Mobile header

Bam Rodriguez’s Surreal Rise To The Top

Corey Erdman - DAZN

Photo: Melina Pizano – ‘Scene’: Bam Rodriguez.

When Bam Rodriguez was about twelve years old, he was watching Juan Francisco Estrada face Chocolatito Gonzalez for the first time, in 2012 . . .

In 2024, seeing fighters of their size in a main event on television in the United States might still be notable, but it certainly isn’t unusual. The times that Bam grew up in, not all that long ago, were very different. In order to watch Estrada and Chocolatito face off, Bam had to subscribe to WealthTV, a niche network mainly focused on shows about opulence that decided to jump into the boxing broadcasting world for a few years. In other words, you still had to go looking for these fights, even though they involved the most skilled fighters on the planet.

As the boxing world was coming to terms with its acceptance of fighters in lighter weight classes, Bam himself was in the process of figuring out where he fit into the athletic world. In elementary school, he played running back in football alongside Ricky Medina, who would also one day become a pro fighter. As quick as Bam’s feet were and as much as he relished the physicality and contact, genetics were not going to work in his favor enough to get him to the NFL. Instead, along with his brother Joshua Franco, he gravitated to boxing, where size would always be relative, because weight classes exist.

What he found, and what his trainer Robert Garcia found, is that relative to fighters his own size, there are few men on the planet more dynamic and more destructive.

In fact, when Garcia saw Rodriguez destroy a fighter of his in the amateurs, the story goes, a lightbulb went off in his head. Not only did Rodriguez have the exact style and mindset that would gel with him as a trainer, but with his connections to Teiken Promotions in Japan for whom he once fought, he could help maneuver Rodriguez up the ladder with or without the help of the American marketplace.

Over the last two and a half years, Rodriguez has had a meteoric rise through the ranks, first stepping up two weight classes and in on short notice to take out Carlos Cuadras, one of the super flyweight division’s “Four Kings” of the era he grew up watching. Then he did the same to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai. Then in his most recent fight, landed over 60% of his power shots on Sunny Edwards, regarded as one of the sport’s top defensive specialists, and stopped him too.

The plan was finally fully executed last Saturday in rather surreal fashion. Twelve years after watching that fight on television, Bam Rodriguez knocked out Juan Francisco Estrada to become the true super flyweight champion.

In terms of “torch-passing” moments, this one couldn’t have been scripted any better than it unfolded in real life. Estrada, the long-reigning champion and surefire future Hall of Famer, might not have been the version of himself that fought Chocolatito in 2012, but it was a version of himself that would have taken out almost any other 115-pounder in the world. Leading up to the fight, Estrada spoke about how Rodriguez’s victories were perhaps overhyped, that his opposition was on the decline, something he insisted he was not.

Estrada was fighting perception, Father Time, and the possible successor on this night.

And fight, he did. Even when Rodriguez blitzed him early in the bout and dropped him in round four, Estrada was still attempting to make adjustments, trying his hand at inside fighting and later trying to find the bounce in his step to walk Rodriguez into counters.

In the fifth round, he found the shot he was looking for, the one that will in all likelihood be his last great moment inside a prize ring. Estrada stepped to the outside of Rodrigurez’s lead foot and landed a right hand that put Rodriguez on the floor for the first time in his career.

The Footprint Center which housed the fight was noticeably shaking when Rodriguez hit the mat. The crowd, a die-hard, mostly Mexican boxing audience that skewed in favor of Estrada got what they were waiting for.

The rise of emotion of everyone in the arena was palpable. In a matter of seconds, everyone’s heads filled with the same thoughts. Was Rodriguez not as good as we thought? Was Estrada just an all-time great so good that he could fend off another great even in the autumn of his career?

