Oscar De La Hoya Cites Devastating โLoss to โคObscureโค Opponent as Career Low, Omitting Mayweather &โฃ Pacquiao
LOS ANGELES, CA – Boxing legend Oscar De โฃLaโ Hoya recently โคidentified a knockout defeatโฃ to Steve Forbes inโข 2003 as the “worst moment” of his professional career, a surprising revelation given his high-profile lossesโ to Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao. The โคomission of those more celebrated rivalsโ has sparked debate among fansโ and analysts, questioning the criteria behind De La Hoya’s โselection.
De La โHoya’sโค career, spanning from 1993 to 2008, wasโฃ marked by both impressive victories and painful defeats. While his bouts against Mayweather andโค Pacquiao were widely publicized and analyzed, the fight againstโ Forbes – a relatively unknown fighter at the time – occurred during a period when De La Hoya was transitioning between weight โclasses. this choice underscores the deeply personal nature โof athletic trauma, โwhere impact isn’t always measured โฃby fame โฃor fortune.
The Forbes fight, heldโค December 13,โ 2003, endedโฃ in a ninth-round technical knockout for De โla Hoya, marking โonlyโ the second loss of his career. In a recent interview, Deโ La Hoya explained the emotional โtoll ofโฃ the defeat, stating,โฃ “It was very hardโฆ I felt humiliated.” He elaborated onโค his struggles duringโข the fight, describing a frustratingโ inability to capitalize โฃon openings.โค “Manny Pacquiao would beโ right in โfrontโฃ of me. He would jab me 15 times, and then I would be ready to hitโข him, and he would be wide open, and I โcouldn’t pull the trigger.”
However, De La Hoya’s later encounters with Mayweather (2007) andโค Pacquiao (2008) were arguably more meaningful in terms of career trajectory and public perception. His loss toโ Mayweather was a unanimous decision, while the Pacquiao fight endedโข with De La โคHoya retiring on his stool after eight rounds, admitting Pacquiao had “beat โthe hell” out โofโ him. De La Hoya later told Larry โKing that Pacquiao’s beating was “a tough beating to get meโข outโค of the sport,” and that he felt like “a shell of myself.”
Despite the clear impact โขof those losses,โ De Laโ Hoya maintains that the Forbes fight remains his most difficult memory. The decisionโ highlights the subjective experience โof defeat and the โคlastingโค psychological effects โขof even โขseemingly โขlesser-known setbacksโฃ inโข a โfighter’s career. It remains โขto be โฃseen if this โคperspective will reshape theโ narrative โsurrounding De La Hoya’s legacy.