Mike Tyson rejected Sylvester Stallone’s offer to fight in Rocky movie says ex-manager ahead of Netflix bout v Jake Paul
RORY Holloway and Mike Tyson’s paths first crossed in 1982 when the aspiring boxer was living in a juvenile detention home in upstate New York.
Introduced by a mutual friend, when the soon-to-be heavyweight champion of the world was just 16, they soon became firm friends and began living together.
Holloway met Tyson when he was just 16 before he became a global superstar[/caption]
Four years later, Tyson would ask Holloway to be his manager in the lobby of a Las Vegas hotel after defeating Trevor Berbick for the WBC title.
Moments before that, Tyson would reject a leading role in Rocky – when Sylvester Stallone asked him if he would be interested in starring in the Hollywood franchise.
In 1997 the pair parted ways – with Tyson’s senses distorted by the hangers-on in his life and the dissolution of Team Tyson.
He accused his former promoter Don King of mismanaging his funds, while Holloway and John Horne were also sued for failing to protect his interests in dealings with King.
The matter was settled out of court, with Tyson receiving $14million.
But, for Holloway, there was no bad blood. SunSport caught up with the ex-impresario who spoke candidly about his time managing the biggest sports star in the world.
Holloway revealed how he had to react quickly to Tyson’s impulsive demands to please the boxing champ.
For Holloway, managing Tyson was “totally chaotic.”
It started with that first act – snubbing Rocky and movie star fame.
He told SunSport: “We’re chatting in the lobby after he became champ and Sylvester Stallone comes towards us.
“He stops and says to Mike, ‘Hey Mike, great fight – congratulations. Maybe we need to talk about you being in the next Rocky movie?
“Mike looked at him and nonchalantly replied, ‘Let me ask you something. In the movie, will you beat me?’ Stallone said, ‘Yeah, it’s Rocky.’
“Then Mike said, ‘Hell, no. I wouldn’t even let you beat me for play.’ I thought that was crazy.”
Despite turning down an opportunity at film stardom, Mike still had to wrestle with being a cultural icon.
Holloway explained: “At that time, there were three Mikes. Jordan, Jackson, and Tyson. Out of the three, I think Michael Jackson and Mike Tyson were global phenomenons.
“Tyson, because he was a young kid coming up from the background he did, created such an interest in the public eye.
“You couldn’t go anywhere. Everywhere you’d go, time would stop. Back in Harlem, they’d have to shut it down if we visited because thousands of people would want to meet him.
“That fame made life a little difficult. He wanted to be normal, but he couldn’t.
“At times he was his own worst enemy. It was both difficult, but it was also a pleasure and an honour.
“It was tough on Mike and it was tough on me – trying to wrap my arms around him and protect him.
“The more money he got, the more difficult it got. And Mike had a very impulsive personality at that time.
I always felt it was my job to protect him.
“But sometimes you can’t protect people from themselves.”
“We could make plans, but the only thing that would count would be the next two minutes.
“I had a lot thrust upon me. I was his closest friend, but at the same time I was his manager managing his fight career.
“Sometimes it became difficult because the lines were blurred, and they started getting more blurred as we got older.
“I always felt it was my job to protect him. But sometimes you can’t protect people from themselves.”
Holloway revealed it was almost impossible planning Tyson’s training camps[/caption]
Tyson and promoter Don King celebrate Holloway’s wedding day[/caption]
Holloway remembered a moment that summed up Tyson’s behaviours.
He continued: “We were preparing for a fight, and usually about 14 weeks before the fight I would set up the camp.
“I had people who did that for me, so I’d told them once we were setting up in Flagstaff, Arizona.
“These guys had 18-wheeler trucks. They brought all Mike’s equipment – all his rings, TV’s, and we’d rent out a whole hotel. They would give us the kitchen and I’d bring our private chefs.
“Before Mike went out there he asked me if everything was set up.
“He trained one or two days, then all of a sudden he was bored and told me, ‘I don’t wanna train here.’ I said to him, ‘What do you mean you don’t want to train here? We brought out almost a million dollars worth of equipment and we rented out a whole hotel!’
“I’d tried my best to make it to his liking, even going overboard. But he didn’t want to train.
“I thought to myself, we’ll give it a couple of days, he would settle down.
“But I woke up the next morning and he was gone!”
“Next I know, Mike is in Vegas! He called me and I asked, ‘What you doing in Vegas?’
“And he said, ‘Bring all the stuff here! I want to train here’. So we had to bring all the equipment to Las Vegas, it cost us a fortune. We got to Vegas and after a few days there he said to me, ‘I don’t wanna train here, I want to go to Ohio!’”