Those thoughts certainly didn’t enter Rodriguez’s mind as he rose to his feet. Before he even hit the canvas, there was a smile on his face, and a chuckle could be detected even amidst the raucous noise. Despite getting dropped, Rodriguez dominated the rest of the round, snatching the hope back from Estrada fans almost as quickly as he’d given it to them.

After the fight, Rodriguez told DAZN’s Chris Mannix that he’d always wanted to get knocked down to see what it felt like. It certainly sounds absurd, if not masochistic, to hear someone say they want to be hit and dropped. But just as a hockey player might dream of scoring the game-winning goal in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals, which necessitates losing three games prior, Rodriguez merely dreamt of overcoming adversity on the biggest stage.

Two rounds later, Rodriguez landed a left hand to the body that sent Estrada rolling and writhing in pain for the count of ten.

The game plan, fittingly aided by Chocolatito himself who served as a sparring partner for Bam for a few sessions, and the career plan had all come to fruition in cinematic fashion.

YOU MIGHT LIKE:

The Power of Mike Tyson

Taylor-Serrano 2: Fight Picks from 5 Experts

Wilkens Mathieu: 5 Opponents for 2025

Osleys Iglesias: 5 Opponents for the Tornado

Petro Ivanov: Nothing Ventured, Nothing Gained

Mehmet Unal and the Art of Passing Every Test

Dzmitry Asanau: The International Talent

Osleys Iglesias: the Perfect Storm?

Steve Claggett: The Dragon’s 5 Options

Alexandre Gaumont Doesn’t Want to Leave Anything to Chance

Predictions: Can Bivol defeat Beterbiev?

A Lifetime of Preparation for Artur Beterbiev

Xander Zayas: The Defender of Humanity

Canelo-Berlanga: Fight Picks from 10 Tigers

Five Potential Opponents for Imam Khataev

Who’s Next for Arthur Biyarslanov?

Amari Jones: Andre Ward’s successor in Oakland?

Wilkens Mathieu Keeps His First Promise

Naomi Mannes: “I’m ready to take that title back to Germany”

Osleys Iglesias: Who Will Want to Walk Toward the ‘Tornado’?

Which path will Christian Mbilli take?

PG International: Terence Crawford Adds More Gold to His Collection

Bruce Carrington: The Monster Hunter

PG International: Shields Proves Her Point in Detroit

Olympics Edition: The Great Guide to Paris 2024

Stepping into the Ring Against the GWOAT, Claressa Shields

Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse: The Underdog’s Perspective

PG International: Lucas Bahdi Stole the Show in Tampa

Dzmitry Asanau: A Wasp Among the Tigers

Sena Agbeko on the Road To Redemption

Lizbeth Crespo: The Best of Bolivia Against Leïla Beaudoin

Guido Vianello: ‘Makhmudov Will Be An Easy Fight’

Leïla Beaudoin: Ready to Complete a Second Quest

PG International: Cloudy Ending Between Shakur Stevenson and Top Rank

Special Edition: Pound for Pound Ranking of Cuban Boxing

PG International: Claggett Remains the Dragon in Teofimo’s Victory

Abdullah Mason

Abdullah Mason: Cleveland can finally celebrate

PG International: The Garcia/Haney’s saga is over, but for how long?

Steve Claggett

Steve Claggett: Do You Believe in Dragons?

Teofimo Lopez Promises He Won’t Overlook Claggett

Wilkens Mathieu: a bright but unpredictable future

PG International: up next for Benavidez, 68 or 75?

Makhmudov: The Lion Returns to the Jungle

Pound-for-Pound Ranking of Uncrowned Boxing’s Best

Who’s Next for Osleys Iglesias?

Butler-Volny: Crossroads on Casino Avenue

April Hunter: Who Hunts Who on June 6?

