(SEPT 24) Yesterday there
was a International Media Conference Call that took place with
media calling into Claressa Shields, Ivana Habazin, and More!
Dmitriy Salita - Thank you. I'd like to welcome all the
media. We have a great night of action coming up on Saturday,
October 5 live on SHOWTIME from the Dort Federal Event Center,
Flint, Michigan, beginning at 9:00 pm ET/6:00 pm PT, Claressa
Shields versus Ivana Habazin will headline a SHOWTIME BOXING:
SPECIAL EDITION.
The main event fighters will be joining us for today's call to
preview their clash for the vacant WBO Junior Middleweight World
title. The undisputed middleweight world champion Claressa
Shields will look to make history once again by becoming the
fastest fighter in boxing, male or female, to become a
three-division world champion. She's already a unified world
champion at middleweight and super middleweight, just nine
fights into her pro career.
She will have a tough challenge in the former world champion
Ivana Habazin who is from Zagreb, Croatia, and she's taking this
fight very seriously and we'll talk about her preparations in a
little bit.
Tickets to the live event which is promoted by Salita Promotions
can be purchased at Ticketmaster and the Dort Event Center box
office.
I would now like to introduce Mr. Chris DeBlasio from SHOWTIME.
The reason why we're experiencing such a big growth on other
platforms for women's boxing and obviously on SHOWTIME is
because SHOWTIME believes in Claressa and believes in women's
boxing.
It's Claressa's sixth fight on SHOWTIME and we are very blessed
and honored to have this fight on this premium network. I'd like
to introduce Mr. Chris DeBlasio to talk about the event.
Chris DeBlasio
Thank you, Dmitry. I appreciate that. So on behalf of Stephen
Espinoza who is the man behind our support of the sport and of
the women's division in particular; and Gordon Hall, our
executive producer who is the co-founder of ShoBox, our popular
prospect-oriented series, and he'll executive produce this
SHOWTIME BOXING: SPECIAL EDITION as well, I just want to say how
proud we are to be part of the event. We know it's going to be a
special one, a homecoming in Flint, Michigan.
As you alluded to, SHOWTIME has a long history of featuring the
best in women's combat sports, from Laila Ali and Christy Martin
in boxing from years ago to Gina Carano, Cris Cyborg and Ronda
Rousey in mixed martial arts more recently.
Since 2017, with Claressa Shields leading the way, we have these
elite women boxers; Shields, Christina Hammer, Katie Taylor has
appeared on the network and Amanda Serrano in several fights.
Shields versus Habazin will be our eleventh women's boxing bout
since 2017 on the network. Shields led the way. In 2017, we
presented the first women's main event in premium television
history when Claressa fought against Szilvia Szabados on ShoBox.
This event, October 5, we will support with a raft of digital
content, short-form content to introduce and to advance the
fighters that are going to be featured in the live event. That
has become a signature for our network. A series being prepared
right now is called THE RISE. It's three parts and it is on
various champions and fighters coming up. This one will be about
Claressa Shields and her rise to the level that she's at today
and what the future holds.
RING RESUME is a detailed analysis and highlights of Shields'
biggest bouts to date; and another very in-depth and intimate
feature called THE APPROACH, an in-depth look at the mindset of
the fighters. These are found on YouTube and across all SHOWTIME
Boxing social platforms. It's something we're really proud of
and we think advances the appreciation and the fandom of these
fighters to the casual and hardcore boxing fans.
We're proud. We're honored to be in business with Claressa
Shields. As you said, Dmitry, this is her seventh appearance on
SHOWTIME, each a seemingly more important bout. This is another
potential history-making event, but she's fighting a very tough
competitor, someone who's looking to make a statement here on
SHOWTIME.
So we're looking forward to a terrific contest and a great main
event along with some terrific co-feature bouts. Jaron Ennis and
Jermaine Franklin are going to try to showcase themselves and
make important statements on the network also in tough
competition.
So with that, I'll turn it back over to you. I appreciate the
time and the opportunity to be part of it. Thank you.
D. Salita
Thank you, Chris. Claressa has a star team inside and outside
the right. She is managed by one of the best in the boxing
business, Mr. Mark Taffet who I'd like to invite to make a few
comments.
