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Question: You are about to face
Shannon Briggs who says he is looking to
perfect the art of the one-punch
knockout. Tell us a little bit about how
you plan to meet that strategy?
Liakhovich: I will have many surprises
for him and we will see (them) in the
ring. It seems like he thinks he will
knock me out in the first round. Bring
him in. We will see.
Question: Shannon, do you have any
opening comments?
Briggs: Well, sure baby. I am chilling.
I am ready to fight. I am happier than a
mother! I am so happy, I cannot wait. I
cannot wait.
Begin Press Questions.
Question: Shannon, there have been
reports about some changes that you made
in your training and where you train.
Can you tell us a little bit about that?
Briggs: We brought in Chuck MacGregor.
Chuck is a guy who I have known a long
time and for many years. Actually, a few
years back, I tried to get Chuck to
train me but at the time he was training
quite a few other guys. So he did not
have the time and I understood that, so
it did not work out. Then it just
happened to be that we were fighting
here in Phoenix and we thought that
Chuck would be great to add to the team,
so it worked out perfectly. It is great.
He used to train this guy, he knows how
this guy fights. He knows his
personality. So I think it is great,
man. I am looking forward to being WBO
heavyweight champion Nov. 4 and just
being a happy man, going on the shows --
Letterman, Leno -- and really making it
happen. But yes, it actually brings some
prestige and some life back to boxing;
with these dead champions we have got
right now, we need it, man.
Question: Shannon, are you still with
Jeff Mayweather because there were
reports about that as well?
Briggs: Yes, Jeff is on the team. He is
still part of my camp. Jeff is a friend,
always for life. Rumors are just that --
rumors. Jeff and the whole gang are
here.
Question: Sergei, what do you make of
this? Does any of it affect what you are
going to do?
Liakhovich: Actually, I like what he
did. By bring Chuck in, he will play
right into my advantage. We are happy to
hear about that addition to his team.
Question: Why is this going to work
to your advantage?
Liakhovich: Well, basically, we read
reports that Chuck is supposed to be the
expert trainer that knows me. I have a
message: Chuck knows nothing about me.
In one year, I have changed quite a bit
and I am now with a great trainer, Kenny
Weldon. What you are going to see in the
ring is something that Chuck has no idea
about. So they are just fooling
themselves by bringing. But I understand
Shannon Briggs needs to feel that way
because he is fighting the best champion
out there and it is kind of a scary walk
out there. He talks the talk. He has a
big mouth. I have major plans, you know,
basically (knocking him into) the second
row.
Question: Sergei, how did you and
Kenny get together and what has he
brought to your team?
Liakhovich: After I lost my first fight,
I had a partner and his ex-manager was
Jim Thomas, who was also working with
Evander Holyfield at the time, and Ken
Weldon was involved with Evander.
Basically, Jim Thomas brought up the
issue with Kenny. Kenny had seen me and
liked what he had seen. He said, 'He's
got tremendous potential and I would
love to train him.' Also, Holyfield told
Kenny, 'This is a kid to watch for; he
can fight.' So Jim Thomas brought in
Kenny Weldon and the rest is history --
we have been with him ever since.
Question: You say "ever since." How
long has this been now?
Liakhovich: After I lost the fight in
Atlantic City to Mo Harris, we had Kenny
take on the duties of trainer. About
seven or eight fights.
Question: Sergei, what has Kenny
perhaps taught you that maybe Chuck did
not?
Liakhovich: He basically teaches me how
to think in the ring and he is a great
fundamentalist.
Question: Shannon, you thought you
had a fight with Wladimir Klitschko but
it fell through. Did all the waiting
give you extra motivation or are you
just focused on this fight?
Briggs: I am focused on the fact that I
am fighting this guy and that is it. I
am not really looking past this. But of
course, there is the imagination that
runs with itself and says, 'OK, knock
this guy off, get the next guy, and keep
knocking these guys off.' But I am just
focused on Liakhovich right now and I am
looking forward to November 4.
Question: Shannon, in your
estimation, who is the best current
heavyweight champion?
Briggs: I guess you would have to say
Sergei. It is really like a tie because,
ostensibly, Wladimir is much stronger
and more dangerous as far as having
one-punch power -- he can get you out of
there with one punch. Sergei is a
different type of boxer; he mixes
punches up differently. With Wladimir,
all you have to worry about is like
pretty much a decent job, a strong right
hand, and trying to hook up with a jab.
Other than that, I mean, like I said, I
am focused on this fight and I am
looking forward to it.
Question: Shannon, will durability be
more of an issue against Sergei than it
would have versus Wladimir?
