Oscar De La Hoya EXPOSES Floyd Mayweather For Being Broke

The Gilded Cage: The Parallel Financial Collapses of Mayweather and De La Hoya

The rivalry between Floyd “Money” Mayweather and Oscar “The Golden Boy” De La Hoya has long been defined by a singular obsession: who has the bigger bank account? For nearly two decades, De La Hoya has publicly campaigned to expose Mayweather as a “broke fraud,” a narrative that reached a fever pitch between 2018 and 2026. However, as the paper trails for both men become public, a startling reality emerges. While De La Hoya spends his time pointing at Mayweather’s IRS liens and liquidated jets, his own promotional empire is crumbling under the weight of defaulted mortgages and massive legal settlements. This is no longer a fight for a championship belt; it is a desperate struggle to maintain the illusion of wealth while drowning in public debt.


The Architecture of the “Broke” Allegation

De La Hoya’s campaign began in earnest on October 18, 2018. While celebrating Canelo Alvarez’s then-record $365 million deal, De La Hoya pivoted to Mayweather, claiming the undefeated champ only “crawled out from under his rock” for exhibition matches because he was out of cash.

“Fighters like that always go broke. He’s always spending… big money is not coming in. Look at what happened to Mike Tyson.” — Oscar De La Hoya, 2018.

De La Hoya’s logic was rooted in the 2007 fight that made Mayweather a superstar. De La Hoya, acting as the promoter, walked away with $52 million compared to Mayweather’s $25 million. He has since maintained a superior attitude, viewing himself as the man who built the “Money” platform and claiming Mayweather retired for exactly one year and one day to dodge a contractually mandated rematch clause. To De La Hoya, Mayweather’s 2024–2026 exhibition tour—including a widely mocked, unsanctioned bout in Mexico City against John Gotti III—is proof of financial desperation.


The Reality of the Paper Trail: Mayweather’s Debt

While De La Hoya lacks access to Mayweather’s private bank accounts, a 2025 investigative report by Business Insider laid out a verifiable trail of public records that validate the “cash flow strain” narrative.

The $54 Million Hanky Loan

Mayweather secured approximately $54 million in financing from lender Don Hanky at a 9% interest rate. This was not a standard loan; it was cross-collateralized, meaning the debt was secured by:

14 residential properties.

The “Girl Collection” strip club in Las Vegas.

His private Gulfstream jet.

The Petty Liens and Legal Fees

The most telling signs of a “cash-poor” billionaire are the smaller, neglected bills that suggest a lack of administrative oversight or liquid funds:

Trash Collection: A $568 lien was placed on his Las Vegas mansion for unpaid garbage fees.

Jet Fuel: A Texas supplier sued for $137,000 in unpaid fuel bills.

Maintenance: A $358,000 lien was placed on his jet by the FAA for maintenance work.

Back Rent: A 2026 Manhattan lawsuit alleged Mayweather owed over $330,000 in rent for a luxury duplex.

Mayweather’s counter-offensive was a $340 million lawsuit against Showtime and Steven Espinosa, alleging a decade-long fraud scheme. His defense is simple: he isn’t broke because of spending; he’s “short” because his former management diverted his earnings.


The Hypocrisy of “The Golden Boy”

The irony of De La Hoya’s criticism is that by 2026, his own financial foundation has shown deep cracks. While he attacks Mayweather’s “life is expensive” lifestyle, public real estate records show that Golden Boy Promotions defaulted on a $27 million commercial mortgage for its Los Angeles headquarters.

Metric
Golden Boy HQ (626 Wilshire Blvd)

Original Loan
$27 Million (2015)

Outstanding Debt
$23 Million (2026)

2015 Valuation
$40 Million

2025 Valuation
$19 Million

Occupancy
40% Vacant

The building is now worth less than the remaining debt, leaving De La Hoya in a “special servicing” nightmare to avoid losing his office. Furthermore, De La Hoya’s personal history includes a $15–20 million out-of-court settlement for a 2007 personal scandal, a massive hit to his liquidity.


Two Legends, One Mirror

Ultimately, the Mayweather-De La Hoya rivalry has transformed into a mirror image of the “retired fighter” trope. Both men generated nearly $2 billion in combined career revenue, yet both are currently tethered to public courthouses.

Mayweather uses exhibition bouts and massive lawsuits to hunt for liquidity, while De La Hoya uses special servicers and public verbal attacks to distract from his declining real estate value. The record for both is the same: big earnings and big spending have led to a 2026 reality where the “Money” and the “Golden Boy” are both fighting their most difficult opponent yet—the public record.