Mark Taffet
Thanks, Dmitry, and thanks, Chris, for joining us today. We
started a few years ago with Claressa Shields and it's on her
broad shoulders that women's boxing is receiving the
recognition, the accolades and the growth that it's experienced
over the past few years.
Every time Claressa fights, we look to make history, and October
5 will be perhaps the greatest night of her professional career
to date as she attempts to win the title in her third weight
division faster than any man or woman in the history of sports.
And the incredible thing is that in Claressa's case, she's doing
it upside down. She's going down in weight from 168 to 160 and
now to 154. It's going to be a very, very special night. It's a
very, very special and memorable for women's boxing.
We're thrilled that the big events are happening and Claressa
loves the role that she plays in the continued ascension of the
sport and to all of her goals going forward. Thanks for joining
us and I'll turn it back to Dmitry.
D. Salita
Thank you, Mark. Now, I'd like to introduce Ivana Habazin who is
not really known in the United States, but in the official press
conference announced the fight she came here and she has made a
great appearance and was very confident. She's definitely
putting that confidence into her work.
She's 20 and 3. She's the former Welterweight World Champion.
She's from Zagreb, Croatia, but she's been in camp in Colombia
and now in Detroit. She's gotten the best possible training
expert for this fight and she has boxed with the world champions
and fighters who are the best in their regions.
So I'd like to invite Ivana to talk about her preparations and
what we can expect from her. Ivana?
Ivana Habazin
Hello, everyone. Thank you for having me. So my training camp
this time was really long, like four months. I'm always in
training, always ready and prepared, but this training camp was
the hardest ever. I feel great, I feel in shape, I'm healthy.
Sparring was good.
I have Raquel Miller in the camp. I have Chris Namus and Tnaja
Ovsenik, and I will have Kali Reis next week too, plus I have
two teammates from Colombia, one was like five times Colombia
national champion. So they really pushed me and that was really,
really hard.
I've never sparred hard before like this and I feel ready. I'm
really confident and I'm coming to win. This preparation makes
me much more confident that October 5 is going to be my night.
Q
How does Claressa compare to Cecilia Braekhus?
I. Habazin
I actually can't compare Claressa and Cecilia because they are
totally different fighters and I'm a totally different fighter.
And I think that Claressa is definitely a tougher fighter than
Cecilia and so physically she's stronger than Cecilia. So she's
more aggressive and I think this fight is going to be tough. But
like I said, I was never prepared like I am prepared now.
So I think maybe this fight for me - I will not tell you it's
going to be easier than the fight with Cecilia, but today I am a
more complete boxer than I was before. And I have James Ali
Bashir as my coach and we all know that he is definitely the
best coach and I learned some new stuff and I'm ready to show
that.
Q
How do you expect the weight drop for Claressa to affect her?
I. Habazin
This is really hard to say for me because I never in my life
lost so much weight. So that depends on the fighter, how she's
going to prepare or what she eats. She has nutrition and all
this stuff. But I really hope that it's not going to be so
effective on her, but maybe it will be because that was a lot of
weight to lose. So we're going to see. I don't think about that
because she's young, she's hungry. She likes to fight and she
likes to win, which is the most important. She has the mind of a
champion. So I think even though she needs to lose the weight,
I'm not going to be a problem for her.
Q
What are your thoughts on fighting Claressa in her hometown?
If the fight is close and it goes to the scorecards, what are
your thoughts on that?
I. Habazin
I really don't think about that the fight is in Flint. It's not
something important for me, where the fight is. For me, the only
important thing is to win, and she's the biggest name right now
in women's boxing and I want to beat her, that's all, because I
have 10 years in boxing and it wasn't easy. My world was really
tough and right now maybe it's the last opportunity to do
something big and I take it seriously and I'm 100% ready. So I'm
not a person who's going to let other stuff affect me. I have my
goals and that's all.
Q
What's the difference between the fighter that you are now
and the fighter that you were when you fought Cecilia Braekhus?
I. Habazin
Actually, it would be stupid to say what I changed because then
I will say what's my plan, you know, so I will say you're going
to see that. I worked on totally different stuff with my coach
and we're going to show that.
