This is an expansion of Misha's comment.  Since $g : (S,\rho) \to N$ is a pleating map we have $g$ is $1$-Lipschitz.  That is, for any $x, y \in S$ we have $d_N(g(x), g(y)) \leq d_\rho(x, y)$.  In fact, if $\alpha$ is a geodesic arc in $(S,\rho)$ connecting $x$ to $y$, and if $\beta$ is a geodesic arc in $N$, connecting $g(x)$ to $g(y)$ in the relative homotopy class of $g(\alpha)$, then $\ell_N(\beta) \leq \ell_\rho(\alpha)$.   Similarly, if $\alpha$ is a geodesic loop in $S$ then the geodesic representative $\beta$, of $g(\alpha)$, has $\ell_N(\beta) \leq \ell_\rho(\alpha)$.  

It follows that $R = R_\rho$, the injectivity radius of $(S, \rho)$, is greater than or equal to the injectivity radius of $N$.  Let $x, y \in S$ be any pair of points.  Let $\alpha$ be the shortest geodesic segment in $S$ connecting $x$ to $y$.  For any point $z$ of $\alpha$ let $D \subset S$ be the open ball of radius $R$ about $z$.  It follows that $\alpha \cap D$ is a single arc, centered at $z$.  Thus the $R/2$ neighborhood of $\alpha$ is an embedded strip with area less than the area of $(S, \rho)$.  Since the area of $(S, \rho)$ is $-2\pi\chi(S)$, deduce an upper bound for the length of $\alpha$ and hence for the diameter of $S$. 

So -

I think that you may be asking a different question from what you wrote?  That is, instead of the quantities $d_N(g(x), g(y))$ and $d_\rho(x,y)$, you are interested in the lengths of certain geodesic arcs connecting these points....