Briggs: I do not know, really, because
they both show me that they have it in
them. So I am looking forward to
bringing it out.
Question: Sergei, obviously Shannon
is going to come right at you. Do you
sense that you are going to meet him
head on or are you going to give him
some time to get winded and then attack?
What is your rough estimation of how
things are going to play out?
Liakhovich: If Shannon jumps right on
me, it will make it a very short night
for Shannon. So basically, talk to
Shannon how far he wants to go. It is up
to him.
Question: Sergei, you have compiled a
more than decent record with some
impressive wins against some top-ranked
competition, but as far as knockout
artists go, Briggs seems to be the
biggest test of your career so far.
Would you agree with that?
Liakhovich: No. I won the title against
the toughest champion out there, Lamon
Brewster, and he is by far the toughest
puncher. So Shannon Briggs does not
qualify in the equation as calling him
the top dog. We will put you over the
top. Just wait until November 4.
Question: Sergei, how can you win
while avoiding the knockout power of
Briggs?
Liakhovich: I know he is going to come
swinging and I know he is going to try
and throw a lot of hard punches, but he
needs to think about every time he
swings, he is going to get hit. So
basically, that is what I plan on doing.
You will see on Nov. 4 how nice it is
going to be.
Question: Shannon, what is the key to
your invincibility over your 11-fight
winning streak?
Briggs: Focus. My career has had its ups
and downs. I was gifted with talent and
I excelled as an amateur. I was on the
USA team. So I always did well; I was
blessed. So with maturity comes wisdom
and the fact that I realize I am not a
kid anymore. I cannot get by without
running, or sparring, and just take
fights. I had to come to the realization
that I am older and that it takes hard
work and that is what it took in the
last couple years. I just really
dedicated myself to training, to
learning how to train. I had never done
any of the stuff that I am doing now, so
I feel great. I feel more confident than
I ever felt in my entire life, as a
person, as a man – I just feel great.
Question: Shannon, how important is
it to you to get a knockout?
Briggs: It is just as important as it
was in every fight. I love the knockout.
He can say what he wants about, 'Oh,
yeah, come to him and this is going to
happen.' Who cares? That is what the
people want. They want blood, they want
to see his head decapitated, so that is
what I am coming for. I am looking
forward to it. I am training. I am in
the best shape of my life physically and
mentally. This is destiny. It is how it
is supposed to be. It has nothing to do
with him. This is beyond him. I feel
good. I am just looking forward to
fulfilling my prophecy, the destiny. We
are having a good time with this. I
could not be happier.
Question: Shannon, how do plan to
overcome the champion's strength?
Briggs: I am dedicated. Just brute force
and determination. I have no doubt in my
mind that it is not going to go right on
my night. That in itself is something
that Shannon Briggs never had. You can
look at all my fights and all my
knockouts and say, wow, how could he not
be confident, he has knocked out so many
guys? That is just talent and lucky. But
now, to have the truth and belief in
myself, and know I can go out there and
run 10 miles, or know I can go out there
and spar 12-15 rounds a day, of know I
could hit the bag. This is stuff I never
did before. I was winning, but just on
pure talent, not experience. Put the
dedication, the hard work, the wisdom,
the maturity and now you have something
real in your hands.
Question: Shannon, what is it like to
know you have a chance to wipe out all
the hype about no American-born
heavyweight champion and be the first to
do that?
Briggs: This is it, I could be the man,
I am appreciative, I am happy. I just
thank God and everybody who played a
piece in this puzzle. I was fighting
everywhere, anywhere for free. So now I
am fighting for the heavyweight
championship of the world. This is a
great opportunity for me and it is a
great opportunity for boxing. Shannon
Briggs as heavyweight champion of the
world is a beautiful thing. It can
definitely bring a lot of people back to
the sport. I am ugly, but I am funny.
That is my motto. So I am looking
forward to bringing some life back to
this sport, and a lot of people having a
good time and enjoying and seeing what
they want. They want knockouts.
Question: Shannon, could you go into
it a bit further about the fact that all
the heavyweight champions are now
Russian or from that part of the world?
Briggs: I think it is a couple things. I
think a lot of kids in America; the
black kids, they are playing other
sports – basketball, football, and other
things, rapping, hip-hop. So to them,
why make money getting hit when 'I can
go out there and make it in other ways?'
You do not have those big lucrative
contract guarantees in boxing. You have
all these unscrupulous managers and
promoters, so people are not dying to
become a professional boxer. It is just
a real tough business. It is just a real
tough game physically and mentally. So
you do not have a bunch of guys jumping
out the window to say, 'You know what? I
am going to be a professional boxer.'