Q
Where does the confidence come from in saying that you're
going to knock Claressa out when she has never even been beaten
before?
I. Habazin
I think I can punch, you know, and the difference before was in
some parts, I wasn't finishing people. That was my problem.
Right now it's a different story and like I said, I made the
best preparation ever. Never, ever before in my life did I do a
preparation like this and I feel strong. I really feel strong
and I think I have power to knock people out.
So for this fight, this is my goal. I don't believe in the
scorecards. So when you knock somebody out and especially in
that big of a fight, that's the only way how you can win. And I
was really prepared for that all the time.
Q
What was your first reaction when you heard that the fight was
going to be delayed for a couple of months?
I. Habazin
My first reaction was, 'damn, I will not see my dogs for two
more months.' That's boxing. Everything is possible. Maybe in
some way, I maybe expect something like that, but you never know
- everything is possible. Everybody can injure and all this
stuff. So I prepared myself to stay in the camp, training more.
Maybe with this, actually, she helped me because I feel I'm much
better right now.
Q
When you go through a loss, what are some of the things you
learned from it, and how does that strengthen you mentally
having a loss on your record?
I. Habazin
Yes, that's actually a good question. When I lost the first
time, I didn't think that I lost that fight, but it's okay. And
that was the most painful stuff ever in boxing for me because I
give always a lot in boxing and when I suffered this first loss,
it was like, 'oh, my god, everything is done.'
But at that time, I was young still and I was only like three
years in boxing but when I came back to train after this, I was
ashamed. I came in the gym and everybody was watching me and
said, 'Oh, you lose' and all this stuff. Nobody was supportive.
So every day, almost for one month, every day I am telling
myself, 'You will come back. You will come back. You will come
back.'
Even if I didn't know when I will come back, if I even have a
chance or no, but I trained more than ever. And that was
actually the first time when I figured out what is professional
boxing, because before that I didn't realize all this stuff and
I was focused more on my university.
And after that, I changed everything and then like a year after,
I got the chance to fight for the IBF title in Belgium and I
said, 'okay, I'm going to Belgium,' and that was the hometown of
Sabrina Giuliani. So, I came. I won.
After, the fight with Cecilia actually came too early because we
didn't have a chance to make a defense. My sponsor wasn't
supportive for me, so I have two options, to fight with Cecilia
for a unification fight -- it was the first unification fight in
the history -- or I can leave the title because I didn't have
logistics for defending my title.
So when I accept that fight, in some way, I knew that I can't
beat her because I didn't have experience. And like one and a
half months before the fight, I had one surgery too, so actually
I wasn't in my best shape and I wasn't good. So maybe that fight
I didn't take very painful like the fight against Eva Bajic when
she beat me.
And the fight against Mikaela Lauren, it was like two years
after Cecilia. That was my first offer for the fight after three
years and this actually was very, very tough for me because I
was without fights. I was without money. I was in the gym
actually in the underground when there was like one room without
windows and I got the offer and I said, 'Okay, I want to fight.'
But all preparation, I was so, so bad.
When we made pad work, I couldn't be one minute on the pad
because I would get tired. My heart would start beating so fast
and I was thinking, 'okay, maybe it's because I start training
too much too early.' But actually, it was that I was so, so
sick. And when I came to the fight, I knew before I needed to
step in the ring, I had a feeling that it wasn't going to be
good because I knew it - I don't have power. My body didn't have
power, nothing, and I just said, 'Okay, god, please save me, I
want to be healthy when this fight is finished.'
But after that, I took a break from boxing for like six months
and I said I will never box again. So after six months, I wake
up one night and it was like 2 a.m. and I go back, I don't know
why, I hear some voice that told me, 'Go and see the BoxRec.'
And I go to BoxRec and I saw Eva Bajic and I said, 'Who is Eva
Bajic? I never fought with her.' And then I go and I saw that
Eva came back after two years or two and a half.
And I said, 'okay, you need to go back in the gym. You need to
come back.' And when I come back in the gym, I start training
and the old symptoms - what I had in preparation for Mikaela
Lauren - started again. It was very bad because I had like some
cardiac - you know, my heart starts beating so fast. I was
sweating all the time and I didn't have power.
