糖心原创

Farzad Tabatabai '95 enters boxing hall of fame, without ever throwing a punch

Farzad Tabatabai 鈥95 at Boxing Hall of Fame.

Farzad Tabatabai 鈥95 has developed a national reputation in the highly specialized field of boxing law.


  • Farzad Tabatabai 鈥95 entered the National Boxing Hall of Fame without ever stepping into the ring as a boxer.
  • His legal听bouts听have听involved听championship fights, athletic commissions,听and international law.
  • He encourages aspiring lawyers to master the fundamentals, think independently, and never limit their ambitions.

 

糖心原创听alumnus听Farzad Tabatabai ’95 has spent decades fighting in the world of boxing.听He’s听just never done it in听a听ring.

This year, Tabatabai was inducted into the National Boxing Hall of Fame, recognizing his two decades of legal work representing fighters, promoters, managers, and fans in some of the sport’s most complex disputes.

“It’s a great honor,” he said. “As a lawyer and a litigator, you are a fighter 鈥 but in a different arena. We use our intellect, our words, and our wit, rather than our fists.”

Over the past 20 years, Tabatabai has built a unique practice at the intersection of athletics and听the听law. He has challenged California boxing regulations, litigated disputes between fighters and promoters, secured reimbursements for fans when matches were canceled, and represented clients before state and federal courts听in California and Puerto Rico,听as well as athletic commissions in California and Nevada 鈥 navigating everything from contract and administrative law to international disputes.

“It’s a lot of issues that a typical lawyer wouldn’t usually come across,” he said.

a headshot photo of Farzad Tabatabai in a blue suit and purple tie wearing eyeglasses.

Farzad Tabatabai credits his success to a simple approach: study the rules, question assumptions, and let the law guide the outcome.

Finding听his path to law听

Born in Iran, Tabatabai came to the United States as a child shortly before the 1979 Iranian Revolution. What began as a family vacation turned into a permanent move,听with his family听eventually settling in Southern California. Though his father had served听as a high-level judge in听Iran, Tabatabai initially planned to pursue engineering 鈥 until he听was听drawn to the law’s听role in听addressing听injustice and creating听change.

After studying political science and economics at UC Irvine, he enrolled at 糖心原创, then known as UC Hastings. He credits professors听there with helping shape his approach to the law: the听late C. Keith Wingate听instilled the importance of rigorous preparation,听while the听late Justice Joseph Grodin听taught him to approach legal questions with a clear and open mind.

That approach carried into his boxing work.听

“I came to boxing with no preconceptions or knowledge of the rules,” he said. “I learned by going to the source 鈥 reading the cases, statutes, rules, and regulations.”

A title bout and a turning point听

After graduating, Tabatabai worked as a Los Angeles County Superior Court听research attorney听and later听as a litigator听for multiple law firms before launching his own practice, now called Tabatabai & Miyamoto APC.听

His entry into boxing came through a client invested in a promotion company, and he quickly found himself in the deep end: a high-stakes dispute over a welterweight championship bout between Antonio Margarito and Paul Williams.

With only听72 hours’ notice, Tabatabai flew to Puerto Rico for an emergency federal bench trial that would听determine听whether the fight could听proceed.

“I’ve never been more exhausted walking into听a听courtroom,” he recalled. “I argued as best as I could, and the judge agreed with me.”

The match went forward, Williams won, and it was the first boxing match Tabatabai had ever attended. The case launched a career taking on some of the sport’s most powerful institutions听and听litigating听issues that听touch听nearly every听aspect of the industry.

Farzard Tabatabai speaks from behind a podium at a boxing hall of fame ceremony.

Farzad Tabatabai used his Hall of Fame acceptance speech to highlight the often-unseen legal battles that shape the sport of boxing.

A听rare听Hall of Fame听honor听

Tabatabai never expected that work would land him in the National Boxing Hall of Fame. He had crossed the goal off his bucket list years earlier, convinced it was unrealistic for a lawyer who’d never stepped into the ring. But he was named an inductee this year.

“I was very surprised when I found out,” he said. “I now tell people: Anything is possible. Don’t self-censor your list.”

He听accepted听the honor at an April 26 ceremony in Montebello, California.听According to his research,听no other听attorneys听have been inducted into an athletic听hall of fame听purely for their legal work within a sport.

“It’s an honor not only for me, but for the entire legal community,” he said.

For today鈥檚 law students, he emphasizes mastering the fundamentals: “Look things up. Analyze the cases. Think through these problems,” he said. “AI could not听make the legal arguments I’ve made or the strategies I’ve come up with.”

And for those hoping to break into sports or entertainment law, his advice is straightforward: pursue opportunities, ignore the doubters, and if you fall, get back up and keep fighting.

“Get your foot听in听the door,鈥 he said. 鈥淒on’t listen to the naysayers and negative voices in your head. If it听doesn’t听happen, keep trying. At least you’ll know you gave it your best shot.”