Skip navigation
Site powered by
Latest news:
msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines: 9 die in Kosovo avalanche; child survives

Tyson gets $14 million,
but won't see any of it

Ex-champ settles with King,
but is $38.4 million in debt

Image: TysonAP
Mike Tyson will have to fight — and fight often — to get out of debt, despite the prospect of a $14 million payment from Don King to settle his claims against the promoter.

Mike Tyson will have to fight — and fight often — to get out of debt, despite the prospect of a $14 million payment from Don King to settle his claims against the promoter.

Tyson will drop his $100 million suit against King in exchange for the payment, but the former heavyweight champion will see none of the money. It will go toward paying some $38.4 million Tyson owes to various creditors, the Internal Revenue Service and his ex-wife, Monica.

To pay off the rest, Tyson’s attorneys have laid out a plan in federal bankruptcy court in New York under which Tyson will fight seven times over the next three years. The plan is ambitious, if only because Tyson has fought only twice in the last three years for a total of about eight rounds.

The first of those fights will be formally announced Tuesday at a news conference in Louisville, Ky. Tyson will take on unheralded Danny Williams on July 30 at Freedom Hall in a bout that will earn him several million dollars to help satisfy his debts.

Assuming Tyson, who will be fighting for the first time in 17 months, beats the British journeyman, he could fight again as soon as the fall. That could be against the likes of light heavyweight champion Antonio Tarver or Lamon Brewster, who holds the lightly regarded WBO heavyweight title.

“He wants to put the past behind him and believes he can be champion again,” Tyson’s manager, Shelly Finkel said. “And that would be a great story.”

The other part of Tyson’s story is well-known. The most feared boxer of his time, he spent three years in prison for rape and squandered some $300 million in purses over the years.

At the age of 38, he’s broke and living in a small house in Phoenix, where he’s in training. His two homes in Las Vegas are up for sale, with the proceeds already earmarked for the bankruptcy court fund to pay his numerous debts.

The settlement with King is a key part of solving Tyson’s financial problems. If the bankruptcy judge approves, King will pay $8 million up front, with another $3 million in January 2005 and $3 million more in January 2006.

Tyson had pinned his financial hopes on winning an even bigger settlement in court on his claims that King stole some $100 million from him while promoting Tyson after he got out of prison in 1995.

But although Tyson’s attorneys were confident in their case, they were concerned about how effective Tyson would be as a witness on his own behalf during a trial and whether King could win a jury over with charm.

For King, the settlement removes one more barrier between him and his former fighter. Since King controls many of the top heavyweights, there’s a good possibility he will end up promoting Tyson fights again.

Tyson, who once vowed never to fight for King again, said in an interview last week that he wouldn’t rule it out.

According to the plan filed Thursday in bankruptcy court in New York, Tyson will contribute the $14 million from King, an estimated $4.2 million from the sale of his two houses in Las Vegas, and $19.5 million from future fight purses to a fund to pay creditors.

Tyson’s first contribution will be a $2.475 million payment on Aug. 4, followed by a $2.31 million payment next Jan. 5. The biggest payment from the proposed series of seven fights will be in January 2006 when Tyson pays $4.95 million.

The IRS is Tyson’s biggest creditor, owed $18 million by the former champion. He also owes taxes in several different states, including $834,000 in Tennessee for his 2002 fight there against Lennox Lewis.

Under the plan, Tyson will also pay Monica Tyson $9 million, beginning with a $2.3 million payment when King makes his first payment. Monica Tyson will also get $750,000 from each Tyson fight.

Tyson also owes millions to unsecured creditors, who will be paid negotiated settlements totaling an estimated $10 million.

For King, the $14 million is the second big settlement he has made with an ex-fighter in recent months. In December he agreed to pay former 154-pound champion Terry Norris $7 million to settle a lawsuit.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

advertisement
More news
Image: Pekingese Palacegarden Malachy trots in ring at the 135th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show in New York
Reuters
Pekingese favored to be top dog

Robins: It’s the Year of the Dragon on the Lunar calendar, and this Chinese influence could extend to it also being the year of the Pekingese on the green carpet at the 136th Westminster Dog Show on Tuesday.

NY cable dispute blacks out Knicks, 4 NHL teams

NEW YORK (AP) - As the glow fades from the Giants' Super Bowl triumph, some New York sports fans are tuning in to basketball and hockey, with the Rangers in first place and the Knicks' overnight sensation, Jeremy Lin, sparking "Lin-sanity.''

Image:
AP
Six new breeds will join show at Westminster

Robins: This year, six new breeds will be making their debut on the green carpet for the Westminster Dog Show, which begins Monday.

Slide show
Image: Snee, 8, son of New York Giants player Chris Snee and head coach Coughlin's grandson plays in the confetti after the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots in the NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game in Indianapolis
  The Week in Sports Pictures
The Giants on top of the football world, getting ready for the London Olympics and more.

more photos

Slideshow
Boston Celtics v Indiana Pacers
  Who's hot on Twitter?
Check out which of your favorite athletes have the best pages and most followers!

NBCSports.com

Special feature
"American Woman: Fashioning A National Identity" Met Gala - Arrivals
When athletes and celebs get together
A look at the many links between sports and Hollywood stars.

NBCSports.com

Slideshow
Image: To match Special Report CAMPAIGN/ROMNEY-OLYMPICS
  Presidential candidates and sports
How do President Obama and his Republican rivals stack up when it comes to their sports backgrounds?