A gleeful revisitation of the world’s greatest boxer—Muhammed Ali, presents a nostalgic sneak peek into the boxing world’s most famous fighter’s fantastic rise and legacy.
The Legendary American boxer, also known as Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr., was arguably the world’s most famous boxer ever to don the boxing glove.
Overview
Date Of Birth: January 17, 1942,
Place Of Birth: Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.
Date Of Death: June 3, 2016, (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Aged: 74 years old
Profession: American Professional Boxer and Social Activist.
Awards And Honours: Golden Gloves • Olympic Games • Presidential Medal of Freedom (2005)
Notable Records: Ali was the first fighter to win the world heavyweight championship on three occasions and successfully defended it 19 times.
Background
Muhammed Ali, also known as Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr., grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, in Southern America during a time of segregated public facilities.
Cassius Marcellus Clay, Sr.’s father, was a painter, while his wife, Odessa Grady Clay, was a domestic worker.
In a family of four sons, Cassius Marcellus specialised in painting billboards and signs while his wife, Odessa Grady Clay, worked as a household domestic.
Gleeful Revisitation Of The World’s Greatest Boxer – Muhammed Ali
At 12, Cassius Clay found boxing his interest and started a career under the tutelage of Joe Martin, a policeman in Louisville.
After graduating from the amateur rank, the young Cassius Clay won a gold medal in the 175-pound division at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome, Italy.
Subsequently, he started his boxing career under the guidance and mentoring of the Louisville Sponsoring Group, a venture run by 11 successful white men.
Overview of Muhammad Ali’s Life and Career
Muhammed Ali (Cassius Clay)
In his early boxing days, he was more renowned for his charisma and great persona than his overwhelming ring skills.
He became interested in arousing public interest in his boxing skills by reading kiddies’ poetry and projecting self-eulogies like ‘Sting like a bee, float like a butterfly.’
He declared himself “the World’s Greatest,” but his journey to greatness in the ring was not entirely smooth.
Clay provoked boxing fanatics as much as he raved, which adversely affected his blistering boxing career.
Clay would lower his hands instead of defending punches by bobbing and waving out of danger during bouts.
It gave many who ascertained that he lacked accurate and efficient knockout power.
During this time, the opponents he was in the rings against had either long passed their best or those who had not passed the stages of mediocrity.
It worsened when Mohammad Ali failed to knock out his opponents in his proposed rounds, to the disdain of his critics.
On February 25, 1964, Cassius Clay challenged Sonny Liston for the world heavyweight championship.
Liston was widely regarded and respected for his intimidating figure, the most potent fighter in Ali’s era.
Despite Clay’s undaunting repose in his confidence, he was seen as an “underdog’ due to his antecedence and inexperience in fighting boxers of Liston’s calibre.
However, in one of the most stunning upsets in the history of sports and boxing, Liston was knocked out after six rounds, and Clay eventually became the heavyweight Champion.
After two days, Clay shook the whole boxing world by proclaiming that he had accepted Islam and the teachings of the Nation of Islam.
Subsequently, on March 6, 1964, his spiritual Mentor and father, Elijah Muhammed, renamed him ‘Muhammed Ali.’
Mohammad Ali dominated the boxing world for the following three years, incredibly and overwhelmingly, as any sportsperson would have done during his prime.
On 25th May 1965, Ali had a rematch against Liston and knocked him out in the first round.
This was followed by victories over Floyd Patterson, George Chuvalo, Henry Cooper, Brian London, and Karl Mildenberger.
On November 14, 1966, in a fight against Cleveland Williams, Ali threw over 100 punches and scored four knockdowns.
The victory over Cleveland Williams was followed by two consecutive wins over Ernie Terrell and Zora Folley.
Then, on the 28th of April 1967, exercising his Islamic beliefs, Ali refused an invitation into the U.S. Army during the war in Vietnam.
His shocking refusal came after a blunt declaration made by Ali 14 months earlier: “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Vietcong.”
A declaration many Americans angrily frowned at.
However, Ali’s position was controversial when most Americans were in support of the ongoing war in Southeast Asia.
Gleeful Revisitation Of The World’s Greatest Boxer – Muhammed Ali
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/boxing/36452615
There were exemptions from Military Service on religious grounds for objectors who met the proposed requirements.
However, Muhammad Ali was not eligible and qualified for such an exemption because he had already pledged to participate in any Islamic holy war.
Consequently, Ali was stripped of his championship medal and prevented from fighting in the United States for three-and-a-half years.
Additionally, on June 20, 1967, he was criminalised and convicted of a crime, sentenced to five years with an option of bail.
Surprisingly, four years passed before his conviction was collectively overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court, which was described as a “narrow procedural ground.”
As the 1960s continued to be plagued with turbulence, Ali’s influence on American society became stronger.
Ali’s message of Black pride and resistance to white domination was seen as cutting-edge in the civil rights movement.
Having rejected an invitation to the United States Army, he also posited that “unless you have an excellent reason to kill, war is wrong.”
Julian Bond, a black activist, later observed this: “When a figure as heroic and beloved as Muhammed Ali stood up and said, “No, I won’t go, “it reverberated through the whole society.”
