7 rich athletes who lost their fortunes

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Apr 25, 2002
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#1
http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=ys-investopediamoneyloss031010&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Almost 80 percent of National Football League players are flirting with bankruptcy two years after they retire, according to Sports Illustrated. NBA players aren’t faring much better. 60 percent of former National Basketball Association players end up broke within five years of retirement. Athletes squander millions of dollars due to bad decisions, lavish spending and poor financial planning. Here is a list of athletes that have lost their fortunes through some of the biggest financial blunders of all time.

Scottie Pippen

Known more for his on court defense than his off court business sense, former Chicago Bulls star Scottie Pippen lost $120 million in career earnings due to poor financial planning and bad business ideas. Air Jordan’s sidekick blew $27 million on bad investments and spent $4.3 million on a Gulfstream II corporate jet.

Evander Holyfield

Four-time boxing champ Evander “The Real Deal” Holyfield reportedly made over $250 million in cash during his boxing career, but despite this he reportedly is flat broke. Holyfield lost all his money by making “smart” business decisions look really foolish. You thought buying a house was a smart move? It normally is, but not when you buy a house the size of Rhode Island. Holyfield bought a $20 million house with over 54,000 square feet and 109 rooms. The house has 11 bedrooms, 17 bathrooms, a movie theater, a bowling alley and an Olympic-size swimming pool. Imagine how much it must cost to cut the grass on all 235 acres! You could buy a Range Rover with the electric bill payment alone.

Lenny Dykstra

Former New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies star Lenny “Nails” Dykstra was a success on the baseball diamond, but in the business field Dykstra has struck out. Dykstra’s failed businesses include car washes, a magazine company, real estate investing and a stock trading website. According to Dykstra’s July 2009 bankruptcy filing, he owed more than $30 million to creditors, including his $18.5 million purchase of Wayne Gretzky’s home. The amazing part is that after two foreclosed homes and numerous failed businesses Dykstra is offering the investment advice that led him into bankruptcy for a mere $899 a year! In the investment world, it is often said that past history does not dictate future performance. Nevertheless, it’s pretty clear Dykstra isn’t the guy to go to for advice.

Latrell Sprewell

Look up the word “shortsighted” in the dictionary and you will see a picture of Latrell Sprewell. He famously turned down a $21 million contract because he said it wasn’t enough money to feed his family. Sprewell, who made over $96 million during his career, lost his $1.5 million dollar Italian yacht, named “Milwaukee’s Best”, in 2007. According to MSNBC, a U.S. marshal seized the yacht after Sprewell defaulted on his mortgage. His $5.4 million house went into foreclosure in May 2008. Don’t blame Sprewell for turning down the three-year, $21 million contract though. I mean really, who could live off a measly $7 million a year?

John Daly

Two-time PGA major champ John Daly gambled away between $50 and $60 million in career earnings, according to his 2006 autobiography. Daly once lost $1.65 million in five hours playing the slot machines at a casino. If you think that’s impressive, there’s more. Daly blew $1.2 million in a mere two hours and 30 minutes at a casino in Las Vegas. He just had his $1.6 million house foreclosed on. Did Daly quit gambling after blowing so much cash at the casino tables? Not by a long shot. Instead, he decided to downgrade from the $5,000 slot machines to the $100 and $500 machines. It looks in John Daly’s world, that is considered sound financial planning.

Jack Clark

Former professional baseball slugger Jack Clark was driven into bankruptcy in 1992 by his appetite for luxury cars. According to his bankruptcy filing, he owned 18 luxury automobiles, including a $700,000 Ferrari and a Rolls Royce. Clark was trying to pay 17 car notes simultaneously, and whenever he got bored with a car he would get rid of it and just buy another one. He ended up losing million-dollar homes and his drag-racing business because of his extravagant spending habits, but despite one of the most publicized bankruptcies in baseball, Clark reportedly got back on his feet in the late ’90s.

Mike Tyson

The king of them all is boxer Mike Tyson, who squandered a $350 million to $400 million dollar fortune. So what did “Iron” Mike spend his fortune on? Everything. He dropped half a million dollars on a 420-horsepower Bentley Continental SC with lamb’s wool rugs, a phone and a removable glass roof. It is one of only 73 Bentley Continental SCs ever built. The sad part is that’s not even the only Bentley that Tyson owned! He spent over $4.5 million dollars on cars alone. Throw in a $2 million dollar bathtub and $140,000 for two Bengal tigers and you can see why Tyson’s fortune is down for the count. He filed for bankruptcy in 2003.
 
