Mike Tyson made $300-400 m in his career and went bankrupt Evander Holyfield made $200-300 m in his career and went bank rupt Riddick Bowe when he retired in 1996-97 had earnings of around $80-100 m Tommy Morrison retired in 1996 with earnings and savings around $8-10 m but went bankrupt in 1998 David Tua made career earnings of $20-30 m but declared bankruptcy in 2010-11 George Foreman made his entire fortune based of his second career. The likes of Lennox Lewis, Larry Holmes, Marvin Hagler are examples of boxers who have not only kept their career earnings but multiplied and built on it in style after retirement. Surely boxers have the ability to hire accountants, financial advisors, the kind of money they make is enough to meet the basic needs of their family like education, food, shelter, health care e.t.c. The money is more than enough to invest in business opportunities in a risk free way. How do they blow it all away? I mean how can a logical person not know limits on how much to spend vs how they are earning or have in savings? Or is it just a desire to blow it all away and these guys have no fear of losing it all and starting over?
You need a certain personality to be a fighter.Very very few people can keep the part of them that makes them successful at fighting contained to the ring and keep it from spilling over and affecting the rest of their lives.
Surely common sense is required both in the ring and outside as well. Look at Floyd Mayweather, he flaunts money openly, flaunts his spending but still keeps a check on his financial affairs
A lot of athletes not just boxers go through this .. I think the main reason is most come from poor backgrounds having nothing. Then when they get a lot of money , they blow it all on the life of luxury and taking care of family, friends, etc. Most just cant say no when asked for money ..Also, they get scammed from bad business ventures and trusting the wrong people when it comes to their money getting managed... Also, they do not factor in the IRS's tax take.. Unfortunately, Hearns is a perfect example of the above stated
Let's take $400 m Mike tyson as an example 33% will be the IRS 33% will be the promoters/trainers/managers (which is quite a lot) His take home is $120 m with which he will be buying his mansions, luxury cars, funding his legal expenses, funding legal settlements and then you have leeches/fake friends
Most people that do is because they just waste it on things they do not need. Ok there is a time to be extravagant. A friend of mine earns 5 times as much as me, but he will end up with less than me in the end, already in a lot of ways he is financially poorer than me, all due to his spending.
Many people from all walks of life go bankrupt. But it seems that professional athletes and lottery winners are among the most likely to do so. In the athletes' cases, their careers generally last a relatively short time. The lottery winners only hit it big once unless they are able to win a second time in very rare cases. Unless the athletes and lottery winners put much of their money into savings or wise investments, there are generally going to be problems for them in the future. - Chuck Johnston
- lack of formal education: sign away Power of Attorney - Too trusting - Too generous with "hangers on"
Let's face it, most athletes are genetically blessed in the sense of physical attributes and physical intelligence, but overall intelligence, hm not quite....
Let's say if i win $5,000,000 today. I buy myself a decent sized house, 2 cars, furniture for the house, necessities with a few luxury items, all this while having more than enough to utilize my left over in a business venture to let the money work for 5-10 times more. How on earth can a boxer not hire or get hold of a highly recommended accountant, financial advisor, consultant who can help him multiply his $40 million into $200 million in the next 5-10 years?
"Or is it just a desire to blow it all away and these guys have no fear of losing it all and starting over?" Of course not. It's quite obvious really, if you think about it at all. Most boxers grow up without much money - and certainly have no experience with running a business. If you give a 20-year-old guy 2 million a year for five years, he'll accept that as how the world is, and is going to be. He will naturally spend millions on stupid things - as opposed to putting it in a low-yield, low-risk investment portfolio. When the tap gets turned off in a few years his BFF's will mostly vanish - as will the hot chick who wouldn't have looked twice at him without the money - and he will find his deferred tax bill under a pile of unopened letters. Not hard to work out.
Most people are awful with money and have little concept of planning and strategy. Especially many professional athletes.
The vast majority of people who win the National Lottery end up bankrupt. If you give a lot of money to a person who is accustomed to having very little, and doesn't really understand how money works, then they are likely to blow it. A boxer is a good candidate for this on many levels.