Skip to main content
Boxing News
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Schedule
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Fight Schedule
  • Current Champions
  • Magazine

Follow us

  • YouTube YouTube
  • Instagram Instagram
  • Twitter / X Twitter
  • Facebook Facebook

© 2013—2025 Boxing News

Magazine

Felix Trinidad refuses to play a part in Oscar De La Hoya’s fantasy

Puerto Rican legend Felix Trinidad has poured cold water on any chance of a rematch against Oscar De La Hoya, with both men now 48 years old

Elliot Worsell

2nd September, 2021

Felix Trinidad refuses to play a part in Oscar De La Hoya’s fantasy
Action Images/Reuters/Steve Marcus

BRINGING much-needed sanity to a sport ever in danger of losing the plot this week is Felix ‘Tito’ Trinidad, who, unlike many of his peers, has revealed he will NOT be returning to the ring at the ripe old age of 48.

Goaded recently by Oscar De La Hoya, one of his former opponents, the Puerto Rican legend seems to have reacted the way any self-respecting fighter should when issued any such callout in their late forties: with pity.

“He (De La Hoya) was left with the desire, but I’m not coming back to boxing,” said Trinidad on Telemundo, via Carlos Narvaez/BoxingScene. “We offered Oscar the fight eight times. Eight times he had the opportunity to face me since I beat him on September 18, 1999 and he did nothing. I am already retired.”

In responding this way, Trinidad impressively takes the moral high ground and makes it – ‘it’ being retirement, of course – look easy. Though he too outstayed his welcome in the sport (as evident in a 2008 fight against Roy Jones Jnr, which really didn’t have to happen), Tito, it must be said, has successfully kept at bay the temptation to return in the past 13 years and has, as a result, remained a fighter to be respected, not mocked.

Forty-eight-year-old De La Hoya, on the other hand, inactive since being stopped by Manny Pacquiao in 2008, has found that same stretch time far more difficult to navigate. It is perhaps why he now spends his time taunting old rivals (chiefly Trinidad and Floyd Mayweather, two men to have beaten him) in the hope of again feeling some sort of relevance or sense of purpose. It is perhaps why he is training to fight 44-year-old mixed martial artist Vitor Belfort on September 11 and, as its headliner, trying to flog what is without doubt one of the most tragic fight cards put together in many, many years.

More stories

Terence Crawford

Terence Crawford names the hardest fight of his career after announcing retirement

28 Dec, 2025
De La Hoya

Oscar De La Hoya names the most powerful puncher he faced in 45 fights: “He rattled me”

27 Dec, 2025
Muhammad Ali

Cus D’Amato said just one other fighter could match Muhammad Ali’s unbeatable mindset

27 Dec, 2025
D Wilder

Deontay Wilder names the opponents he wants in dangerous two fight plan: “I’ve called my manager”

27 Dec, 2025
Boxing News

Since 1909

Editorial

  • News
  • Live Coverage
  • BN Investigates
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Magazine

Boxing

  • Upcoming Fight Schedule
  • Current Boxing Champions

Company

  • About Boxing News
  • Contact us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy

Follow us

  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • X
  • Facebook
  • Google News
Copyright 2013—2025 Boxing News