Oct 23, 2009
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I guess many of the bad business ideas come from them thinking they could just throw their name on a brand and have instant success. The truth is Jordan, Magic and others have been so involved in the day to day operations so that their businesses could succeed. Many of these guys say hey I'm gonna open up a restaurant and let someone run it for me while I sit back and get paid. I have no pity for those who just squander their money away on stupid shit.
 
May 9, 2002
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#3
This is why I laugh when people say "he should have gone into the draft last year....he would have gotten 10 million dollars and be set for life! Even his kids would be set for life!"

10 million is a lot of money....until you have it.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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When you give a kid with a high school education (optimistic) who’s never had money before that kinda money I don’t think we should be surprised at how much they lose.
 
Oct 23, 2009
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#5
^I was just thinking that the MLB, NBA and NFL should make it mandatory for all players to go through some financial management meetings but it wouldn't work....young guys don't give a fuck except how much money their next contract is gonna be. In the NFL they don't even care about the NFLPA meetings even though their involvement affects their future after football. I read an article saying that the players vote the senior guy on the team as their team rep because they want him to go to Hawaii at the end of the year.
 
Mar 16, 2005
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^I was just thinking that the MLB, NBA and NFL should make it mandatory for all players to go through some financial management meetings but it wouldn't work....young guys don't give a fuck except how much money their next contract is gonna be. In the NFL they don't even care about the NFLPA meetings even though their involvement affects their future after football. I read an article saying that the players vote the senior guy on the team as their team rep because they want him to go to Hawaii at the end of the year.


they do, as well as rookie seminars on how to stay out of trouble, choose financial advisors wisely, etc...
 
Jun 27, 2005
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^I was just thinking that the MLB, NBA and NFL should make it mandatory for all players to go through some financial management meetings but it wouldn't work....young guys don't give a fuck except how much money their next contract is gonna be. In the NFL they don't even care about the NFLPA meetings even though their involvement affects their future after football. I read an article saying that the players vote the senior guy on the team as their team rep because they want him to go to Hawaii at the end of the year.
All NBA rookies do go through financial planning courses
 
Jan 28, 2005
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#12
Not being surprised is really setting the acceptable standard for how smart we are as a species pretty low.
or more precisely as a nation. I know my generation alone values dollars over education. Not to say money isn't important, but it doesn't amount to much if you're not smart enough to keep what you have or to continue making more.

I look at the next generation- all my friends little brothers and sisters- and they're even worse.
 
Jul 6, 2008
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i gotta put kenny anderson on there that dude has financial problems.

also, got to put any athlete that owes money on child support to many multipe baby mommas with many childrens.

the child support kills your money quick and that shit lasts for 18 years.
 
Jul 6, 2008
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#14
you guys need to look up david vaughan, taht dude had millions and ended up homeless. can u imagine a 7 footer being on the streets.
 

phil

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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#15
^I was just thinking that the MLB, NBA and NFL should make it mandatory for all players to go through some financial management meetings but it wouldn't work.
actually it should be mandatory in high school for graduation. art and phys ed are, but financial responsibility? its not even offered in a lot of schools. sad.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#19
Why do I feel like some of yall feel bad for these guys? They're idiots, or just really really, really really, down on their luck. They should be thankful for the oppurtunity they had and be sweeping our sidewalks right now. Instead they're filing for bankruptcy and doing tv interviews and Oprah specials so that they can make money on how idiotic they were and not work. The eses down the block looking for ANYTHING they can get for a wage deserve more respect then these cockroaches.

Bourgeois?

Fuck them.

Why is it someone's responsibility to teach these guys that they could live off one year's salary for the rest of their life? If you made $10M a year would YOU go blow money on a corporate jet or invest in your family, your responsibility. God can only hope Latrell Sprewell Jr. has a college education fund.

Im sorry but this shit is ridiculous. Mike Tyson can come clean my room if he want to live lavish. But you know what? He's Mike Tyson, he can surround himself with bad people and his name and make money off appearances in comedies about middle-aged upper class white bachelors going to Vegas and listening to Usher for the weekend. If only the WBA had a class so he could learn to have a savings account while he was busy kicking ass and raping and pillaging women...
 

NAMO

Sicc OG
Apr 11, 2009
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#20
I thought Scottie was Pimpin?

anyway, if you get 10 million dollars and can't manage to save/invest/grow/keep your money, you don't deserve it.