The ban ended in October 1970, and Ali was allowed to return to the boxing ring, but his boxing skills had eroded.
He could no longer depend on his legs, which could carry him for 15 rounds.
Switching and twisting were no longer as sharp as they used to be.
Meanwhile, Ali recorded comeback wins against Jerry Quarry and Oscar Bonavena.
Gleeful Revisitation Of The World’s Greatest Boxer – Muhammed Ali
On the 8th of March 1971, came against Joe Frazier, who became Heavyweight champion during Ali’s ban.
The fight was tagged ”fight of the century” due to the intensity, which Frazier won in the 15th round.
Following the loss to Joe Frazier, Muhammad Ali won ten straight consecutive fights, eight out of them against world-class opponents.
Then on the 31st of March 1973, Ali was defeated by not-well-known boxer Ken Norton, who broke Ali’s jaw in the second but was later defeated by Ali in the rematch.
After that, Ali fought Joe Frazier again and won on a unanimous 12-round decision.
Technically, the rematch between Mohammad Ali and Joe Frazier was arguably Ali’s best outing in the ring after his ban from the game.
A bout between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman, who had previously ousted Frazier in 1973 to become heavyweight champion of the world, came on the 30th of October, 1974.
The fight was themed “Rumble in the Jungle” by Ali. The fight was valued at an unexpected location in the Democratic Republic of Congo< formerly known as Zaire in Africa.
Ali was greeted with a great reception by the people of Congo, which encouraged and inspired him to knock out George Foreman in the eighth round to win back his heavyweight title.
It was in this fight that Ali used a tactic once employed by a former great boxer, Archie Moore.
More named the strategy “the turtle,” but Ali called it “rope-a-dope.”
The tactic was against moving around the ring. Instead, Ali sat back and leaned back into the rope to avoid Foreman’s heavy punches.
In the next two and a half years, at the pinnacle of his boxing career, Ali fought nine times.
He was a courageous fighter who feared not fighting the best in the business, but gradually, it was evident that he was already on the decline.
The most famous of his fights that involved Ali and Joe Frazier in the Philippines was on the 1st of October, 1975, their third time in the ring.
The world of boxing regarded the bout as the greatest prizefight in the history of boxing.
Muhammad Ali won when Joe Frazier’s ringside called a halt to the fight after heavy blows in the 14 rounds.
Ali’s final performances in the ring were pathetic to recall.
In 1978, he lost his Leon Spinks, an amateur boxer who had just won an Olympic gold Medal and had only seven professional fights to his name.
Ali reclaimed his championship after seven months in a 15-round victory over Spinks.
Then he retired, but after two years, he made a U-turn and suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of Larry Holmes after 11 rounds.
Gleeful Revisitation Of The World’s Greatest Boxer – Muhammed Ali
In 1981, his final bout was a decision loss to Trevor Berbick, but Ali’s name is already inked with a golden pen as one of the greatest fighters, ever lived.
Although others have equalled his record of 56 wins and five losses with 37 knockouts, his opponents’ calibre and dominance during his prime ranked him on the same summit as boxing immortals.
Ali’s most visible ring qualities were speed, excellent footwork, and willingness to take punches.
Muhammad Ali’s latter years were marred with illness.
Damages to his brain sustained from heavy punches, which resulted in slurred speech and slowed and stiffed movement, are visibly the symptoms of Parkinson’s syndrome.
However, Ali’s religious beliefs changed over time.
In the 1970s, he started to study the Holy Quran and became a devout Muslim.
His initial submission to the teaching of Elijah Muhammed, e.g., “the white people are devils, and there is no heaven and hell,” was ignored as people embraced spiritual preparation for his afterlife.
In 1984, Ali publicly refuted Louis Farrakhan’s separatist doctrine, proclaiming:
“What he teaches is not at all what we believe in. He represents the time of our struggle in the dark and confusion, and we don’t want to be associated with that at all.”
In 1986 Ali married his fourth wife, Lonnie (née Yolanda Williams).
He had nine children who avoided being associated with the path their father (Ali) was treading.
However, one of his daughters, Laila Ali, became a professional boxer.
She was undefeated in her 24 consecutive fights between 1999 and 2007, and he won many titles in various weight classes.
Ali’s name became a force to reckon with in boxing.
Despite his later years marred by the deadly disease, he still managed to gain recognition in the social world for his nonviolent resistance movement.
He became an advocate for black people’s rights in the United States.
In 1996, Ali was honoured to light the Olympic flame at the start of the Games of the XXVI Olympiad in Atlanta, Georgia.
This magnanimous goodwill confirmed him as one of the most beloved athletes in the world.
The turbulent period of his life from 1964 to 1974 was the basis of the film Ali (2001), in which Will Smith starred as the boxer.
His life story was told in the documentary film I Am Ali (2014), which includes audio recordings he made throughout his career and interviews with his intimidating and self-assuring stances.
In 1990, he was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame’s inaugural class.
In 2005, the President of the United States of America awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Gleeful Revisitation Of The World’s Greatest Boxer – Muhammed Ali