Remembering Bob Shamrock

DixieDestroyer

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Good article on the (late) adoptive father of MMA legends Ken and Frank Shamrock. Bob Shamrock was the owner of the Shamrock Ranch, a facility for troubled boys in Susanville, California, who was instrumental in turning Ken's life around as a teenager.

Remembering Bob Shamrock


Monday, January 18, 2010
by Jake Rossen (jrossen@sherdog.com)

There are places for kids who punch pregnant teachers in the stomach, and most of them have more in common with zoos than detention centers.

Ken Kilpatrick, whose biological father deserted him, his brothers and his mother shortly after Ken was born, had shifts in all of them: foster homes, juvenile hall, the occasional hospital visit when he cornered the wrong guy on the wrong night. As young as 7, the kids would come home to an empty house, their mother having gone go-go dancing to pay the bills. Assaulting a teacher at age 5 was rage without the physical ammunition to back it up, but by the time he was in high school, he could bench-press 360 pounds. He strong-armed seniors for their lunch money. When he was 13, his stepfather grew tired of delivering punitive beatings and told police that Ken didn't have a home with him anymore. His outlook consisted primarily of group homes, prison or an early grave.

In 1979, with the state fed up with his temper, Ken was driven by a parole officer to a ranch in Susanville, Calif., and ushered into a sprawling home in a town fueled by jobs offered at a nearby state prison. Having housed more than 600 boys since opening their doors in 1968, usually eight at a time, the Shamrock Boys' Home was operated by Bob Shamrock and his wife, Dee Dee, and it was love that had a twist of masochism to it: By taking in boys between 13 and 16 years old, they were getting delinquents who lacked the maturity to make civil decisions but the developing strength to find real trouble.

But Bob had grown up with a heart. His father ran a mission on Skid Row, and he would have his son dish out hot soup to the homeless and luckless men who had seen no reward after the Korean War. On good days, Bob would see familiar faces come back with suits and success stories. On bad days, he would have to step over a dead body in the doorway. When he was of age, he enrolled in UCLA's pre-med program, but dropped out when his father needed more help running the family fabrication business.

After Bob sold the business, he and his wife bought the 6,400-square-foot ranch in Susanville, building on the group care ideal they had started in Anza, Calif., years prior. The care-giving had an obvious origin in his father's shelter, but the focus on young adults was for other reasons: Despite repeated attempts, the couple couldn't have children.

State care was often sterile and disconnected, but Bob wasn't interested in housing problems for profit. To curb their aggression, he had the kids cutting cords of wood for their three fireplaces, cleaning highways and movie theaters, keeping them busy and tired. He fostered a sense of community and respectability by having red satin jackets with a Shamrock crest made. Walk a straight line and you could see movies, have friends over, even drive Bob's classic cars into town. If you still had the energy for trouble, you could put on some boxing gloves and hash it out with another boy in the yard: Bob would serve refreshments.

He knew the kids needed an authority figure, not a prison guard: He showed interest and curiosity in their problems and ambitions. When he saw that Ken had significant athletic potential, he encouraged him to enroll in his school's football and wrestling programs -- but only if he maintained at least a C average in his classes.

"He was real comfortable about who you were,"Â Ken recalled in 2008. "And the things you did, didn't matter to him. He just wanted to know who you wanted to be, and where you wanted to go, not what you did in the past."Â

By the time Ken was late into his teens, and even though it meant the state would no longer subsidize his housing, Bob had formally adopted him. Without calculation on his part, Bob was slowly taking on echoes of what Cus D'Amato was doing for another athletic, troubled teen: Mike Tyson. Ken Shamrock liked to fight -- he won several Toughman competitions, dusted with bar brawlers in back lots -- and had an iron-jaw intensity that lacked navigation. So Bob got him into a career that he himself had idolized as a child: professional wrestling.

Ken ran the local circuit before getting wrapped up in the stiffer style of the Japanese scene, where his physique and willingness to go all-out led him into the burgeoning Pancrase organization, a promotion that debuted in 1993 and was an open-handed precursor to MMA, with few predetermined finishes. Ken excelled, and while hardly a terror on the level of Tyson, was already bucking the odds of most boys who grow up in the system.

Accounts of what happened next vary, with some suggesting Shamrock's student Scott Bessac saw an ad in a 1993 issue of Black Belt magazine for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and Bob himself claiming that he personally phoned promoter Art Davie and suggested Shamrock for a slot. Either way, it was a perfect match. The UFC was something Ken had inadvertently shaped himself for: a freestyle fight that didn't place emphasis on technical boxing, but a punch-grapple hybrid that his training in Japan was perfectly suited to.