Also, the amateur program here, it is
not as crazy as how it was years ago,
and again, (not as) lucrative and
attractive for kids to be in it. Then
you look at the Soviet Union, when it
was I guess the Soviet Union, they have
always had a strong amateur program and
stuck behind it. So I guess it kind of
came to a head here with all these guys
coming from the Soviet Union. And they
can fight. They are holding their own in
their craft; they are good at what they
do. So it has worked itself out. But now
it is time to clean up this mess, so
that is what I am here for.
Question: Shannon, is there more
pressure on you or any American who now
challenges for a world heavyweight
title?
Briggs: If you let it. I guess people
can point the finger and say it is up to
you. But it has nothing to do with that.
It is just the fact that I am here in
this destiny and in this time and this
is what it is supposed to be. It was
written this way; this is how it was
supposed to be. I was born December 4,
1971. I weighed 3 pounds at birth; my
mom had me premature. So here I am now,
270 pounds, 34 years later and about to
be 35. So it is like all my life has
been turbulent ups and downs, and no I
am going to rectify it. I am going to
get everything right. I am going to set
everything straight Nov. 4.
Question: Sergei, you mentioned that
your objective is to unify the
heavyweight championship. Are you
convinced that that is ever going to be
done, and if you remain champion, how
will you go about making sure that that
happens?
Liakhovich: Well, first of all, I will
focus on this fight. Then after this
fight, I want to fight Klitschko. After
this fight, we will see.
Question: Shannon, how important is
it for there to be one heavyweight
champion? Do you think that is a
necessity?
Briggs: We definitely need it. People do
not know who these champions are. They
do not know who Liakhovich is, Valuev,
Klitschko. They do not care. These guys
are not personable, these guys are not
marketable. They are ugly. They get on
my nerves. I am sick and tired of them.
Everybody wants to see a champion they
can identify with and they can talk to.
I am here to just clean up this mess.
Question: If you happen to win the
championship, Shannon, why would they
identify with you?
Briggs: I am American. I am a black
American.
Question: You are talking about here
in this country, then?
Briggs: Yes, sir, in this country.
Question: It is a world championship,
though. Do you think the world can
identify with you?
Briggs: Yes. The world can identify with
one champ, (especially) an
English-speaking heavyweight champ. No
offense to these guys in that way. I am
not trying to be rude in that way. I
just think these guys are not pushed by
their managers. They knock me and say,
listen, Shannon Briggs is just known for
being famous. But what is wrong with
that? I am out there doing what I have
to do to make a living and propel my
name and the sport at the same time.
Question: Shannon, it seems you have
succeeded at times in getting underneath
Sergei's skin. Is that your strategy to
bait him into a punch-out because you
think it benefits you?
Briggs: Yes, and that is fine with me.
If you want to box, that is fine. You
cannot outbox me. If you want to slug,
let us slug. I am determined. My whole
thing is that I am just hungry for that
opportunity. A hungry man is a dangerous
man and I am willing to die. I am
willing to be put in a suit in a box
Nov. 5 if I do not win. If I am willing
to put everything on the line, that is
how important this is to me, my family.
You know, for me, this is it.
Opening Statements Begin for Juan
Diaz and Fernando Angulo.
Angulo: I am feeling very well and
strong. I am preparing as I expected to
prepare. We have been training in Los
Angeles and training to win. That is my
plan.
Question: Fernando, tell us a little bit
about your upbringing. It is a very
unusual story.
Angulo: My childhood is what I would
consider a bit embarrassing. I did grow
up fairly close to the Ecuadorian Amazon
and it was very, very close to the
jungle. When I was approximately seven
years of age, I had to leave my parents.
They were abusive. I would stay away for
a period of two years in the jungle and
then come back to my hometown and stay
there for about three months. During the
time that I would return I would stay
with people in the town. They were
always very hospitable and very generous
and would allow me to stay in their
homes. In return for food and a roof
over my head, I would do small jobs of
picking coffee or picking
cacao. So my beginnings were very humble
and very difficult.
Question: Fernando, there is no shame
in that. We do not pick our parents. But
when you spent this year or two in the
rain forest, did you see people? Were
you foraging for yourself? Or did you
hook up with other people? What happened
to you out there?
Angulo: I am from a town that is right
at the edge of the jungle, so I grew up
very much accustomed to a jungle. To me,
it was not a new experience. I have done
farming. When I would go into the very
inner parts, I was alone. The times that
I would come out, people would help me.
I would have to beg for food on the
street. I would be walking around with
just some shorts, a tee shirt, barefoot,
and in the cold. Sometimes I would sleep
in the street in the city alone.
Sometimes people would give me a home.
