PO’AI SUGANUMA-JARED
HAMMAN REMATCH HIGHLIGHTS STELLAR ELITEXC FIGHT
CARD ON FRIDAY NIGHT, AUG. 15, AT TABLE MOUNTAIN
CASINO, FRIANT, CALIF.
For
Immediate Release
Event Will Include
Return Of Camoes Against Morgan, Terrific Women’s
Match Between Purcell And Sexton, Diabate vs.
Fletcher And KOTC champ Berry Defending Against
Lizama (SHOWTIME, 11 p.m. ET/PT, Delayed on
the west coast)
LOS ANGELES (Aug. 7, 2008)
– Same network, same venue, same fighters.
It’s only fitting.
In a rematch of a fight that
demanded one, promising, once-beaten light heavyweights
Po’ai Suganuma (9-1) of Hilo, Hawaii,
and Jared Hamman (10-1) of San Bernardino, Calif.,
will clash in the main event on ShoXC: Elite
Challenger Series Friday, Aug. 15, live on SHOWTIME
(11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the west coast) at
Table Mountain Casino at Friant, Calif.
Suganuma handed Hamman his
lone loss in a controversial fight that lasted
all of 15 seconds in the main event last April
5 at the Table Mountain Casino on ShoXC.
ShoXC, an EliteXC presentation
that pits developing fighters in tough match
ups, is a springboard for the future stars and
champions of EliteXC. ShoXC is patterned after
the popular SHOWTIME boxing series ShoBox: The
New Generation.
Tickets, priced at $50 (General
Admission), $60 (Reserved), $70 (Gold) and $80
(VIP), are available at the Main Casino Cage
at Table Mountain Casino. They also can be purchased
online at www.tmcasino.com/tickets.html. Doors
open at 4:30 p.m. First live fight is at 5:30
p.m. PT.
In other SHOWTIME fights,
Fabricio “Morango” Camoes (10-4)
of San Diego meets Sam “The Squeeze”
Morgan (19-10) of St. Paul, Minn., at 160 pounds;
Muay Thai striking specialist Cyrille “The
Snake” Diabate (14-6-1) of France will
make his EliteXC debut against ShoXC veteran
Jaime Fletcher (9-3) of San Bernardino, Calif.,
at 205 pounds; and for the first time ever,
EliteXC will showcase a title fight from one
its sister organizations, King of the Cage,
when KOTC middleweight champion Keith “KO
Kid’’ Berry (7-2) of Las Vegas by
way of Murrieta, Calif., takes on Ray Lizama
(5-5) of Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.
Also on SHOWTIME, EliteXC
will introduce a new women’s weight class
(130 pounds) when one of the few true pioneers
of women’s mixed martial arts, Debi Purcell
(4-1) of Laguna Hills, Calif., faces Cage Warriors
champion Rosi Sexton (8-1) of Manchester, England.
Non-televised bouts: Promising,
exciting Melanie LaCroix (1-0) of Los Angeles
vs. Katrina Alendale (0-2) of San Francisco
at 140 pounds; Ralph Lopez (3-0) of Fresno,
Calif., vs. Roberto Vargas (2-0) of San Bernardino
at 150 pounds; Josh Rave (8-4) of Fresno vs.
Jesse Brock (6-3) of Sacramento at 140 pounds;
Mike Moreno (3-2) of Fresno vs. Lucas Gumaza
(2-0) of Stockton, Calif., at 170 pounds; and
Marcus Levesser (5-2) of Fresno vs. Josh McDonald
(3-3) of San Francisco at 160 pounds.
The SHOWTIME and non-televised
fights are scheduled for three, 5-minute rounds
with the exception of Purcell-Sexton and LaCroix-Alendale,
which are slated for three, 3-minute rounds.
Fans can watch pre- and post-fight interviews
only at ProElite.com. Fighter pages are below.
Suganuma had landed a nasty
overhand right, followed by a flying knee combination
that rocked and floored Hamman. But a moment
before he could pounce and land what potentially
might have been the finishing blow, or blows,
he was pulled off by the referee and declared
a TKO winner.
The generally gentleman-like
Hamman was lived afterward. “I don’t
know what happened or why it was stopped,’’
he said. “I wasn’t hurt and felt
completely fine. I wanted to keep fighting.