When I met medical, they said, 'You have a thyroid problem and
if you want to box again, you need to go in surgery
immediately.' I didn't think about that, I said, 'okay, let's
go,' because I want to come back. And in 2017, I made two easy
fights then came the offer for the IBO title. I said I want to
fight. Even in that fight, I wasn't 100% healthy because it was
like one, one and half year to get healthy, but I made it.
And now, I can say that right now I am really, really 100%
healthy. I am prepared and I am motivated more than ever because
when I come back, I said I need to be not 100%, but I need to be
500% and I want to change something. I want to change my life.
So right now, I think this is the right chance.
Q
You mentioned this was maybe your last big chance. Many
people will say that a fighter with nothing to lose is the most
dangerous opponent and perhaps we saw that with Otto Wallin. Do
you feel you're in this position that makes you dangerous?
I. Habazin
Yes, definitely, and I said that before the fight. I don't have
nothing to lose right now. I only can change everything and if
not now, then when? So I'm ready, I'm 100% ready. I'm really
focused on that. Four months I was training only for that fight,
so we're going to see what's going to happen.
Like I said, this is boxing. One punch can change everything.
You can be good all fight, but you can finish on the floor in
the last second. So everything is possible. Claressa is a great
fighter, but I believe in myself and that's it.
D. Salita
Thank you. This is also a time when we have two superstar
trainers in both of the fighter's corners. I think it's the
first time in women's boxing with Ali Bashir training Ivana
Habazin and John David Jackson training Claressa Shields. So
that's going to be a very interesting test of stars as well.
Ivana, would you like to finish up with any closing statements?
I. Habazin
Yes, I just want to say thank you for this opportunity. I'm
really happy because of that and at the end, actually, I really
want for people to enjoy a good fight. So the better [fighter]
is going to win and that's all. I hope that's going to be me.
But I wish good luck to Claressa.
D. Salita
Thank you, Ivana. Now, I'd like to introduce Claressa Shields.
Claressa, in her last fight headlined the biggest fight in
women's boxing history and put on a tremendous performance.
She really could have fought anywhere she wanted. We had offers
from some big venues in Las Vegas, New York, Atlantic City,
elsewhere throughout the country, but Claressa made her point to
come back to Flint to give this fight back to the fans and the
community she grew up in.
I want to list some of her accomplishments even though I know
that most of you know them. She is 9-0 with 2 KOs since turning
pro three years ago and will represent her town of Flint,
Michigan on October 5.
She's the first American boxer male or female in the history of
the sport to win two Olympic gold medals. She became the sixth
fighter in history, male or female, to unify all four major
world titles in one weight class. She defeated Christina Hammer
in the previous fight in April to earn that honor.
Claressa Shields has accomplished a lot in her life in boxing
and as a humanitarian, as a role model, but she will be
achieving her first on October 5 because it will be the first
time that she's going to be fighting as a professional in her
hometown in Flint, Michigan. So Claressa, talk about your
training camp, getting down in weight and how you're preparing
for this fight?
Claressa Shields
Yes, yes. Well, weight is not a conversation that I want to
have. I don't have a problem with my weight. If I did, I
wouldn't want to go down to 154 and accept this challenge. So
weight is not a problem.
This camp and every camp, we just want to be a better version of
myself. So, me and Coach John David Jackson said with the Hammer
fight, we just want to fix a lot of mistakes. Now I know people
on here are like, "How many mistakes did you make during the
Hammer fight?" A lot, even though it was a unanimous decision, I
beat her almost every round, it was still that me and my team
having the mentality that we want to fix everything going into
the fight with Ivana.
She has faster hands than Hammer. She's coming from a lower
weight class. She's more comfortable with 154 and of course I'm
losing weight. We want to get a knock out.
So the combinations are good. The jab was good against Hammer.
We've just been working a lot of punches, making sure that we're
throwing our straights over, making sure that we'll be pacing
with our straight and make sure that we just have more
precisions for this camp.