Osleys Iglesias: ‘I Will Fight Anyone That Gets in my Way’

Butler-Volny in 15 fight picks

Mbilli-Derevyanchenko: the Dream Undercard of Matt Casavant

Jhon Orobio: the Marathon Sprinter

Steven Butler: ‘He will never want it more than me’

Sergiy Derevyanchenko: the Technician arrives in Quebec City

Mbilli-Heffron: 10 Ways to See the Conquest

Simon Kean Deserves his Tribute

PG International: Oleksandr Usyk is a Living Legend

The prospect of the month, May edition: Moses Itauma

Christopher Guerrero promises to be ‘himself’ on May 25

Albert Ramirez in 4 questions : ‘hard work will pay off on May 25’

PG International: Loma’s back on top, Charlo hits rock bottom

The second chance of Adam Deines

Appreciate The Greatness of Canelo And Inoue In Real Time

Avery Martin Duval: the future antihero?

More than just a win for Thomas Chabot

Bazinyan-Phinn and the art to promote

“We Want More”: 10 Local Fights to Make

Christian Mbilli Against British Boxing

The new life of Mehmet Unal

Mark Heffron: “I Want To Beat The Best Mbilli”

Erik Bazinyan and the new Super 6

Lani Daniels would like to unify with Lepage-Joanisse

Erik Bazinyan: better than we think?

Shakeel Phinn: The Jamaican Juggernaut

Cornerman, Part V: Stéphane Joanisse’s School of Life

Two Riyadh giants square off in Shawinigan

Mark Heffron: a british knockout artist against Mbilli

The Ghost Chabot is back with a new coach

Cornerman, part IV: the rise of Jessy Ross Thompson

When third time’s the charm to become world champion

Matchmaking: the art of creating the perfect storm

Who’s next for Vany?

Super Welterweights: Life After Jermell Charlo

This time it’s true

Butler-Rolls recap: Two KOs and a Champion

Butler-Rolls: Will Lou DiBella Get His Revenge?

Abril Vidal: more than just an opponent

Predictions: the experts divided by Butler-Rolls

Cornerman, part III: Samuel Décarie-Drolet, the boxing teacher

The Super-Middleweights

2024: the Dragon year?

Cornerman, Part II: The “Mike Moffa” way

Editorial: Arthur Biyarslanov is the best super-lightweight in the country

Bazinyan vs. Phinn: between bragging rights and world title aspirations

Shakeel Phinn: Now or Never

Steven Butler: still chasing the dream

168 Reasons to Smile

Cornerman, Part I: the 12 tasks of Marc Ramsay

Shamil Khataev joins his brother with the tigers

Chabot 2024: “smarter, but still spectacular”

Luis Santana’s looking to build momentum

Bazinyan-Godoy: What to Take Away from January 25th?

Seven years later: Vany aims to seize her second chance

The Grizzly hangs up his gloves

Here comes Artur again

Bazinyan-Godoy: analysis and predictions for January 25

Back to the future for Avery Martin-Duval

Orobio-Fendero: brother in arms

Mary Spencer: “Losing motivates me more than winning”

Wilkens Mathieu’s aiming for a “Tyson” year

BETERBIEV VS. SMITH: THE 13 PREDICTIONS FOR JANUARY 13

Callum Smith: Do You Really Know Him?

Rohan Murdock : ‘you picked the wrong guy’

Wilkens Mathieu: a rookie year in five acts

Firecrackers in 2023, Explosion in 2024

Artur Beterbiev’s eternal quest

A new tiger: get to know Osleys Iglesias

Steve Claggett: from road warrior to fan favorite

Christian Mbilli: the world-class Canadian

Fendero and Khataev : two unique recruits

Bazinyan and Mbilli : two tigers, one objective

Mbilli-Góngora: These Modern-Day Gladiators

Wilkens Mathieu: Youth, Talent, and Wisdom

Christopher Guerrero : ‘Like in a video game’

Christopher Guerrero : The Tiger Finally Roars

Steven Butler: “I Would Knock Out the Steven of Three Years Ago”

It’s David Lemieux’s Fault

Mbilli : Resilience embedded in DNA