I felt I could keep fighting. I don’t
make excuses. I absolutely want a rematch if
he wants to give me one.’’
Suganuma was quick to oblige.
“Nobody likes to win by controversial
decision,’’ he said. “I thought
I had him dazed but I don’t think he was
completely out. I was a little surprised the
ref did what he did but only because I wanted
to hit Hamman again. If he wants to fight again,
let’s do it. I’m down.”
Hamman has won all 10 of
his MMA fights by stoppage – eight by
TKO and two by submission. A college football
coach at the University of Redlands (Calif.)
and former football star at California Atascadero
High, Hamman has yet to have a fight enter the
third round.
Suganuma majored in computer
science in college. After moving to Japan in
late 2004, where he worked as a singer, ukulele
player and English teacher, Suganuma became
interested in wrestling.
An avid weight-lifter, he
won a grappling competition and, then, after
a month of training, made his MMA debut. He
won his first five before losing a fight stopped
due to cuts in August 2006. Suganuma returned
shortly thereafter to Hilo, his hometown, to
train with BJ Penn. He has gone 4-0 since.
The winner of the Suganuma-Hamman
rematch could wind up fighting Rafael Feijao,
who has looked like a one-man wrecking crew
since joining EliteXC.
Camoes, who has won five
in a row, was sensational in his EliteXC and
United States debut last April 5 at Table Mountain
Casino. A black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
making his first start since Oct. 7, 2006, he
scored a scintillating 3:30, first-round TKO
(strikes) over Joe Camacho on ShoXC.
“I didn’t
think it would end that fast,’’
said the talented Camoes, who once went 27 minutes
with Anderson Silva before losing. “I’m
very happy. I wanted to give a spectacular showing.
I came to the U.S. to fight for the belt. I
look forward to fighting anybody that will get
me closer to achieving my goal.’’
Morgan has made a career
of re-inventing himself. Fans’ jaws dropped
when he stopped Duane Ludwig in the first round
in April 2005, and now he’ll try to regain
his winning ways after losing his last pair
to world-class Paul “Semtex” Daley
and Cung Le in January 2008 and November 2007,
respectively.
A hard-trying former welterweight
and competitor on “The Ultimate Fighter
2,” Morgan won the first two minutes against
Daley before losing by first-round TKO and he
showed great heart against Le and caught and
rocked Le, the Strikeforce champion, a few times
before losing by third-round TKO.
“I’ll
be ready,’’ said Morgan, who got
into MMA “to help vent some off my life
issues. I just kept doing it. I want to fight
all the top name guys. I'm not scared of any
of them. I still feel I'm getting better all
the time. Every fight for me is all or nothing.
This will be a very good and interesting fight.
’’
Purcell, who’s as responsible
as anybody for helping put woman’s MMA
on the map, and the talented Sexton recently
signed multi-fight deals with EliteXC.
They join a group of EliteXC
female fighters that includes, among others,
Gina Carano, Cris Cyborg, Tonya Evinger, Shayna
Baszler, Julie Kedzie, Kaitlin Young and LaCroix.
Long regarded as one of the
world’s toughest women and one of a few
to hold a black belt in Ruas Vale Tudo, Purcell
has trained in fitness and MMA for more than
20 years, with competitive experience also in
submission grappling, boxing, kickboxing, Muay
Thai, wrestling, Tae Kwon Do and gymnastics.
Purcell was the first woman
to compete and win in King of the Cage, headlined
the first-ever all female NHB card in the U.S.,
owns a win in Hook N Shoot, was an Ultimate
Wrestler world title belt-holder and was the
first and only female coach in the International
Fight League (IFL).
On the recent popularity
surge of women’s MMA, Purcell said, “It’s
awesome. I’ve been telling promoters for
years what women could bring to the sport. I’ve
always thought that if you brought in skilled
women and put them on a fight card, it would
bring in the fans. We come to fight, always
give everything we have and it’s always
exciting. You never see a boring women’s
fight.’’
The founder of fightergirls.com,
Purcell will be making her first start since
dropping a decision to Hitomi Akano at a Smackgirl
event in Japan on Feb. 15, 2006.
Sexton, one of the most courted
women in the game before signing with EliteXC,
is fighting for the first time since scoring
a second-round submission (armbar) over Julia
Berezikova on Aug. 24, 2007.