So it's one hard camp. My body is kind of torn apart right now
two weeks from the fight, but one more hard week of training and
then the last week I get to wind down. So right now I feel
really great.
Q
You've obviously shown a tremendous chin during your career
and she said she's going to knock you out, I just wonder what
you think of that?
C. Shields
She's going to say a whole lot. I think she called me fat. Many
girls in boxing say they can knock me out and I do have a
healthy chin and I like to go in and test every girl's chin and
everything like that.
So I respect that she's coming with that kind of attitude, but,
no, it's not even possible to knock me out. I may have been
dropped by Hanna Gabriels, but that was a shot with me off
balance. It wasn't something that hit my chin then I went down
and I was woozy or like that. I've never been stung by a woman
nor man. So Ivana is just talking.
Q
Did you happen to see her fight with Cecilia Braekhus?
C. Shields
There was a whole bunch of bouncing around. They both were off
balance throwing their shot.
Ivana likes to put her head down and just throw punches.
Whenever she feels like she's in danger, she just goes in to a
straight bull mode and puts her head down and start pulling in.
So you have to use a really good jab against her.
I kind of feel like towards the end of the round, Ivana kind of
tries to stay in and do a whole lot of holding, and dancing and
pulling itself like that. But early on she tried to stand her
ground and used her combinations, but it's nothing that I
haven't seen before. I know for a fact I'm a lot stronger than
Cecilia Braekhus so Ivana is going to have a lot of problem on
her hands come October 5.
Q
How satisfying would it be to get this knockout in your
hometown and have another history-making performance for you?
C. Shields
I just kind of feel like it's not so much about the knockout,
it's about improvement to me. A knockout is great, but at the
same time, I want to go in there and I want to look phenomenal.
I want to be sharp. I want to work on everything that I worked
on in camp and be able to execute it in the fight.
So I'm not going out there looking for the knockout, but I know
that it's going to come just because of how training has been
going. I've been hurting my sparring partners with body shots
and head shots. I'm doing this coming down in weight and my body
is sore too.
It's sore too, I'm breaking my body down and it's getting
stronger as I break you down, and I can feel going there and
boxing in the eighth round and be strong and safe, and be able
to do everything that I want to do and let my combinations go
and let my hard body shots, the hard head shots still be
explosive towards the end of the round.
So just knowing that, I feel like the knockout is going to come.
But I'm not going to go out there trying to rush it, I just want
it come. So I want to go out there and do everything that I've
been working on in camp, and I believe everything is going to
come together.
Q
Based on what you said earlier in the call, Claressa, were
you happy with your performance against Christina Hammer?
C. Shields
I'm my biggest critic. That fight I was happy I became
undisputed champion. But when I went back and watched the fight,
to me, I made so many mistakes. I was like, "Oh, cut it off,"
like I'm just like, "I'm over it," you know what I mean? Like, I
did really well, but I was just like, "Why didn't you get the
knock-out? Why were you not sending out all your shots when you
should have sent out all your shots?" and just stuff like that.
For me, it's just I've always been super hard on myself. So I
give myself maybe a B minus for that fight, but I want to get an
A. I want to do everything right in a fight and even get a
knockout, or have it so I was just destroying her in every
round, destroying her, destroying her and I'll take her
confidence away from her and I'll hurt her.
I made some mistakes and she caught me with not even a whole lot
of shots, but just the fact that she caught me with a shot that
I shouldn't have gotten hit with. It feels like that. But that
is just me, my biggest critic, and me wanting to get better.
So everybody else tells you like "That was the best fight that
we've ever seen and your defense is on point." But I've known
how to do all that stuff. I've known that I had defense. I've
known that I could jab. I know what I could do. I just want to
do it the best way that I know I can.
I watched it 40, 50 times. But each time I watch it, I'm seeing
a different mistake and it wasn't something huge, but it's still
just like, "This shouldn't happen because we worked on it at
camp." It wasn't a whole bunch, but it was just like just stuff
that I see that maybe you guys don't see.
Q
Do you feel that maybe if they change the rounds from two
minutes to three minutes, you would have about three or four
knockouts?
C. Shields
Yes, absolutely. Also the refs are super hard on me and It feels
like they will not call the fight when I'm hurting these girls.
