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There’s nothing quite like an
insider’s perspective.
When taking a look at the life of
aspiring Las Vegas amateur boxer Ryan ‘The Rhino’ Bates, you will sense a man
who has much more to him that meets the eye. Not only is Bates a fighter with
championship dreams, he is also a correspondent for 411Mania.com and has spent
some time in the past working for the biggest promotional company in the
industry, Top Rank.
During his time within the company,
Bats worked directly under Top Rank’s head public relations man, Lee Samuels.
From helping organize huge events at the MGM Grand to assisting Top Rank’s
stable of fighters with their endless requests, Bates got to know a completely
different side of the sport on a first hand basis.
One thing Bates got to notice right
off the bat was just how well each of Top Rank’s fighters were handled. While
champions such as Miguel Cotto, Kelly Pavlik, and Juan Manuel Lopez were treated
with obvious importance, Bates will concede that nobody had the impact that
Filipino sensation Manny Pacquiao had within the company.
“Pacquiao was that office at times,”
Bates pointed out recently. “If he had a fight coming up and you had three
different projects on your desk and Manny Pacquiao wanted something, you made
sure to do whatever Manny wanted first. Quite frankly at times I was alright
with it because he became the pound for pound champion and when you reach that
level I think you kind of deserve it.”
One thing about Pacquiao that has
been well documented is that he always comes with a large entourage. While it’s
great in the sense that Pacquiao has great appreciation for those important to
him it could also become quite the choir handling all of the requests that came
with Manny’s large group.
“There were times when it was
frustrating because he would often have a lot of demands,” Bates concedes.
“Sometimes instead of having a certain amount of people on his list he would add
seventeen or more people. You had to just find a way to make it happen and it
could be challenging. When his fights were coming up that office revolved around
him.”
While it may have been a challenge,
Bates admits that it was never too much of a pain catering to Pacquiao and his
team. If anything, Bates was able to get an up close look into how much trust
Pacquiao had in those around him and exactly how his team made things work.
“Manny is a very genuine guy too,”
Bates points out. “He always rolls deep, which was annoying at first, but that’s
because you realize everyone who is around him is somebody he knows very well
and is very concerned about. He’s very genuine and you notice that he likes to
joke around a lot. I remember back on the De La Hoya-Pacquiao tour, this stop
was in Texas, somebody from Manny’s team pulled out a squirt gun and started
shooting people. That’s just how his people are sometimes. Manny loves to have
fun and he was very polite the few times I talked to him.”
For as much as he may like to joke
outside of the ring, Pacquiao has been all business when inside of the ropes.
Lately his victories over Oscar De La Hoya and Ricky Hatton have put him at a
whole new level in the sport, one that very few fighters ever attain. Reflecting
on those victories, Bates remembers just how much a Pacquiao victory impacted
his life at work the following week.
“When he won the next day was the
greatest day on earth,” Bates says smiling. “There were only fifteen or so
people in the core office, and we all walked in like ‘yeah, we did it’, as if we
were part of that victory too. The Pacquiao fights were the greatest. The Monday
after the De La Hoya fight had to be the greatest and we were just riding a
high.”
The man responsible for a huge part
of Pacquiao’s success is Bob Arum, who runs Top Rank. While Arum is regarded by
some as a shrewd businessman who will do anything to make a buck, Bates will be
the first to admit that he saw a different side of the promoter when it came to
Pacquiao.
“People are very skeptical of Bob’s
appreciation of his fighters,” Bates acknowledges. “I don’t blame them because
promoters aren’t highly trustable people, but I will say from what I have seen
of Bob and Manny interacting and Bob speaking, that his love is genuine. Aside
from all of the money that Pacquiao made for the company I feel that Bob really
did care about Manny and his well being.”
The sport of boxing requires a lot
of hard work and often a lot of traveling for world class fighters when they
reach an elite level in the sport. Pacquiao is no different and Bates can only
recall a few occasions when he crossed paths with the multi-division champion.
Still, those rare times when he did interact with Manny, he was left with quite
an impression.
