By Corey Erdman
Following Canelo Alvarez’s destruction of Rocky Fielding at Madison Square Garden, Oscar De La Hoya took the podium in the media area assembled in the hallways beyond the locker rooms. Typically, when Oscar, or any authority figure, steps up to the dais, reporters dutifully fall silent and point their cameras or audio recorders accordingly.
The only problem this time is that Ryan Garcia, who hours earlier had dispatched of Braulio Rodriguez, happened to walk into the area at the same time. Almost instantly, the swarm of journalists, hangers on and those somewhere in between flocked to the left of the stage and formed a scrum around Garcia. Media relations representatives tried to quiet down the flock, but it was too late. In a media world dominated by the currency of metrics and clicks, those who were a part of that economy knew exactly where their numbers would come from that night.