I can roll back and look at the fight where I fought against
Sydney LeBlanc. I put her through eight rounds of hell and they
just let her take that and maybe destroyed her as a fighter. She
doesn't want to fight since I beat her. And she came into the
fight - me and her, she came down from light heavyweight to
fight at 168 and I mean, I destroyed her from the first bell of
the first round to the last bell of the eighth.
She never even landed more than 10 punches on me the whole fight
and they didn't even call it. So it's like with three minutes, I
will have a lot more time to break the girls down and be able to
get them out there because I've hurt every girl that I fought.
So as soon as those two minutes ring and it's the end of the
round, and they get that one minute rest, they come back in
recuperated and ready to go in the next round. So you have to
kind of start all over again.
But would it be in two minutes, I just got to I guess pick up
the pace until they actually see that women boxing needs to be
the same as the men, or at least give us three minutes a round
so we can have the same amount of work time.
Q
Would that be a goal of yours to possibly push to
three-minute rounds for one of your future fights?
C. Shields
Yes, absolutely. Me and my team have been going over, we're just
trying to figure out what's the best way to go to the
organizations about it. We don't know if we want to go over and
tell them, "Hey, maybe we could start off with 10 three-minute
rounds, or maybe we can start off with 12 two-minute rounds."
We're just still going to try to figure it out and try to go
with the best way to where it's safe for the other world
champions and also see what they agree with. I'm going to have a
talk with all the girls who are world champions to kind of like
have a vote on what they want to do because this is not just
about me, I want it to about the other women too what they're
comfortable with.
I think the thing to understand is that women will always get
paid less than the men unless we fight the same amount of time.
So with that, one of the change that got to be made is either 12
two-minute rounds or 10 three-minute rounds.
I think that one of those has to change within this year to get
us on the road to equal pay and equal opportunity as far as
getting the big knockouts that we can get.
Q
Have you thought someone that you thought might be using
PED's when you fought them as a pro?
C. Shields
Yes, I'm not going to do that. Honestly, I don't know. I wanted
a VADA testing for Hammer. For some reason, we didn't have it
for that fight. But I wanted VADA testing for that fight, but we
didn't get it.
I'm happy that there's VADA testing for this fight. But I think
every world champion should be doing VADA testing especially
after Mia St. John came out talking about she was on PEDs her
whole career and all this craziness. I think that every world
champion, male and female, should be open to do VADA testing
because it's just safer for the boxers and I think that they
should be clean.
I've always been a clean athlete and I'm not going to say who I
think do PEDs, I really don't know. I hate to have to feel it's
been out there because I don't know. People think "I just need
this," but I'm just strong because I work my ass off.
Q
What do you think you need to accomplish in order to be
deemed the best female boxer of all time?
C. Shields
I think I've already accomplished everything to be the best
female boxer of all time. But I think that some of the fans or
media people may feel like you have to have 25 and 30 fights to
be compared to Laila Ali. So I'm just taking my time, I'm
racking up the belts and racking up the divisions and making
history.
I'll always be the world's best and nobody is ever going to make
me feel different about that unless somebody comes and beat me,
and that's not going to happen. So I'm going to keep breaking
records and doing what no other woman has done.
If I feel great on 154, maybe we'll stay on 154 and try to
become undisputed there. Then if not, maybe I'll just be looking
to that160. I'm always going to go where the best fighter is and
the toughest fighters are at, and try to make the most money.
Q
Do you think the nine fights that you've had is a better
resume than o all the other female boxers in the sport?
C. Shields
Definitely, and that's talking about the female of boxers, but
the male boxers too. Male boxers have people their record is
literally padded up so that you are about 20-0, right? 20 or
15-0 and they got padded records against easy opponents.
I haven't fought against a person who's had a losing record ever
in my pro career, I think someone did the math and it was like
125 wins and seven losses all my opponents together so they'd be
able to say that is a nice fight. Well, other boxers, male or
female, say fought fighters like that. I haven't fought against
a fighter who has a losing record yet.
Q
Would you like to fight a male fighter in the future if you
have opportunities?