From 1993 to 1996, Shamrock was more or less the leading man of the UFC. (Royce Gracie, unequivocally the most compelling presence in the sport's earliest days in America, had a reputation that far exceeded his actual participation: He competed for only 18 months before bowing out.) Bob had taken a wayward, angry young man and given him the emotional nourishment he needed to become the face of a sport.

In assisting Ken with contracts, negotiation and ancillary business tasks -- including the formation of Shamrock's Lion's Den, which turned out several contenders and champions in the 1990s -- Bob was a crucial cog in what was then a freewheeling business. Several fighters went unrepresented, or were inadvertently aligned with the barrel-scraping rejects that populated boxing. Bob looked out for Ken; Ken, in becoming the first U.S. fighter to be the focus of mainstream media attention in outlets like People and "Larry King Live,"Â carried the sport, showing a strength of character and respect that contradicted the perceptions of the time.

Allegedly, it was Bob who suggested to Davie the idea of a "Superfight"Â to resolve the rivalry between Shamrock and Gracie; it was also Bob who tried to petition the promotion not to cut Shamrock's pay when politics intervened, then phoned Bret Hart to see what opportunities might be available in the WWE. And it was Bob's charge who returned to the UFC in 2002 to help an ailing company draw some much-needed attention with a grudge fight against Tito Ortiz.

Ken was Bob's most visible project, but celebrity isn't everything. The other boys that passed through his home learned the rewards of hard work, and the consequences of thoughtlessness. He wasn't segregating troublemakers: He wanted to reform them. There's no telling how many lives he saved, or what those lives went on to accomplish.

"He had this presence that kids would open up to him,"Â Ken recalled. "They would allow him to talk to them. They would allow him to get into the personal problems that most people would never come close to. He was gifted with that. That's something that no one will ever be able to understand."Â

Sports are full of peripheral characters that operate outside the frame of a camera. Some get their proper acknowledgment, and some do not. To wonder about what mixed martial arts would be like today had Bob Shamrock not opened his home to troubled young men plays with quantum theory: what if this, what if that. We only know that Ken speculated he'd be incarcerated or dead if not for Bob's intervention, that the earliest incarnation of the UFC was a sea of ill-equipped fighters with hearts bigger than their sense and that Shamrock represented actual athleticism. In possessing legitimate skills and a poster boy's body, he helped nudge it closer to respectability.

Bob died Jan. 14 at age 68, succumbing to complications from diabetes. He is not the first father that will be sorely missed, though perhaps the only one to be mourned by 600 sons. His contributions to this sport were largely unseen. But like all great supporting roles, the story would not be nearly the same without him.


***Reference article/link....

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

DixieDestroyer

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Here's another good article from Yahoo Sports Dave Meltzer...

MMA pioneer Bob Shamrock remembered

By Dave Meltzer, Yahoo! Sports Jan 18, 5:16 pm EST

Bob Shamrock, the adoptive father of mixed martial arts legends Ken and Frank Shamrock, two of the sport's biggest stars in its embryonic period, passed away on Thursday at the age of 68 due to health problems brought on by diabetes.

Shamrock was the father figure for a wild group of younger fighters in the mid-90s, who called themselves the Lion's Den, the forerunner today's major camps. In MMA's early days, the Lion's Den, a group of guys who were always together at the early UFC and overseas events, stood out amid the strange assortment of characters that were prevalent at the time.

But Bob Shamrock should best be remembered as unique, outgoing, and overly friendly man with a huge heart who gave hope to hundreds of California teenagers over 30 years caught up in the dead end of the foster-care system, through his Shamrock Boys Home in Susanville, Calif.

Ken was brought to the home as a teenager in 1979, after a youth spent on the streets, in juvenile hall and foster care. Frank came aboard in 1987, going through a foster-care system that led him to his own life going nowhere.

"The type of boys he brought in, they would make me nervous,"Â￾ noted HDNet Fights president Guy Mezger, who was a competition kickboxer before becoming a member of the original Lion's Den team in 1994. "If they would make me nervous, most people should have been very nervous."Â￾

Bob Shamrock and his and wife, Dee Dee, started taking in troubled youths in 1970. His caring for those less fortunate started young, as when he was a child, he'd go to the mission in Los Angeles, where he grew up, and serve meals to the homeless and play piano for them.

It started when he and his wife decided to take in one child. Then suddenly they found out about others and there were four. At times they raised as many as 18 children on a big ranch which had horses, a gym, a swimming pool along with basketball and tennis courts.

