Breaking NewsSponsored by The Sullivan Auto Group

Subscribe: Home Delivery Special!
Last Updated 12:19 am PDT Saturday, May 3, 2008
Story appeared in section, Page C1
LOS ANGELES - You could say his business career began here, on the other side of the river. He was a mere mocoso - a snot-nosed youngster - toiling the gritty blocks of East Los Angeles while pushing an ice cream cart and selling his wares for spare change.
Off in the hazy distance, across the bridges connecting the barrio to downtown Los Angeles, twinkling skyscrapers teased. So close, yet so far was never more apt than for a kid wanting to lift himself out of "East Los" and set up shop downtown as a successful businessman.
Oscar De La Hoya, now 35, was that kid harboring that seemingly impossible American dream. Consider it realized. Many times over. Because instead of hawking ice cream from a cart, De La Hoya now owns an 11-story building in the heart of downtown, on the corner of Wilshire and, appropriately enough, Hope.
The Golden Boy, a gold medalist in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, has gone corporate. No longer merely some multimillionaire world champion boxer with a smile as disarming to Madison Avenue as Los Angeles' downtown library tower is tall, De La Hoya has become a business entity unto himself.
Having made some $225 million in the ring, he has stakes in such varied business interests as real estate, publishing, sports and entertainment, and grocery stores, and he is eyeing banking.
Lest you forget, at the core of the Golden Boy business empire is what got him here - boxing.
Which is why, two days before what he says is the first of the last three fights of his Hall of Fame career, the third floor of the Golden Boy Building was a beehive of activity.
De La Hoya, a 10-time world champion in six weight classes who has not fought since losing a split decision to Floyd Mayweather Jr. a year ago, will meet former lightweight titlist Steve Forbes tonight in a junior-middleweight bout at the 27,000-seat Home Depot Center.
It is De La Hoya's first fight in the Los Angeles area since 2000. It is being shown on HBO, rather than pay per view, and tickets were sold for as little as $25. The promotion is billed as De La Hoya's homecoming.
Yet there is a melancholy feeling to it all. De La Hoya, who lives in Puerto Rico with wife Millie and two of his children, has long struggled with acceptance from Los Angeles' burgeoning Latino community, despite his heritage and fistic and fiscal success.
"It all started when I fought (Julio Cesar) Chavez," in 1996, De La Hoya said of the bloody mess he made of the Mexican legend in 1996 with a fourth-round stoppage.
"It all started when I fought (Julio Cesar) Chavez," De La Hoya said of his bloody fourth-round technical knockout of the Mexican legend in 1996. "A lot of things I've done have been overshadowed by, I don't want to say hate, but a lot of negativity."
Long labeled a sellout since simply moving from his old neighborhood to nearby Montebello and for the, ahem, unpardonable sin of professing his love for golf, De La Hoya has battled perception problems within his own community. That made a chance encounter last Saturday at Dodger Stadium, where he threw out the ceremonial first pitch, all the more telling.
"This homeboy with a shaved head and tattoos on his forehead came up to me and said, 'Hey, you beat Chavez, my idol. But that's OK, because you've shown you deserved it.' "
There have been a few breakthrough moments over the years, such as his racially charged fight against Fernando Vargas in 2002. Vargas claimed he was the "real Mexican," only to be knocked out in the 11th.
More vindication has come with De La Hoya's charitable foundation, as he has poured millions back into his community. He opened a youth center on the Eastside, a neonatal and cancer treatment center in his late mother's name and a charter school in his name is scheduled to open in fall 2009.
"I'm not sure if I've won them over," De La Hoya said, "but I hope I've left with them with (a good feeling)."
De La Hoya was in peril of becoming another boxing cautionary tale early in his career. Wild spending, legal issues and partying were the culprits. Then he met Swiss banker Richard Schaefer, an uncle by marriage to one of De La Hoya's oldest friends.
Continue reading on next page
About the writer:
- Call The Bee's Paul Gutierrez, (916) 326-5556.
Unique content, exceptional value. SUBSCRIBE NOW!
RELATED STORIES
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Site Map | Advertise | Guide to The Bee | Bee Jobs | FAQs | RSS
Contact Us | e-edition | Subscribe | Manage Your Subscription | E-newsletters | Sacbeemail | Archives
sacbee.com | Sacramento.com | Capitol Alert | SacMomsClub.com | SacPaws.com | SacWineRegion.com
Copyright © The Sacramento Bee
2100 Q St. P.O. Box 15779 Sacramento, CA 95816 (916) 321-1000