“I remember one time that we
specifically had to get one autograph from him for one of the sponsors,” Bates
recalls. “We had Pacquiao sign a few autographs and Pacquiao didn’t know me from
Adam and he was just the nicest guy. I could have told him I need you to sign
this blank check and he might have even done that. There is something about him
that makes him so laid back and I think that’s a great quality in him.”
While most of Bates’ duties required
that he held down the Top Rank offices in Las Vegas, he still found himself
traveling his share, as he was often on the road in conjunction with media tours
for scheduled fights. One such pit stop in California captured Bates’
imagination in a way he never expected.
“I always loved going to press
conferences on the West Coast,” Bates claims. “I remember distinctly going to
the Los Angeles press conference for De La Hoya-Pacquiao and being in the middle
of Wilshire Boulevard, right in the heart of Los Angeles. It was firmly De La
Hoya territory and there was just a mass of people who came out. That street was
packed from our stage back to the intersection and there were even people on
rooftops. It was crazy and the Filipinos came out strong to support their boy
too. Every time people started chanting ‘Oscar’ it would be followed up by
people chanting ‘Manny’. I talked to a couple different fans and no matter who
they were rooting for they just were looking forward to a good fight.”
While that atmosphere may have been
dynamic, there was nothing quite like the frenzy of an actual Pacquiao fight, at
least according to Bates. Having fought in Las Vegas for eight of his last
eleven contests, Sin City is like a second home to Pacquiao and Bates recalls
first hand just how crazy the town gets during fight week.
“Before any big fight, but
especially before a Pacquiao fight the city is just crazy,” Bates points out.
“If you walked outside you couldn’t look too far without seeing people who were
talking about the bout. For Pacquiao-Hatton that was madness. I think the entire
nation of the United Kingdom was over there. I don’t know what the Queen was
doing; she must have been sitting on her throne wondering where everyone was.
There were also plenty of Filipinos down there. All of the British pubs were
packed and it was just crazy.”
The Pacquiao-Hatton fight was
certainly electric and Bates himself can’t recall any event that had the
magnitude of the two stars linking up. Despite the fight being completely
one-sided the atmosphere first hand was definitely worth remembering.
“I remember walking towards the
arena for that fight,” Bates recalls. “The instant you got inside the MGM you
could hear ‘There’s only one Ricky Hatton’ and down the line you could hear
people cheering for Manny. Usually when you get into a big event and it’s a dark
undercard there is only 10 percent of the people there. Already that place was
starting to fill up and it was a madhouse. The roar of the crowd was so loud
that you almost couldn’t hear Michael Buffer. It was the wildest fight.”
No matter how wild the occasion, one
man in Pacquiao’s corner who seems to take everything with stride is his trainer
Freddie Roach. As the chief trainer in Manny’s corner Roach has guided his
charge with great care and understanding. Throughout it all, Bates has his
reasoning for believing why Roach is so unfazed.
“This is old hat for Freddie Roach,”
Bates says without hesitation. “He’s had so many great fighters that it’s just
second nature for him. I remember during the Pacquiao-Hatton red carpet press
conference I had to assist Freddie Roach for the day. I basically followed him
around and made sure everything was alright as far as him getting to all of his
interviews. He was so down to earth and it was just another day at the office
for him. He’s just gotten so used to working with Manny that he rolls with
anything.”
In talking to Bates you get a true
sense of the effect Pacquiao has had within Top Rank but it’s obvious that his
star power has covered a much wider platform. While this may be a ride that many
people didn’t see coming, Pacquiao has found a way to impact the boxing world as
well as his own country. According to Bates, Pacquiao is still learning to
adjust to his superstar status and in an odd way perhaps that’s what makes him
so endearing to many, simply because he’s remained the same person throughout
his journey in the sport.
“He’s put the Philippines on the
map. He is the Philippines at times. Now because of him we are discovering so
much new talent in the Philippines. Nonito Donaire, Z Gorres, and Bernabe
Conception have all made a name for themselves by following in Pacquiao’s
footsteps. We wouldn’t have heard of them it wasn’t for Manny Pacquiao. I still
think he’s starting to adjust to his celebrity status. Just a year ago it was
kind of new to him but he’s still coming into his own in many ways.”
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==For Fight Recaps between January and May 2009, click here...
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Fight Recaps Part
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11-11-2009
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