Floyd Mayweather has been dealing with one financial crisis after another over the past several months. Lawsuits, unpaid bills, tax liens, rent disputes, and even criminal charges have been piling up around the boxing legend. For someone with his level of fame and a reportedly massive fortune, the situation looks surprisingly messy.
So when a quick $7 million payday was suddenly ripped away from him — just hours before it was supposed to happen — it stung in a very real way.
A Fight in Greece That Never Made It to the Ring
Mayweather was booked to step into the ring this past Saturday in Greece. His opponent? Mike Zambidis, a retired 44-year-old Greek kickboxing star. It was a six-round exhibition match — not a title fight, not a professional comeback. Just the kind of low-stakes, high-profit event that “Money” Mayweather has become known for since hanging up his gloves professionally back in 2017.
The plan was simple: use his famous name, his perfect undefeated record, and the public’s curiosity to put on a show and collect a big check.
And the check was going to be very big.
According to court filings, the promoter — a company called Front Row — had already handed Mayweather $3 million upfront, plus covered travel costs for his team. With additional deals factored in, Floyd’s total take could have reached at least $10 million. That means roughly $7 million more was still on the table, waiting to be collected after the fight.
His manager, Walter Jordan, also noted in court documents that Floyd personally spent $250,000 on training camp to prepare for the Zambidis fight — money that now can’t be recovered.
Then the fight got canceled.
The Lawsuit That Pulled the Plug
A company called CSI Sports Events took legal action against Mayweather in federal court in New York, claiming breach of contract. That lawsuit is what ultimately stopped the Greece event from happening.
Here’s what CSI is claiming: they had a deal with Mayweather to produce two major events. The first was an exhibition fight against Mike Tyson. The second was a professional rematch against Manny Pacquiao. According to CSI, Mayweather was not allowed to fight anyone else until he honored his Tyson commitment first.
CSI says they advanced Mayweather $4.5 million toward his guaranteed earnings for both events. They’re now seeking nearly $7 million in damages from Mayweather and a company called Frist Apex Ventures.
The Numbers Were Enormous
The fights CSI was planning weren’t small deals. According to the lawsuit, here’s what Mayweather was supposedly set to earn:
- Tyson exhibition: $14 million total, including a $2 million advance already paid
- Pacquiao rematch: $35 million plus 20% of pay-per-view revenue — or a flat $50 million if there was no pay-per-view deal
- If Pacquiao was unavailable: $20 million plus pay-per-view percentage, or a $25 million flat fee
Even by Floyd Mayweather’s standards, those are massive numbers. It also explains why CSI moved so aggressively to stop the Zambidis bout — they weren’t just protecting one fight. They claim they had locked up Floyd’s entire near-term fight pipeline.
A Netflix Deal Made Things Even More Complicated
There’s another layer to this story that makes it even messier.
CSI alleges that Mayweather separately signed a deal with a company called EverWonder for a Pacquiao fight to be streamed on Netflix. That deal reportedly promised him $24.75 million, including a $2.75 million advance and a potential $3.75 million bonus.
The problem? CSI claims Mayweather accepted advance payments from both CSI and EverWonder for what was essentially the same Pacquiao fight. On top of that, it’s alleged that Frist Apex — acting on Mayweather’s behalf — also took an additional $5.8 million advance from a third-party lender tied to the EverWonder contract.
Frist Apex keeps popping up in a very interesting way. In Floyd’s own $175 million lawsuit, he claims Frist Apex helped divert his money and assets away from him. But in the CSI lawsuit, that same company is described as acting as his representative in fight negotiations. It’s a tangled web.
Why This Hits Especially Hard Right Now
The timing of all this couldn’t be worse for Mayweather.
Over recent months, he’s been hit with a $7.3 million IRS tax lien, sued over $330,000 in unpaid rent on a luxury Manhattan apartment, and hit with felony charges connected to an alleged $200,000 bad check used to buy a watch. He’s also filed his own massive lawsuits, claiming former business partners helped steal money, real estate, a private jet, and over $100 million in jewelry.
In the middle of all that chaos, a clean $7 million exhibition payday — one that was set to land this weekend — would have been a welcome shot of cash.
Instead, it’s gone.
Big Paydays Ahead — But the Road Is Blocked
Floyd Mayweather still has the star power to command enormous fees. The Tyson exhibition could bring $14 million. A Pacquiao rematch could bring $35 to $50 million. But right now, every major fight on his radar is caught up in legal battles.
The bigger paydays are still theoretically possible — but getting from a signed contract to actual money in hand has become the real challenge.
The Bottom Line
Floyd Mayweather built a career on making smart, calculated moves inside the ring and out. But right now, his financial life looks anything but clean. A $7 million check that was supposed to arrive this weekend has vanished, buried under lawsuits and contract disputes.
He can still attract massive fight deals. The question is whether he can untangle the legal mess around him fast enough to actually collect.

