing with defeats over former world
champions Raul Marquez and William Joppy, and his spectacular victory over
previously unbeaten Daniel Edouard at the Staples Center in February of this
year sealed the deal. In July, Taylor made the most out of the opportunity, as
he took on the challenge to face Hopkins and seized the title.
In what could possibly be his last fight as a professional, Bernard
Hopkins—who is already assured a place in the Boxing Hall of Fame thanks to
his over ten-year reign atop the middleweight division—is an old-school
warrior who has accepted all challenges from all opponents throughout his
career. He is 3-0 in rematches with his opponents. Hopkins has fought harder
and smarter in all of these fights with his record reflecting the results—all
knockout victories. “I will do the same to Jermain Taylor that I did to each
one of my other rematch opponents—I will knock him out,” said Hopkins.
Tickets priced at $800, $600, $400, $200 and $100 are on sale now at the
Mandalay Bay Theatre box office and at all Las Vegas Ticketmaster locations
(Tower Records/WOW!, Smith’s Food and Drug Centers, Robinsons-May stores and
Ritmo Latino). To charge by phone with a major credit card, call the Mandalay
Bay box office at (702) 632-7580 or Ticketmaster at (702) 474-4000. Tickets
also are available for purchase at
www.mandalaybay.com or www.ticketmaster.com.
The Taylor vs. Hopkins II pay-per-view telecast, beginning at 9 p.m. EST/6
p.m. PST Oct. 1, has a suggested retail price of $49.95, will be distributed
by HBO Pay-Per-View and will be available to more than 50 million pay-per-view
homes. The telecast will be available in HD-TV for those viewers who can
receive HD. HBO Pay-Per-View is the leading supplier of event programming to
the pay-per-view industry. For your daily Taylor vs. Hopkins II fight week
updates, log onto
www.HBOPPV.com.
For more information about Taylor vs. Hopkins
II, “No Respect” please visit
www.dbe1.com
or
www.goldenboypromotions.com
10-12-2005