RON RIZZO: Alright guys, let’s move on this portion of the call with Ronnie Shields coming up next and then we can have group commentary when the press gets to ask their questions.
RONNIE SHIELDS: Donovan George is a very skilled fighter. We take no one lightly so we’re here training, but I think after the fight, we ought to put the managers in and let them go at it and make them put up their purse against each other. We’re looking forward to this fight. This is what we do. I think that both guys will be competitive. The best man is going to win on March 17 and I think that’s all that matters. The other team is very confident, we’re very confident. This is the game. This is the way it’s supposed to be. They’re supposed to feel like their guy is better just like we feel Edwin is better. I’m here in Houston to get Edwin into the best condition possible and to put together the best possible game plan. If you live in New York, please come out and see this because this is going to be better than the main event.
KEVIN ROONEY JR.: A fighter we’re very excited to work with at DiBella Entertainment, we feel he is one of the bright young stars in all of boxing, he’s 20-0 (14 KOs), he was the 2005 US National Champion and the 2006 National Golden Gloves Champion, and he’s currently ranked #5 by the WBC and IBF, and #8 by the WBA, and he is the current USNBC super middleweight champion, Edwin "La Bomba" Rodriguez.
EDWIN RODRIGUEZ: I want to thank my whole team, DBE, and Lou DiBella, for giving me such a big opportunity on HBO at Madison Square Garden. This is a dream come true for any boxer and I’m training extremely hard for Donovan George. He’s a very good fighter. He’s one of those fighters that doesn’t know how to take a step back so I am not taking lightly at all. So I’m bringing 100 percent, my best game, in. With regard to the bet between the managers, giving all to the winner, I’m sure it’s going to be me, but I like that bet. After this fight, I look forward to bigger things. I just want to thank everybody for this big opportunity.
KEVIN ROONEY JR.: At this time, we would like to open it up to questions.
DAX CONN (TALKIN’ BOXING): Don, you’re only two fights removed from your loss to Francisco Sierra. Since then, both your bouts have a combined amount of time of nine rounds. You’ve never been beyond eight rounds in your entire professional career. Edwin is a pressure fighter. He has a solid chin and has gone 10 rounds several times. Considering all that I just mentioned, has your camp done anything different for this fight than you normally have in the past in your preparations considering the time off and the amount of time that you’ve had in between your bouts so you can prepare yourself for what will more than likely be a distance of 10 rounds in your bout against Edwin.
DONOVAN GEORGE: I’m not sure that I’m doing anything differently. I’m going to train harder than I’ve ever trained before because of the high possibility that this fight is going to go more than eight rounds. The reason I haven’t been in the ring in a long time is entirely might fault. I was a numbskull and I just didn’t work out. But I’ve been in the gym, I’ve been training, I’ve been sparring. I’ve cut weight, I’ve been on weight, I just didn’t get the opportunity to go out there and fight. As far as this fight coming up, I couldn’t be more excited. I’m so motivated to train hard and my father is going to get me ready. We’re going to bring in the strength coach to give me the extra edge as much as possible. I know it’s going to be a grueling fight and I know it’s going to come down to conditioning and basically who can take the better punch. I have that one loss on my record and it wasn’t just a loss. I got beat up bad, it was a horrific beating and everyone saw it. It was on national television and it was embarrassing, but I bounced back and beat a pretty good fighter. I just want to go out there and prove myself and fight fights like this on the biggest stage in the world. It’s just a great opportunity to show the world what I’m made of and I know it’s going to be a great fight.
DAX CONN (TALKIN’ BOXING): Edwin, this question is for you. Donovan has some serious power, as we all know. Nineteen of his 21 wins come by stoppage. You, yourself though, have a fairly impressive KO ratio, 14 of your 20 wins come by stoppage, but you’ve also shown some pure boxing ability when you need to and you have a higher level of competition on your resume. Donovan, I believe, does possess more power. Are you ready for a toe-to-toe war that Donovan brings or do you think that if Donovan does bring his pressure that you’ll be able to outbox him? Or do you really believe that this will come down to, as Donovan mentioned, who has the better chin?
