Golden Boy Promotions and Oscar De La Hoya are facing a pivotal stretch as pressure mounts on two of the company’s biggest names in the same week.
Vergil Ortiz Jr.’s proposed April 18 clash with Jaron “Boots” Ennis was effectively halted after a Nevada judge granted Golden Boy a temporary restraining order, pausing the bout while the contractual dispute plays out in court.
An emergency hearing is scheduled for Friday to determine whether Matchroom can proceed without Golden Boy’s involvement. A ruling is expected either Friday or early next week if the matter is not resolved beforehand.
Behind the scenes, the stakes are higher than a single fight date in Las Vegas.
The Ortiz Leverage Fight
Ortiz filed suit in January seeking to terminate his promotional agreement, arguing that Golden Boy’s contract requires the company to maintain an active broadcast agreement at all times. Golden Boy’s longtime streaming partner, DAZN, has reportedly tied renewal discussions to the Ortiz-Ennis fight being finalized.
Golden Boy counters that it signed Ortiz to a three-year deal in August 2024 after he won the WBC interim junior middleweight title, securing exclusive rights to negotiate his bouts.
In a separate action, the company is also seeking more than $10 million in damages from Ortiz’s manager, alleging interference with contractual and economic interests.
Sources have indicated there is still hope that the Ortiz-Ennis situation can be resolved before the hearing. However, there is also an expectation that Golden Boy may ultimately not be involved in staging the fight regardless of the outcome.
That possibility shifts leverage immediately.
Garcia Signals An Exit
As the Ortiz matter heads toward a courtroom decision, Ryan Garcia has publicly suggested his upcoming WBC title fight with Mario Barrios could be his final bout under the Golden Boy banner.
Garcia said he would be “sort of a free agent” afterward, reigniting questions about the stability of one of boxing’s most high-profile promotional partnerships.
The relationship between Garcia and De La Hoya has been strained before. As previously reported by World Boxing News, Garcia went public over a blocked Jake Paul fight, accusing Golden Boy of standing in the way of a bout he believed made commercial sense.
That episode exposed deeper tensions about control of career direction, and the latest comments suggest those issues are still close to the surface.
A Structural Squeeze
Golden Boy’s strength has long rested on controlling three levers: contractual rights, broadcast relationships, and star assets.
All three are being tested at once this week, years after Canelo Alvarez forced his way out in a similar public split with De La Hoya.
Ortiz’s future now hinges on contract language and broadcast obligations. DAZN’s renewal discussions are reportedly tied to the very fight a judge has paused. Garcia, meanwhile, is publicly signaling independence once his immediate obligation is met.
None of this guarantees a split. Contracts are enforceable instruments, and emergency hearings do not decide long-term futures on their own.
But boxing does not wait for paperwork to change before power shifts. It reacts to momentum.
De La Hoya is not just defending a contract in court. He is trying to hold position in a market that is becoming more aggressive, more consolidated, and less patient with the old ways of doing business.
Whatever the judge rules in the coming days, Golden Boy is navigating a moment where control of two major stars is being openly tested at the same time.
If both situations move beyond Golden Boy’s control, this won’t read as a difficult week. It will read as a turning point.
























