Kelly Pavlik media day notes
For
Immediate Release
Kelly
Pavlik was 9 years old, just a pup, when he
walked into the Southside Boxing Club in Youngstown
for the very first time.
The first person he met was
Harry Arroyo, former world champion from Youngstown.
Coming over to greet Kelly was trainer Jack
Loew.
"Who do we have here?"
asked Jack, looking down at Kelly.
"I want to be a fighter,"
Kelly said.
+++++
At the gym, there is a large,
framed photograph of Youngstown amateur fighters.
Team Youngstown included tough-looking teenagers
dressed in their bright red robes, trimmed in
white piping. In the first row, kneeling and
squeezed in, is young Kelly. He is the only
one not wearing a robe.
"He just started training
and we were sending in our team to fight in
West Virginia," said Loew. "Kelly
hadn't earned his robe yet. He was 10 years
old, our youngest, and he was going into his
first fight."
Kelly was matched against
an amateur who had 24 fights.
"A lot of people told
me Kelly had no chance that night," Loew
said. "But Kelly destroyed him and won
by knockout. I was thinking, while watching
that fight, we had someone special...."
++++++
Kelly grew up 8 blocks from
Ray Mancini, about two miles from Harry Arroyo.
"Amazing, isn't it,
three world champions living so close together,"
said Mike Pavlik, Kelly's father.
++++++
"When I was 17, the
power all of a sudden just came to me,"
said Kelly.
++++++
Kelly, after an 89-8 amateur
career, was courted by boxing promoters. One
suggested that he relocate to Houston, work
with a new trainer, maybe add weight and grow
into the heavyweight division.
"That just didn't sound
right," said Mike, at breakfast before
Kelly's Media Day at the Southside Boxing Club.
"Then we got the call from Jay Edson."
The late, great Jay Edson
was Top Rank's site coordinator for over 20
years. He was extremely popular with many fighters.
After each event, Jay would write thank you
letters to the fighters.
"Just give us five minutes
on the phone," Jay asked Mike Pavlik. "That's
all we are asking. Cameron Dunkin wants to talk
to you."
Dunkin, who has brought many
top fighters to Top Rank, got his five minutes.
"Cameron called me at
home and he just made the most sense,"
Mike said. "He said it would be a long
process, a journey, but that it was the right
way to get Kelly to where he wanted to go as
a professional fighter. That's how we signed
with Top Rank, because of Jay Edson who asked
for five minutes of our time."
+++++++++
At the Southside gym, there
are photographs of Kelly in action in earlier
professional fights. In a clutter of framed
pictures there is a historic photo, shot by
ringside photographer Ed Mulholland, of Kelly
and Jermain Taylor in their title fight. In
the picture, the fight is over and Kelly is
sprinting back towards a corner, arms at his
sides, screaming with joy. Taylor is down and
out, crumpled against a cornerpad.
There is another photograph
of that fight. After the fight was over, the
two were standing in the ring and Kelly's right
hand was touching Taylor's cheek area.
"That's the compassionate
side of Kelly," Loew. "The war was
over and he was making sure Taylor was OK."
++++++++++
Rob Todor, sports editor
of the Youngstown Vindicator, gives full-blast
newspaper coverage of Kelly. There is a Kelly
Trivia question every day.
"What did Kelly leave
behind in Atlantic City?" was the question
the other day.
Mike Pavlik read that and
flinched.
"On Sunday, the day
after the Taylor fight, Kelly and I were in
a car driving back to Youngstown," said
Mike. "Then it hit me like a thunderbolt.
I forgot our check. Left it by the coffee pot.
I turned to Kelly and said 'son, there is something
I have to tell you...' "
Kelly laughed and said "don't
worry, Dad. You can work it out."
"I was surpised how
calm he was," said Mike. "But we did
work it out. Top Rank rewrote the check and
sent it to us."
=====
During the Media Day workout,
Loew took a baseball bat and held it out to
a member of the press.
"Try to swing it,"
he said.
The bat was too heavy to
swing. It was leaded and hard to handle.
"Now watch this,"
Loew said.
Loew handed the baseball
bat to Kelly.
"This is dangerous -
do not try this at home," said Loew as
he got behind a large, black heavy bag and used
both hands to steady it.
Like a ballplayer going to
the plate, Kelly -- wearing a black teeshirt
which read 'Defend Youngstown' across the front
-- picked up the leaded bat, took a couple of
practice swings and then he stepped towards
the heavy bag and cut it loose. Ten times he
swung and crashed the bat against the heavy
bag. Ten times right side, 10 times left side,
a pause, and he did it again. Sweat poured down
his face.
=====
"The hunger to win is
still with me - bigger than ever," said
Pavlik, toweling off.
=====
"The day we came back
from Atlantic City there was literally - and
I am not kidding about this - a line of people
at our front door," said Mike. "They
had arm-loads of pictures, posters and hats.
Everyone wanted Kelly's autograph."
=====
Pavlik vs. Taylor '...the
Epic Battle Continues' is at the MGM Grand Garden
Arena on Feb 16 and is promoted by Top Rank
and DiBella Entertainment. Pavlik vs. Taylor
will be available on HBO Pay Per View.