EDWIN RODRIGUEZ: We know who has the better chin. I’ve never been down before, but I let my trainer Ronnie Shields come up with a game plan and I just follow his game plan. He better come up with a game plan on how to beat Donovan George and I’m just going to execute it on March 17.
JEFFREY FREEDMAN (KO DIGEST): Edwin, after the Rosinsky fight, you said you wanted to fight somebody in the top 10 and somebody who could get you to that championship level. I was wondering is Don George somebody like that or is this more of a Rosinsky-type fight as you move toward your ultimate goal?
EDWIN RODRIGUEZ: Donovan George is ranked #4 by the IBF, so he is one of those guys ranked in the top 10. It’s definitely a step up and I’m just preparing for it and getting ready.
JEFFREY FREEDMAN (KO DIGEST): Edwin, talk a little bit about what it means to be fighting at Madison Square Garden on HBO for the first time. Is that as big a dream as winning a world title, or perhaps even bigger?
EDWIN RODRIGUEZ: Being on HBO is a huge opportunity. Being at Madison Square Garden, which is about four hours from where I live, so I’m going to have a lot of fans there. It’s a great opportunity, so it’s almost just as good as winning a world title.
JEFFREY FREEDMAN (KO DIGEST): For boxing fans who don’t really know that much about you, can you tell us about your style in the ring, and who you are as a person outside of the ring?
DONOVAN GEORGE: In the ring, I like to come forward and fight. If you’ve ever seen any of my fights, I’ve never been in a bad fight. I take shots and I give shots. I’m always willing to take one to give one. This is going to be an action-packed fight. I am going to try to tighten up my boxing ability, but as the fight gets going and it gets into the later rounds, everybody goes back to the fighter that they were when they first started fighting and the original fundamentals they were taught. My father taught me to use the jab, so that’s what I thought I’d do. Outside of the ring, I’m a humongous sports fan. I watch sports all day and, to be honest, I probably play poker four or five times a week for 12 hours at a time.
JEFFREY FREEDMAN (KO DIGEST): What did you learn from the loss to Francisco Sierra? You described it as a horrific loss earlier. It had that somewhat controversial ending. What do you take from an experience like that?
DONOVAN GEORGE: I was losing the fight. I was getting beat up bad. Yeah, he hit me after the bell, but I’m not going to complain about that. I went into that fight overconfident and I wasn’t mentally ready for that fight. I was hurt, I should never have gone in there. I thought, in my mind, ’oh I’m just going to go in there and blow this bum out,’ but it didn’t turn out like that, and I took a terrific, humbling beating. I’ll never take anyone lightly like that again. Everything happens for a reason. Because of that fight, I got that Cornelius White fight. They brought me in there to get killed against Cornelius White and, obviously, that didn’t happen. On the big scheme of things, everything happens for a reason.
JEFFREY FREEDMAN (KO DIGEST): In your amateur career, or at any point in the past, have you ever sparred with Edwin Rodriguez? Have you two even met?
DONOVAN GEORGE: No, I had a very limited amateur career. I’ve probably only been to a few national tournaments, and I’m not even sure if I’ve ever seen him there. The only time that I saw him was in Chicago when he fought Kevin Engel. To Mr. Army, I don’t think I got dropped in that Adama fight like you said I did, but maybe I got hit too hard. But as far as the amateurs, Edwin has more accomplishments that I have, and god bless. But this is the pros and I’m going to come to fight and I’m willing to lay it all out on the line for this fight.
JEFFREY FREEDMAN (KO DIGEST): How did this fight between Rodriguez and George come about and why did Andy Lee pull out?
KEVIN ROONEY JR.: We had been looking for an opponent for Andy and, unfortunately, we weren’t able to lock in a suitable opponent for Andy that fit for HBO and fit for Lee’s camp. We obviously didn’t want to lose the slot, as we still had the show. So then we came up with this fight between Edwin and Donovan, and everyone loved it. It’s unfortunate that we don’t have Andy on the card, but we think that we have a great fight with this Edwin-Donovan fight.
BOB MUTTER (CHICAGO TRIBUNE): You are half Greek, half Irish?
DONOVAN GEORGE: Yes sir.