C. Shields
I feel like right now I'm just going to fight in women's boxing
right now, trying to get an equal pay. I don't feel like I
should have to fight a man in order for us to be taken as
serious athletes.
I've gotten in the ring with plenty of men. I fought 16 rounds
this week with men, four different sparring partners. I can get
in there with guys and I'm going to hold my own, and I know when
it comes down to handling my business, I've never been knocked
out by someone, or dropped, or anything like that.
So I don't think there's a difference between women and male
fighters. That feels like it's all about preparation. If you
feel like if you have to get ready to fight again, if I have to
be ready to fight against the male, I would change my whole
training. I think I'm training hard until now.
But to get ready for a man, I would definitely upgrade and I
think I have a great team who makes sure that I'm at my
strongest, that I'm explosive, that my legs are strong and my
muscles are strong. I feel like men have better body endurance
than women and I say that because they've been fighting so long
for so many more rounds in men than women just throughout my
whole career.
Like even in amateurs, we've got four two-minute rounds; and the
men, they have three three-minute rounds. And now in a pro, I've
only fought 10 two-minute rounds; and men who are world
champions have fought 12 three-minute rounds, so I don't know
how long. So when you have that, they just have a better body
endurance than I think women do. But I think it's all about the
preparation.
Q
What does fighting in front of your home town friends mean to
you especially with all that you've accomplished? And did you
think that you would get this homecoming fight sooner in your
career or later in your career?
C. Shields
No, I feel like that the fight came at the right time. I wanted
to be super accomplished when I went back home to Flint and
that's just because I want the kids to see that like I'm from
Flint, Michigan and I have accomplished all this. I'm not
waiting for the end of my career to come back to Flint, I'm
coming back and I'm going back to Flint in the peak of my
career.
I'm going back while I'm the world champion, while I'm the
undisputed champion, while I'm breaking records. I'm bringing
the fight back to Flint and I feel like me becoming a three-
time division world champion, the best time to do so is now. I
feel like that was the perfect fight to bring back to Flint
while we have all these other fights that are going on. I just
feel like right now is the right time to just inspire the city
and inspire the kids.
Q
In this fight being your first fight at 154 pounds or really
your first world title fight at that weight class, is this sort
of the start of a journey to maybe try to do the same thing as
you did at 160 and unified the entire division, or is this sort
of a one-time deal at 154 and then move back up to middleweight?
C. Shields
I don't really know yet. I feel like it really depends on how I
feel doing the fight. I feel great right now. I've been doing
great in camp. I've been eating healthy and dropping the weight
the way that I'm supposed to. I'm dehydrated.
So it's all about going into the fight, actually catching 154,
getting on the scale and getting in the ring. So what I'm going
to do there is going to fight.
.
Q
How does that impact your performance in the sport also
having another really big visible job as a role model?
C. Shields
I'm only 24 years old and I think that women's boxing has been
quiet long enough. I feel like we haven't got our due just
because we haven't spoken up enough about it.
I feel like there are women who did speak about it, but they've
spoken about it in the wrong way like they just came up at
people the wrong way and it's more of like a "I've got the
skills to pay the bill. I've got the power to knock people
over." And I'm not just talking to impress like I would go in
there and try to do it. I'll really just try to go in there and
do whatever I say, and I feel like I've been putting on
performances that even men aren't putting on.
So I don't really feel the need to have to be quiet and has to
be whatever they call lady-like. Like I'm a lady and I spoke a
lady, and I'm going to do what I want to do and that makes me
feel good at night. The day that you can hear me not talking,
something is wrong. So I'm going to do what I want to do.
As far as me being a role model, I feel like I'm a great role
model like you don't see me in the newspaper talking about like
killing nobody or going to jail. I hadn't been arrested. You
don't see me drinking so I feel like I'm a great role model and
I just want to tell everybody to be who they are, and don't try
to pretend to be somebody you're not for social media or for
cameras.
You'll never have to keep lying about who you're not. So it's
about me being comfortable with myself and just being who I am
and doing what I'm most comfortable doing. And I feel like I'm
being a great role model if I'm doing that because a lot of
girls look up to me and they say, "You being so confident makes
me confident," so why would I stop being confident.