
-Mike Mollo and Don King-
NEW YORK—Two of the greatest
boxers in history, Felix “Tito” Trinidad and Roy Jones Jr.,
will face each other in a battle boxing fans have been waiting
for years to see at New York’s famed Madison Square Garden on
Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008. The event has been dubbed “Bring on
the Titans” and will be produced and distributed live by HBO
Pay-Per-View (9 p.m. ET/6
p.m. PT).
But before Trinidad and Jones
square off, there will also be three bouts featured at the
Garden and live on the pay-per-view telecast including
heavyweight Andrew Golota taking on the emerging Chicago
heavyweight “Merciless” Mike Mollo; former 154-pound champion
Roman “Made in Hell” Karmazin squaring of with Alex “The
Technician” Bunema; and undefeated super lightweight Devon
Alexander “The Great”—Don King’s top young prospect—will face
his toughest opponent yet in former world champion DeMarcus
“Chop Chop” Corley.
In a match where two titles
will be on the line, Golota (40-6-1, 33 KOs) of Chicago by way
of Warsaw, Poland, the current International Boxing Federation
(IBF) North American champion will face the young and hungry
World Boxing Association (WBA) Fedelatin titlist Mollo (19-1,
12 KOs) in a Chicagoland showdown.
Preceding Golota-Mollo,
Karmazin (36-2-1, 23 KOs), from St. Petersburg, Russia, now
living in Los Angeles, will defend his WBA Intercontinental
super welterweight title against Bunema (26-9-2, 14 KOs), from
Kinshasa, Zaire, now living in Atlanta.
The opening of the telecast
will showcase the 20-year-old phenom Alexander (13-0, 9 KOs),
from St. Louis, Mo., taking on Washington, D.C., veteran and
former World Boxing Organization (WBO) 140-pound titlist
Corley, who has stepped into the ring with the likes of
“Pretty Boy” Floyd Mayweather, Zab “Super” Judah, Miguel
Cotto, Junior Witter and Jose Alfaro.
Golota, the greatest Polish
heavyweight ever and one of the best heavyweights to have
never won a world title, has won his last two contests via
technical knockout and continues on his quest to win an
elusive world crown. His most memorable fights came against
some of the best heavyweights of his era including former
world champions Lennox Lewis, Mike Tyson, Riddick Bowe, Chris
Byrd and John Ruiz.
His last ring appearance was
against Mike Tyson conqueror Kevin “The Clones Colossus”
McBride at the Garden on Oct. 6, 2007. Golota can often be a
slow starter, so McBride took a page out of Lamon Brewster’s
and Tyson’s scouting report on the Pole and rocked him early
in the match.
Golota used his veteran skills
to weather the storm and maintain his composure, buying time
to establish a rhythm in what turned to be a highly
entertaining brawl that saw the Garden crowd on its feet
during much of the contest.
Golota opened a nasty gash over
McBride’s left eye in round five and finished him off with
just 18 seconds to go in the sixth when referee Arthur
Mercante Jr. halted the contest.
Mollo, 27, is still building
his reputation as a legitimate heavyweight contender. A win
over Golota would help catapult him into the upper echelons of
heavyweight contenders seeking a world-title shot.
Mollo needed only two rounds to
knock out Art “The Polish Warrior” Binkowski in his last
outing on Oct. 13, 2007, in Hoffman Estates, Ill.
Mollo turned in a dominating performance, battering the former
Canadian Olympian from pillar to post. He dropped Binkowski
three times in the second round before the referee stopped the
carnage.
When asked how he felt after
the fight, Mollo exclaimed, “Unbelievable,
super-aggressive like a pit bull. Now I want Golota.”
Look for the young Mollo to
come out swinging early, and the proverbial chips—or possibly
the fighters in this case—will fall where they may.
Karmazin is coming off a
sterling third-round knockout over former two-time 154-pound
world champion Alejandro “Terra” Garcia on Friday, Nov. 23,
2007, at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles.
Karmazin, 35, proved why he has
always been considered one of the best junior middleweights in
the world in an absolute destruction of Garcia where the
Russian looked fantastic.
He lived up to his Made in Hell
moniker when he dropped Garcia with a devastating body shot in
the opening round. The assault continued until Karmazin
disposed of the Mexican with a four-punch combination
punctuated by a stinging left hook to the body in the third
round that earned him a knockout.
“I knew the fight was going to
end early after the first round,” Karmazin said. “I’m a
boxer, I’m a thinking fighter, and I knew I was faster and
punched harder.”
Bunema is also coming into this
fight with plenty of momentum. In his last appearance, the
32-year-old dispatched veteran Steve Walker with a second
round TKO on Nov. 10, 2007, in Ridgefield, Wash.
The Zaire native managed
another nifty victory nearly two months earlier. Bunema
delivered a fourth-round knockout against the young and tough
Farid Shahid on Sept. 21, 2007, in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Alexander is scorching hot,
having scored an opening-round TKO over Cory Peterson on Oct.
13, 2007, at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Ill.
Fighting out of the Cory Spinks
camp under the tutelage of trainer Kevin Cunningham, his
promoter Don King thinks it’s time to show Alexander’s skills
to a wider audience.
“I insisted on putting
Alexander The Great on the Jones-Trinidad pay-per-view because
he is emerging and ready to become the top welterweight in the
world,” King said. “Now is Devon’s time and I want everyone
to see this young talent display his skills.”
Standing in the way of
Alexander’s quest for glory is the always dangerous Corley.
Now 33, Corley has a vast experience advantage over his young
opponent and would like nothing more than to spoil Alexander’s
first appearance in a televised pay-per-view match.
The Trinidad
vs. Jones
domestic pay-per-view telecast will begin at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m.
PT and is being produced and distributed by HBO Pay-Per-View,
available in more than 61 million pay-per-view homes.
This domestic telecast will be
available in HDTV 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 Trinidad
vs. Jones
fight week updates, log on to
www.hbo.com.
The event will be distributed
internationally by KingVision, available through DK
International Sales, a division of Don King Productions, Inc.
The event is being promoted by
Don King Productions in association with Madison Square
Garden.