Sometimes when I went into the jungle, I
would sleep there alone and survive on
my own natural instincts and what I knew
from growing up. When I became an
amateur at the age of 16 is when my life
changed a bit.
Question: Juan, do you have some
opening comments?
Diaz: Yes, my story is not that
emotional and not that hard. I have much
respect for Mr. Angulo for surviving all
of that and being where he is at now. I
was born in the United States, went back
to Mexico and then my parents came back
here. They worked hard to give both my
brother and I a good education, and now
I am at the University of Houston, a
world champion. I can say that they were
very, very successful on what they tried
and set out to accomplish, which is for
my brother and I to have a better
future. And now I just want to thank all
the fans all around the United States
who supported me and who did not have
any doubt that I would be where I am at
now.
Question: Juan, how has the balance
been at the university along with
training for this fight?
Diaz: It has been a little tough.
Question: Are you going to classes
full-time?
Diaz: No, that is part-time. Four
classes is full-time; three is
part-time. So I started doing three
classes, but all the training I have
been doing recently has got me down to
one class only, so no matter how hard it
gets, I have to only take one class.
That is all I am going to take. But I am
going to continue going because I know
that staying in school is what keeps me
motivated and keeps me winning.
Begin Press Questions.
Question: Fernando, you have not
fought since December. Diaz looks like
he is going to be your toughest
opponent. How you are preparing and what
are your plans against him?
Angulo: My strategy is to train very
hard and train consistently. I am in
excellent condition. I do regard my
opponent to be one who is always in good
condition, a guy who throws a lot of
punches, to be a very strong fighter.
But I am confident that I am in
excellent condition and because of my
conditioning and training, I will be
taking the title to Ecuador.
Question: Juan, have you seen any
tape of Fernando, and how are you going
to approach him?
Diaz: I have seen film on him. He is a
very strong puncher. If I was to compare
him to somebody, I would say he is kind
of like a (Ricardo) Mayorga type of
fighter. He is real strong and he is a
little awkward. Those are the most
dangerous fighters to fight, so I have
got to be on my best night and be real,
real focused in order to fight and beat
Angulo.
Question: Juan, would you agree that
he looked like he was in phenomenal
condition at the press conference?
Diaz: Yes, yes. I know that from my
previous fights that all the fights that
I fight, they come in great shape
because they obviously want to become
champions of the world.
Question: They want what you have?
Diaz: Yes, and that is why they are not
going to lose that opportunity or waste
it.
Question: Juan, what does it mean to you
to be fighting now for (new promoter)
Don King?
Diaz: It is a very exciting time for me
because I remember back in the day when
I was eight years old and my favorite
fighter was Julio Cesar Chavez and I
used to see Don King get up in the ring
with him and those Pay-Per-View shows.
Now I look back and I think back and I
see myself, he is going to be stepping
in the ring with me. It is just amazing
how far along I have come through my
professional boxing career. It is just
very exciting to be in this position and
to be fighting such a spectacular fight.
Question: Juan, is there any
distraction that you have tried to
tender a contract beyond just this
one-fight deal and it has not come to
pass yet? Does that bother you at all?
Diaz: Well, no, it does not bother me at
all because I have my manager who is
taking care of that, and he is the
businessman and I am the fighter. So
whatever happens is going to happen, and
if it works out, fine. If not, then both
the promoter and us will move along with
what we have to do. So I am just focused
on staying champion on Nov..
Question: Fernando, what do you have
to say to those who think you are way
out of your league in this match against
Diaz?
Angulo: First and foremost, Juan Diaz is
not superior to me. He is the champion,
but I have all the class and the
qualities to be a champion, and I will
demonstrate this by fighting and beating
the champion. I am very hungry and I
have very, very strong desires to become
champion.
Question: Fernando, will you admit
that, on paper, Diaz is the best
opponent you have faced?
Angulo: On paper, Juan Diaz is the
champion. Therefore, since I am fighting
for that title, he is the best opponent
I have faced. But I have had many tough
fights, none have been for the title,
but they have been difficult. I expect
this to be a very difficult fight, but
it is difficult not just because I am
facing the champion, but I feel I am
also fighting the judges. I know my mind
must be clear. I must have a positive
mindset, but I am comfortable because I
am completely prepared. I invite all the
fans to watch this fight on SHOWTIME so
that they can witness how good a fighter
and opponent I am.
Question: Fernando, how will you
overcome the experience advantage your
opponent has?
Angulo: In terms of the experience, I do
not want to provide any details but on
Nov. 4 you will see how I will deal with
Juan's experience. I am a quiet boxer; I
am not one to talk much. But I will
demonstrate that I am more than capable
of dealing with Diaz's experience.