Ken Shamrock was brought to the ranch with two other boys by a probation officer. Bob Shamrock's home was like a different world for him. Bob pushed him into sports like football, wrestling, weightlifting and bodybuilding. He was a high school star in football and wrestling. Three years after he arrived in his home, Bob Shamrock formally adopted Ken.

"The truth is, if it wasn't for Bob, Ken would probably either be in prison or dead,"Â￾ Mezger said. "Bob couldn't have loved him more if he had pulled him out of the womb himself."Â￾

"And Frank, he's a handful now, so imagine what he was like as a teenager. Frank got into trouble and went to jail, and Bob was there visiting him every day he could."Â￾

"And it wasn't just Ken and Frank, Vernon (White, an early Lion's Den fighter and another first generation MMA star), he was like a son of him. There were hundreds of kids he brought into his home and he turned a lot of their lives around. The ones who became successful owe it to Bob,"Â￾ Mezger added.

"My mother was great, but my father beat me up and it wasn't until I met him and he took me in that I for the first time in my life saw what a father should be,"Â￾ said an emotional Jens Pulver, who moved to Lockeford, Calif., where Bob Shamrock was living, in 1999.

"I looked up to him. I got started in what I wanted to do in life because of him. So much of what I want to be, helping out kids with my own gym, is from what I learned from him."Â￾

Pulver, who hated his name because it was the same as his father's, even asked Bob at one point if he could take the Shamrock name since Bob was the first real father figure he felt he ever had.

"He told me, ‘You go out there and make the Pulver name mean something good,"Â￾ said Pulver, who went on to become the first 155-pound champion in UFC history.

Pulver was part of the "Shamrock 2000"Â￾ team, a short-lived camp Bob had put together while Ken moved away and left MMA for pro wrestling. Pulver noted that there was a little kid who would show up at the gym to hit the bags in those days named Nick Diaz with his younger brother Nate, both of whom later became MMA stars.

Pulver wanted to fight full-time, but they didn't have the right training partners for him. Shamrock put him in contact with Monte Cox and sent him to Iowa, where Pat Miletich was starting a camp where he could train full-time.

"My whole life, through high school and college, was in his house,"Â￾ he said. "I took everything I had when I moved to train with his team. Then, I left for Iowa, it's still there."Â￾

It was fighters who started with Shamrock that were the original champions in three of the UFC's first four weight divisions. Ken was the original superfight champion in 1995, beating Dan Severn, which became the heavyweight championship. Frank was the first middleweight champion in 1997, beating Olympic gold medal winning wrestler Kevin Jackson, which is now the light heavyweight champion. Pulver beat Caol Uno to become the first bantamweight champion in 2001, which is now the lightweight champion. Mikey Burnett, another Lion's Den member, lost a close split decision to Pat Miletich for the creation of the lightweight championship in 1999, which is today's welterweight title.

The road to the Lion's Den glory days started when Bob Shamrock, a huge pro wrestling fan, thought, since there was no such thing as mixed martial arts at the time, that Ken had the look, the toughness and athletic ability to be a pro wrestling star.

He paid for Ken to attend pro wrestling school in the late 1980s in Sacramento, and later moved with Ken to the Carolinas to help him start his career.

While wrestling there, Ken met up with Dean Simon, better known by his wrestling stage name of Dean Malenko, who ran a wrestling school with his father in Tampa which trained guys in legitimate submission maneuvers. Ken became a wrestling star in Japan and then joined a promotion called Pancrase, named after the ancient Greek Olympic sport of Pankration, which featured pro wrestlers in matches without predetermined endings.

Ken Shamrock and Royce Gracie were UFC's two biggest stars during a period of major pay-per-view success through 1996. Frank, who Bob also adopted, along with Mezger. During the darkest days of UFC history, when its existence was hanging by a thread in 1998-99, Frank, as middleweight champion, was the company's biggest star. Later, Frank was instrumental to the beginnings of the Strikeforce promotion.

Bob Shamrock could be stubborn at times, likely because he had to remain firm, or else he would have been taken advantage of by the kids he housed. There were times in their adult lives that Bob was estranged from both Ken and Frank. He and Ken made amends, and as a token of his gratitude, Ken bought Bob a 1968 Rolls Royce.

"I don't want to say he was like Mother Teresa, but he was the closest thing,"Â￾ Mezger said. "When people think of Bob Shamrock, they'll talk about Ken and Frank, but he changes the lives of hundreds of kids, and that's what he should be remembered for."Â￾

***Reference article...

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 
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