FightHype.com

AN OPEN LETTER FROM OSCAR DE LA HOYA TO OSCAR DE LA HOYA

By Paul Magno | November 14, 2017
AN OPEN LETTER FROM OSCAR DE LA HOYA TO OSCAR DE LA HOYA

On the occasion of Oscar De La Hoya’s recent statement about returning to the ring to take on Conor McGregor:

Rather than put forth the effort to write piece #1,212 on the Golden Boy’s hypocrisy, I thought I’d save time and just re-print Oscar’s cringe-worthy open-letter about the evils of Mayweather-McGregor, with appropriate edits made to make it applicable in the here and now. Enjoy.

To my fellow boxing fans:     

I write in the hopes that together we can protect the sport of boxing.      

With each passing day, it looks more and more likely that the circus known as Me Vs. Conor McGregor will be coming to town in the near future.

As undercard fights start to take form, athletic commissions give their blessings in exchange for millions of dollars and the fighters start counting even more cash, one group will eventually be left to make sure this farce doesn't occur.

You, the fans, who are the lifeblood of our sport.

Boxing is starting to dig out of the hole that Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao shoveled by waiting seven years to put on a fight that ended up being as dull as it was anti-climactic.

But if you thought Mayweather/Pacquiao was a black eye for our sport — a matchup between two of the best pound-for-pound fighters that simply didn't deliver — just wait until (one of) the best boxer(s) of a generation dismantles someone who has (only) boxed (once) competitively at any level — amateur or professional.

Our sport might not ever recover.

I fully understand the initial attraction from any fan of combat sports. McGregor is almost certainly the best pound-for-pound MMA fighter. I am the Golden Boy. But success in one sport does not guarantee success in another. Far from it. And let's be clear, these are two different sports — from the size of the gloves fighters wear, to the size and shape of the ring, to the fact the one sport allows combatants to use their legs to strike.         

Furthermore, it's not like McGregor would be fighting a good fighter, let alone a mediocre one. He would be fighting (Me-- a Hall of Famer). 

Now, I know critics will say that I'm only writing this letter because I’m bitter/loopy/fucked up on something/dumb/starving for attention/all of the above.

But my interest is in the health of boxing as a whole. It always has been. And if I were to come out of retirement to take on someone like Keith "One-time" Thurman, Errol Spence or some other top welterweight, not only would I applaud the fight, I'd be the first one on line for a ticket.

That kind of fight is what the fans — and I am a fan first — deserve.

Which brings me back to the circus.

My and Conor's motivation is clear. It's money. In fact, we don't even pretend it's not. But it's also a lack of consequences for when the fight ends up being the disaster that is predicted. After this fight, neither of us will need you anymore. I will go back to retirement — presumably for good this time with (hopefully) a nine-figure paycheck — and Conor will go back to the UFC.

It's a win-win for us. It's a lose-lose for you. You'll be $100 lighter and we will have squandered another opportunity to bring boxing back to its rightful place as the sport of kings.

At this point, only you can shut the circus down by making it clear that you won't pay to see a joke of a fight and telling your casual-fan friends that they shouldn't either.     

Sincerely,      

Oscar

APRIL 22, 2024
APRIL 21, 2024
APRIL 18, 2024
APRIL 17, 2024
APRIL 16, 2024
APRIL 12, 2024
APRIL 08, 2024
APRIL 04, 2024
APRIL 01, 2024
MARCH 30, 2024
MARCH 28, 2024
MARCH 25, 2024
MARCH 21, 2024
MARCH 18, 2024
MARCH 17, 2024
MARCH 14, 2024
MARCH 12, 2024
MARCH 11, 2024
MARCH 07, 2024
MARCH 04, 2024
FEBRUARY 29, 2024
FEBRUARY 27, 2024
FEBRUARY 22, 2024
FEBRUARY 19, 2024
FEBRUARY 15, 2024
FEBRUARY 12, 2024
FEBRUARY 08, 2024