BOB MUTTER (CHICAGO TRIBUNE): Your mom is Irish?
DONOVAN GEORGE: My mom is 100 percent Irish, and my dad is 100 percent Greek. Both were born in the US.
BOB MUTTER (CHICAGO TRIBUNE): Where are you training Donovan?
DONOVAN GEORGE: I train between gyms. I train at Chicago Fight Club with Sam Colona. My father and I go down there and we go to Windy City Fight Club, which is closer to my house. I’ll be going out to New York the week of the fight.
BILL HILLMAN(FIGHTNEWS.COM): Since Edwin is ranked #5 and Donovan #4 by the IBF, will this fight be an IBF title eliminator?
LARRY ARMY: We wanted it to be, but it just didn’t work out. I think part of the problem was Adonis Stevenson and Jesus Gonzalez. There was a non-mandatory, voluntary before we made this fight. We would have loved it. Donovan George’s team would have loved it, I’m sure. They had a title eliminator with Librado Andrade, but it just wasn’t in the cards unfortunately.
MIKE MICHAEL: As you’re aware, we were supposed to be doing the title eliminator with Librado Andrade, but that didn’t work out. As you just heard, we would have loved for this to be for the #1 spot and #2 spot, but that didn’t work out. But maybe we can work out doing a defense of George’s USBA title. We’ll talk with Lou DiBella and Leon Margules and we’ll see what we can work out.
LARRY ARMY: And there’s Edwin’s WBC USNBC title as well.
MIKE MICHAEL: Let’s throw all of our belts into the pot and let’s talk to our promoters.
LARRY ARMY: I agree.
BILL HILLMAN(FIGHTNEWS.COM): Edwin and Ronnie, what did you guys pick up from that win over Will Rosinsky and what are you guys planning on changing for this bout?
RONNIE SHIELDS: These are two different fighters. Will Rosinsky was a good boxer as well as a pressure fighter and Donovan is a ’come for the head’ kind of guy, so that right there puts you in a different kind of light. I’m studying tape of Donovan right now and putting together our plan. The thing about Rosinsky was that he was a naturally bigger guy and we had to go up in weight to fight him. He was a strong fighter. Donovan is more Edwin’s weight. These guys are 168 pounders.
EDWIN RODRIGUEZ: Like Ronnie said, they’re both different fighters. Rosinsky a shorter fighter so he was harder to hit, but this is a whole different fight. We’re going to stick to this game plan and it has nothing to do with Will Rosinsky.
BILL HILLMAN(FIGHTNEWS.COM): For Donovan and Pete, Edwin hits pretty hard to the body. What are you guys doing to prepare for Edwin’s body attack?
PETE GEORGE: Hundreds of rounds on the medicine ball will help us get ready for that one, preparing him so he can take those shots. Edwin is a good body puncher, and Donovan will be ready to take those shots. There’s things that we see that we’re going to try to exploit that Edwin might be doing wrong. I know Edwin is going to be prepared and we’re going to be prepared. But there’s things that we see that we’re working on.
KEVIN ROONEY JR.: Thank you everyone for participating in today’s call.
The Edwin "La Bomba" Rodriguez (20-0, 14KO’s) vs. Don "Da Bomb" George (22-1-1, 19KO’s) 10-round super middleweight showdown, being billed as "Bombs Away" will be the co-feature bout of the evening to Sergio "Maravilla" Martinez (48-2-2, 27KO’s) defending his Middleweight crown against top-rated Irish middleweight contender, Matthew "Mack The Knife" Macklin (28-3, 19KO’s). The card which will be aired live on HBO’s "World Championship Boxing is entitled, "THE REAL Middleweight Championship - Get Your Irish Up", is promoted by DiBella Entertainment and will be shown live on HBO beginning 10PM ET/7PM PT.
Tickets are priced at $505, $355, $205, $125 and $65 and are on sale now. Tickets can be purchased through the Madison Square Garden Box Office or through Ticketmaster, at ticketmaster.com, or call (800) 745-3000. Call DiBella Entertainment at (212) 947-2577, or visit www.dbe1.com and @loudibella on Twitter for more information.