Just looked into Mike Tyson's financial journey and honestly it's one of the wildest comeback stories in modern history. The guy went from being literally one of the richest athletes ever to filing bankruptcy, and somehow clawed his way back. Pretty fascinating stuff.



So here's the deal - during his boxing prime in the 1990s, Tyson was absolutely untouchable. We're talking $30 million per fight at his peak. Over his entire career he pulled in over $400 million, which is insane money even by today's standards. Back then he was basically printing cash. But then the classic story happened - bad decisions, worse management, extravagant lifestyle, legal issues. The whole thing imploded and he hit rock bottom with bankruptcy in 2003.

What's interesting is how he actually recovered from that. Most people would've stayed down, but Tyson reinvented himself. Got into entertainment, did that one-man show that actually worked, showed up in The Hangover and other films, grabbed endorsement deals. Then he made a really smart move getting into the cannabis space early. His company Tyson 2.0 is supposedly worth over $100 million now, which is a completely different game than boxing.

There was also that exhibition fight with Roy Jones Jr. in 2020 that caught everyone off guard. PPV numbers were massive - over $80 million globally. People didn't expect that kind of commercial success but it showed there's still serious interest in Tyson.

Current net worth sits around $10 million according to most estimates, which honestly seems low given everything he's built, but a lot of that wealth is probably tied up in the cannabis business rather than liquid assets. He's living in Vegas now, way more low-key than the mansion and tiger days. The contrast between where he was in the 1990s and where he ended up is pretty instructive about how fast fortunes can shift, but also how adaptability matters more than people think.
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