“It's great to be involved
with an international promotion of the caliber
of EliteXC," said Sexton, a submission
ace who owns notable victories over Carina Damm
and Tomomi "Windy Tomomi" Sunaba.
“EliteXC has a very promising female division.
I'm looking forward to fighting some of the
top ones.’’
The much-admired Brit, a
full-time mother and an osteopathy student,
is keen to avenge the sole blemish on her record,
a loss to Carano. “I would love a rematch
with Gina,’’ Sexton said, “but
the weight would be an issue. My management
tells me I'm too small to be fighting at 140
pounds.’’
Since her debut in 2002,
Sexton has become a stalwart of the British
scene. One of a few, popular mainstays in women's
game, she has earned international acclaim for
her sprightly performances.
Diabate has won five of six,
including a 1:15, first-round submission (armbar)
over Ryan Robinson in his most recent outing
on April 21, 2007. The Frenchman was supposed
to make his U.S. debut in late December 2007,
but broke an ankle during training. This is
his first fight back.
“It was the first time
I've had to pull out of a fight,’’
said Diabate, whose only loss since July 2005
came to Mauricio “Shogun’’
Rua. “I was doing light sparring with
takedown defense. One of my sparring partners
did a takedown, trapping one of my legs at the
same time. It was completely a fluke accident.’’
Fletcher will be making his
third start in a row on ShoXC, where he 1-1.
He earned an upset three-round unanimous decision
over Aaron Rosa on March 21, 2008. In his outing
before last, a fighter with decent submission
abilities on the ground got submitted (armbar)
by Giva Santana on Oct. 26, 2007.
Berry, 20, captured the KOTC
middleweight belt at the age of 19 with a 2:05,
first-round submission (triangle choke) over
Sean Loeffler on Aug. 5, 2007. In his last outing,
Berry, a former light heavy, submitted Omar
Luv (strikes) on Dec. 2, 2007.
Lizama will be making his
second ShoXC start. In his debut on Aug. 25,
2007, he came up on the wrong end of a close
three-round decision to Chicago’s Hector
Urbina in a tactical match in which both fighters
gave their best.
“I like to fight guys
who stand up in bang. That’s my game.
I want knockouts,’’ Lizama said.
“But with this guy, I had to concentrate
more on defense. I thought the decision could
have gone either way, but I can’t complain.
When you leave it in the hands of hands of the
judges, anything can happen.”
SHOWTIME announcer Mauro
Ranallo will call the play-by-play for ShoXC
with Stephen Quadros, The Fight Professor, serving
as color analyst. The executive producer of
ShoXC is David Dinkins, Jr. with Richard Gaughan
producing and Rick Phillips directing.
For more information on
EliteXC and other MMA-related stories, including
bios, video-on-demand, photos, stats, Fantasy
Fight Game TM and more, please visit ProElite.com
and EliteXC.com. For information on SHOWTIME
Sports, including exclusive behind-the-scenes
video, photo galleries and complete telecast
information, please visit http://www.SHO.com/Sports.
Fighter pages for televised
bouts: Suganuma (http:/poaisuganuma.proelite.com),
Hamman (http://jaredhamman.proelite.com), Camoes
(http:/fabriciocamoes.proelite.com), Morgan
(http:/sammorgan.proelite.com), Diabate (http://cyrillediabate.proelite.com),
Fletcher (http://jaimefletcher.proelite.com),
Purcell (http://debipurcell.proelite.com), Sexton
(http://rosisexton.proelite.com), Berry (http://keithberry.proelite.com),
Lizama (http://raylizama.proelite.com).
Fighter pages for non-televised
bouts: LaCroix (http://melanielacroix.proelite.com),
Alendale (http://katrinaalendale.proelite.com),
Lopez (http://ralphlopez.proelite.com), Vargas
(http://robertovargas.proelite.com), Rave (http://joshrave.proelite.com),
Brock (http://jessebrock.proelite.com), Moreno
(http://mikemoreno.proelite.com), Gamaza (http://lucasgamaza.proelite.com),
Levesser (http://marcuslevesser.proelite.com),
McDonald (http://joshmcdonald.proelite.com)
About ProElite, Inc.
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