Holloway added: “It was crazy. But when he put his mind to something, you had to accommodate him.
“Once I got him in the ring and saw him touch gloves with an opponent, it was like a weight had lifted off my shoulders.
“I didn’t even care about the fight, I was just happy to have got him where I needed to get him.”
In 1986, Mike created history at the Las Vegas Hilton when he knocked out Trevor Berbick in the second round of the WBC heavyweight title contest
Holloway was there for the moment that would change both their lives.
At the time he was working at a juvenile detention centre, and was in Sin City to support his friend.
By the end of the night, Holloway would become part of Team Tyson.
“That’s probably one of the most memorable times in my life,” Holloway said.
“It was a historical fight, he becomes the youngest ever heavyweight champion, and I then met him in the hotel lobby.
“I told Mike I had to go to Albany because if I didn’t go back I wouldn’t have a job.
“Mike held the belts up to me and said, ‘We used to eat baloney together, now we’re going to eat steak. Tell them you quit.”
Working alongside Tyson during his hey day was legendary promoter Don King.
King and Tyson would fall out over the belief King had stolen money from him.
A legal battle which dragged Holloway’s name into the mud ensued, with Tyson eventually getting a $14million payment.
Holloway insisted he has nothing but respect for King, who helped them all achieve a privileged position.
“I never had a problem with Don,” Holloway divulged.
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“In the sport of boxing, I gathered as much information that I could from him from his experience.
“He gave me business acumen, and he understood my position as Mike’s best friend.
“Don had an influence on Mike to a certain extent. But Mike really relied on me to deal with Don, as the middle man. There were scrapes, little small issues, but he never really had a problem with Don.
“Most of the issues were due to Mike, in my opinion. A lot of people try and say different things, but the fact of the matter for us was that promoter brought us almost $500million. That’s the bottom line.
“He allowed us to change trajectory on how much fighters got paid. We revolutionised that and it wouldn’t have happened without Don.
“Don was able to leverage the whole Mike Tyson brand. I know what he meant to us.”
In 1992, Tyson was convicted of rape and sentenced to six years in an Indiana prison.
He would serve three, before being released on parole. Holloway visited him every month to check on his friend.
“Mike was always in a very sombre mood (in prison)”, Holloway recalled.
“I would drive from New York to Indiana every first week of the month and I would sit down with him for a few hours and talk.
“We never discussed anything passed prison. We never discussed what he was going to do when he got out.
“It made me come to the conclusion he wasn’t going to box again. He lost so much weight and he didn’t look like Mike Tyson. He must have weighed about 180 pounds.
“His eating habits were different. We’d talk about life, our family, where we started and came from, going down memory lane.
“Four months before he got out, I found out that he really wanted to fight.”
Mike and I came from abject poverty.
“All of a sudden you get all this wealth and it’s like a tap, you don’t see it cutting off soon.”
When Tyson got out, a huge fortune awaited him. Although, he was already spending up to £50,000 on piece on his new fascination, Tigers.
“I don’t know how he came up with this fascination for tigers,” Holloway laughed.
“Next thing you know, we had tigers in the house, a leopard… next minute, he was asking about getting a giraffe and a hippo.
“We were at the house and tigers were walking around like pets and laying in the garage.
“At one point he talked about buying the house next door, tearing it down and building a big moat with palm trees so the tigers could feel at home.
“The background we came from, we never had anything growing up.
“Mike and I came from abject poverty. All of a sudden you get all this wealth and it’s like a tap, you don’t see it cutting off soon. Every couple of months, he’s fighting and he’s getting $30million or $40million.”
Holloway and Tyson went their separate ways in 1997, which still hurts Holloway today.
“Nothing ever happened. It was one of those situations where we just grew apart,” he said.
People see you doing good and they want to be in your position.
“I was a target, I had that on my head.”
“When it happened, I think people made a bigger deal out of it than there was. Mike and I never had an argument. It’s just something that happened.
“He and I will always have a connection, he’s the godfather to my kids, and I will always support him up close or from afar.
“The rumour mill took a toll on me. People saying I allowed people to take advantage of Mike and take his money, that was tough.
“Mike would know I would never let that happen intentionally.
“Outsiders came in and drew a wedge between us, they had an objective.
“People see you doing good and they want to be in your position. I was a target, I had that on my head.
“When we went our separate ways, there wasn’t any beef and that never gave me closure. Life has to go on. But that’s something that always lingers inside of me, in my heart.
“I had nothing but good times with Mike. He afforded me and my family things that I may never have had, and the journey was amazing.”
Holloway and Tyson went their separate ways in 1997[/caption]
Holloway admitted he misses his friend, Tyson[/caption]