Henry Garcia hasn’t been pleased with the conduct of Oscar De La Hoya.

The father of junior welterweight contender Ryan Garcia took aim at the founder of Golden Boy Promotions, which has been embroiled in a legal dispute with their star client for the past year.

The two were able to put aside their squabble for Garcia to return to the ring earlier this month against Oscar Duarte but the leadup to the fight was overshadowed by their animosity for each other. Garcia ended up stopping Duarte in eight rounds.

In a recent interview, the elder Garcia suggested that De La Hoya was taking credit for aspects of his sons’ career on which he only had a miniscule influence, including the making of the high-profile showdown between Garcia and Gervonta Davis in April. The fight, which ended with Davis knocking Garcia out in the seventh round, required the collaboration of various parties (promoters, networks, etc.), and Henry Garcia said the two most important people in getting that fight over the line was Davis’ longtime advisor, Al Haymon, the founder of Premier Boxing Champions, and Garcia’s attorney, Lupe Valencia.

“He needs to go to church, brother,” the elder Garcia said of De La Hoya in an interview with Punsh Drunk Boxing. “That’s the only solution I know. That’s what you need. Listen to your fighters, man. C’mon. You’re a promoter. We’re making money for you. Mario Lopez (on his podcast 3 Knockdown Rule) says, ‘I can’t believe that he (De La Hoya) made so much money for Canelo, he made so much money for Ryan.’

“Like c’mon brother. We made the fight happen. Not just De La Hoya. We all did. Al Haymon. You had DAZN involved, you had Showtime involved, you had Golden Boy involved, then you had the teams, Tank’s team involved, with [Leonard] Ellerbe, Ryan Garcia and his team, with Lupe Valencia. You had all these people involved. So, don’t say it’s Oscar, please don’t say that. OK? I know some stuff that will clear everything right away.

“I’ll just tell you this much,” Henry Garcia continued. “If it wasn’t for Al Haymon and Lupe, there wouldn’t have been a fight. And you can quote me on that. I don’t care if you have listened and I’mma tell you why because Al Haymon, not once did he talk to Oscar De La Hoya. They had something going on way back in the past and they don’t see eye to eye. So when you don’t see eye to eye with somebody, you go through the outside doors … but remember, man, everybody has to play a role and sometimes that saying goes, ‘You don’t have to like someone just because you work with them.’”

Sean Nam is the author of Murder on Federal Street: Tyrone Everett, the Black Mafia, and the Last Golden Age of Philadelphia Boxing.