Why isn't Floyd Mayweather more grateful to Oscar when Oscar made him famous?
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If you're dumb enough to think Oscar is solely running that company and he's personally paying Mayweather. When Oscar went on his drug binges who do you think was running Golden boy? It wasn't Oscar.
If Oscar is paying millions of dollars to someone he doesn't like who's the real fool?Comment
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If you're dumb enough to think Oscar is solely running that company and he's personally paying Mayweather. When Oscar went on his drug binges who do you think was running Golden boy? It wasn't Oscar.
If Oscar is paying millions of dollars to someone he doesn't like who's the real fool?Comment
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I'm getting tired of satirically ragging on Floyd. It's sooooo....band wagon now. Floyd is the real deal whether you agree with it or notComment
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Says the insecure police officer that finds women unattractive if they have had black boyfriends lol. Oscar doesn't sign those checks igoramous. He's also not running the company. Deal with the fact that you were wrong as usual.Comment
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So the only reason he's a major shareholder now is because all the other ones pulled out. You really think they were going to trust an inexperienced drug addict?
October 15, 2014
Golden Boy Promotions president and co-founder Oscar De La Hoya has bought out the two largest shareholders in the company besides him, at their request.
In a deal recently completed, De La Hoya bought back Anschutz Entertainment Group's approximate 20 percent stake in the Los Angeles-based company and the approximate 12 percent of the company held by Gabriel Brener, a private investor and chairman and CEO of Brener International GroupComment
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Yea he is now. He wasn't always a major shareholder. Tell the whole story. In fact he wasn't a major shareholder until three months ago.
So the only reason he's a major shareholder now is because all the other ones pulled out. You really think they were going to trust an inexperienced drug addict?
October 15, 2014
Golden Boy Promotions president and co-founder Oscar De La Hoya has bought out the two largest shareholders in the company besides him, at their request.
In a deal recently completed, De La Hoya bought back Anschutz Entertainment Group's approximate 20 percent stake in the Los Angeles-based company and the approximate 12 percent of the company held by Gabriel Brener, a private investor and chairman and CEO of Brener International GroupComment
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