Question: Juan, when do you think you
will be able to set up an opportunity to
pick up another title and how important
is it to you to become the undisputed
lightweight champion?
Diaz: It is very important for me to
unify the division, but right now I am
not thinking ahead. I have a date with
Angulo on the 4th, and that is the only
thing that I am concentrating on. I
never plan or look ahead because
unexpected things happen all the time,
not just in boxing but in our lives. So
I prepare myself mentally, physically,
and everything that I can try to do so
that I win on Nov. 4. Then, I will talk
about some possible unification bouts.
Question: Juan, you have beaten so
many quality fighters as a professional.
Is there anyone in the division that you
think is going to be able to challenge
you down the line?
Diaz: There are a lot of fighters that
are really dangerous. You have seen
fighters who are coming from losing
records and they beat top, top
opponents. So any fighter that steps in
there is a threat to you, and right now
anybody that steps through that ring, I
see them as a big threat. But as far as
me wanting to fight other fighters, the
fight that I would really love would be
against the new WBC champion, Joel
Casamayor, or Jesus Chavez, who is
another champ.
Question: Juan, do you think that
Fernando is overmatched here? True, he
is a threat like anybody, but do you
think your record stands far above his?
Diaz: I do not see him as undermatched
because a lot of the experts have been
proven wrong so many times, and
champions themselves have proven
themselves wrong. So those are the kinds
of things that keep me motivated and
training hard. You cannot take this guy
lightly.
Question: Fernando, what is the name
of the town that you grew up in and how
big was it? And does anybody in that
town know that you will be fighting or
where that you will be fighting for a
world title on Nov. 4?
Angulo: The town that I grew up in,
actually, the city is quite large with
millions, but I grew up in a very small
part by the edge, right by the jungle.
So it was not highly populated.
Question: How many people live there?
Angulo: It is a province that at this
time certainly has a population in the
millions, but when I was growing up, it
was a very, very small, small town.
Question: How many amateur fights did
you have?
Angulo: I had 25 amateur fights, and I
lost five of them. I did not stay as an
amateur for very long because I did not
like it. I became an amateur only for
the purpose of eventually becoming a
professional.
Question: You started when you were
16, correct?
Angulo: Yes.
Question: Are there people in this
small area near the jungle that knew
you? Do they actually know you are
fighting?
Angulo: Actually, I have been very quiet
about the fight because I have been very
focused. I am sure that now that there
are newspapers that people might know
about it, but personally, I am not aware
of anyone who is aware that I will be
fighting. I am totally concentrated, and
my goal for more than seven years has
been to fight for a world championship.
I have not spoken to anybody from my
hometown, and so my personal knowledge
is that they do not know anything.
Question: If you were to win, would
you go back to Ecuador? I understand you
live in Venezuela now, but would you
want to go back there and visit?
Angulo: I would love to return. I am
living in Venezuela presently. That is
where I have been developing myself
professionally as a fighter. I have been
away from Ecuador for the last five
years approximately, but I am Ecuadorian
from the root and from the heart, so I
plan to first return to Venezuela
immediately after the fight, with the
title, and then go to Ecuador and spend
a vacation there, because I miss it.
Question: You are training in Los
Angeles with Venezuelan trainers, right?
Angulo: Yes.
Question: Juan, there is a lot of
talk about the heavyweights and how
nobody cares about them anymore. Are you
a fan of the heavyweights?
Diaz: A little bit. I watched a couple
of fights. One of the real, real
exciting fights I watched was between
James Toney and Samuel Peter.
Question: Juan, as a fighter, what
would the solution be to bring more
interest, more people back to the
heavyweight division? What would you
like to see?
Diaz: I think it is because we have a
lot of Russian champions and a lot of
the people, they want to see some
American champions. For example, they
see somebody growing up, coming fresh
from the Olympics and starting their
career, like Shannon Briggs was saying
earlier, they can kind of relate to them
because they see them grow up in front
of their faces on TV. A lot of the
Russian champions, they come overseas,
and next thing you know, they are
champions, so the people do not really
know too much about them or what they
are about.
Question: Would you like to see an
American heavyweight champion?
Diaz: I think that everybody around the
world deserves a chance to fight for the
championship, to become champion. So I
feel that whoever trains hard, then I am
all for that guy no matter where he is
from, what color he is. I am for whoever
has trained hard and wants it.
Question: What did you think of
Casamayor in his winning effort against
Diego Corrales?
Diaz: I thought he looked a lot better
than he did in this last fight. He
looked stronger. He looked like he was
in great shape. I am just hoping that we
can make that fight happen after Nov. 4
or sometime after that.
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