Saturday, March 28, 2009, at 11
p.m. ET/PT on SHOWTIME
Buffalo Run Casino, Miami,
Oklahoma
Photos: Tom Casino - SHOWTIME
MIAMI, Okla.
(March 29, 2009) –
Undefeated super middleweight Andre Dirrell
outclassed Derrick Findley and Harry Joe
Yorgey outfought Ronald Hearns in a battle of
unbeaten junior middleweights en route to
impressive victories on a special Saturday edition of
ShoBox: The New Generation on SHOWTIME.
Dirrell, of Flint,
Mich., who is ranked No. 1 in the World Boxing
Organization (WBO), No. 3 in the World Boxing Council
(WBC) and No. 7 in the International Boxing Federation
(IBF), won by sixth-round TKO to improve to 18-0 with 13
knockouts. Findley, of Gary, Ind., who couldn’t answer
the bell for the seventh, fell to 13-3 with 8 KOs.
Yorgey (22-0-1, 10
KOs), of Bridgeport, Pa., triumphed by ninth-round
knockout. In a terrific action fight, he registered
three knockdowns, the last coming at 2:59 of the ninth.
Hearns, of Detroit, scored one knockdown but suffered
his first defeat. He is 21-1 with 17 KOs.
The doubleheader took
place at the Buffalo Run Casino and was promoted by
Gary Shaw Productions, LLC, and DiBella
Entertainment. It aired live on SHOWTIME at 11 p.m.
ET/PT (delayed on the west coast).
Dirrell was making his fifth appearance on SHOWTIME –
he’s fought three times on ShoBox and twice on
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING. He could not floor
Findley, but he had his way throughout.
After ending Findley’s
winning streak at seven, the six-foot-1, 25-year-old
Dirrell proclaimed himself ready for any boxer in the
168-pound division.
“I’ll fight any of the
champions right now,’’ the 2004 Olympic Games bronze
medalist for the United States said. “It doesn’t matter
which one. I’m greedy. I want all the belts.’’
Dirrell did the vast
majority of the belting Saturday as he made it look easy
against Findley, who accepted the assignment on short
notice. It was Dirrell’s sixth consecutive win inside
the distance.
“It was target
practice all day, all the time’’ said Dirrell, who
switched from orthodox to southpaw several times. “Crazy
as this might sound, I actually wanted the fight to go
10 rounds just to get in some work and to get more time
to show off some of my ability.
“But this isn’t all
about talent. It’s about hard work and dedication.’’
Yorgey, who knows all
about hard work and dedication, dropped Hearns in the
fourth, fifth and ninth rounds.
“I waited and waited
for a chance to fight on SHOWTIME so when I got the call
I said, ‘sure, let’s do it.’ ‘’ Yorgey said. “I’m a TV
fighter. My fights are always exciting. I knew after the
fourth round when I froze him with a body shot that I
had him. I can adapt to any fight. Tonight, I was the
aggressor.’’
Entering the ninth
round, Yorgey was ahead on two of the scorecards (78-73
and 76-75) and behind on the other (76-75). After
decking Hearns the first time, Yorgey also went down in
the fourth, but it may have been more the result of a
slip than from a clean punch.
“He never hurt me,’’
Yorgey said. “I felt great throughout. I usually don’t
look to load up with the right hand, but I knew the
opportunities were there. I told everybody I wasn’t just
an opponent and I was coming to win. I’ve always
believed in myself and that all the hard work I put in
daily would pay off.’’
Yorgey dedicated the
fight and the proceeds from a raffle that his family
held during the show to his friend and Hatfield, Pa.
resident Shannon Yoder, who has cancer.
Hearns, the oldest
son of legendary eight-time world champion Thomas
“Hit Man” Hearns, was making his fourth appearance
on ShoBox. He offered no excuses afterward.
“I’m obviously very
disappointed, but it’s just something that I have to
write off as a learning experience,’’ Hearns said. “I
was knocked down hard but I kept getting up. I never
thought for a second that I wasn’t going to get him and
that I was not without a chance. This is a very
difficult moment, but I know I will bounce back. Give me
two or three more fights and I would love to fight him
again.’’
Nick Charles
called the action from ringside with Steve Farhood
serving as expert analyst. The executive producer of
ShoBox is Gordon Hall with Richard Gaughan
producing and
Rick Phillips directing.
Saturday’s bouts will
re-air this week as follows:
DAY
CHANNEL
Wednesday, April 1, 10
p.m. ET/PT SHOWTIME TOO
It will
be available ON DEMAND from Tuesday, March 31-April. 27.
Upcoming:
Next Saturday, April 4, on SHOWTIME (10:45 p.m. ET/PT),
WBC champion Timothy Bradley (23-0, 11 KOs) takes
on his WBO counterpart Kendall Holt (25-2, 13
KOs) in what will be a hotly contested 140-pound world
title unification bout in the main event on SHOWTIME
CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING at the Bell Centre in Montreal. In
the telecast’s opening match, Librado Andrade
(27-2, 21 KOs) will be opposed by Vitali Tsypko
(22-2, 12 KOs) in an IBF super middleweight eliminator.
The highly anticipated debut of Strikeforce on SHOWTIME
(10 p.m. ET/PT) takes place Saturday, April 11, live
from the HP Pavilion at San Jose, Calif. The five mixed
martial arts fights: Frank Shamrock vs.
Nick Diaz at 179 pounds, Josh Thomson defends
his Strikeforce lightweight title against Gilbert
Melendez, Cris Cyborg and Hitomi Akano
clash in a women’s fight at 145 pounds, Scott Smith
takes on Benji Radach at 185 pounds and unbeaten
heavyweight Brett Rogers faces “Abongo”
Humphrey.
Six days later on Friday, April 17, ShoBox
returns with a clash between featherweight phenom
Yuriorkis Gamboa (13-0, 11 KOs) and Jose Rojas
(25-6-1, 17 KOs) for the interim WBA featherweight
title. In the co-feature
at Buffalo Bills Casino at Primm, Nev., undefeated
Selcuk Aydin (17-0, 14 KOs) collides with Said
Quali (25-2, 17 KOs) in a welterweight bout. The
telecast begins at 11 p.m. ET/PT.
An eagerly awaited WBC super middleweight title fight
between defending champion Carl Froch (24-0, 19
KOs) and former undisputed middleweight titleholder
Jermain Taylor (28-2-1, 17 KOs) will highlight a
tripleheader Saturday, April 25, on SHOWTIME (9 p.m.
ET/PT). In other fights at MGM Foxwoods in Mashantucket,
Conn., WBC 154-pound kingpin Vernon Forrest
(41-3, 29 KOs) meets Jason LeHoullier (21-1-1, 8
KOs) in a 10-round non–title fight and
Allan Green
(27-1, 19 KOs) will be opposed by Carlos De Leon Jr.
(21-2-2, 14 KOs) in a 10-round super middleweight fight.
Two 10-round fights will be featured on ShoBox
on Friday, May 1. Luis
Carlos Abregu
(25-0, 21 KOs) will take on Irving Garcia (17-3,
8 KOs) in a welterweight skirmish and Marvin Quintero
(15-1, 12 KOs) battles Wes Ferguson (20-3-1, 6
KOs) in a lightweight encounter. The ShoBox
doubleheader at Chumash Casino Resort at Santa Ynez,
Calif., will air on SHOWTIME at 11 p.m. ET/PT.