Muhammad Ali, 'the Greatest', dies aged 74
He was number 133 on the list.
Muhammad Ali, the three-time heavyweight champion who
proclaimed himself “the Greatest”, defied the US government over the Vietnam
war, and later became one of the most well-known – and loved – sportsmen in
history has died. He was 74.
Ali died late on Friday at a hospital in Phoenix, Arizona,
the family’s spokesperson Bob Gunnell said. His funeral will take place in his
home town of Louisville, Kentucky.
Ali was admitted to hospital on Thursday with a respiratory
problem – a move that was described at the time as “a precaution”. However,
reports emerged 24 hours later which said he had been placed on a life support
machine and his family “feared the worst”.
Ali had become increasingly frail since being diagnosed with
Parkinson’s disease in 1984, aged 42, and in recent years had limited his
public appearances. Earlier this month his brother Rahman Ali revealed that the
condition was so advanced he could barely speak or leave his house.
As a sportsman he will be remembered for many classic fights
– in particular beating the fearsome Sonny Liston to become champion; the Fight
of the Century and the Thrilla in Manilla against Joe Frazier, and the Rumble
in the Jungle in 1974 when, at the age of 32, he surprised everyone bar himself
by cutting down George Foreman in Kinshasa to regain back his title.
Paying tribute after his death, Foreman wrote: “Ali, Fraser
and Foreman we were one guy. A part of me slipped away.”
Another former world heavyweight champion, Mike Tyson,
wrote: “God came for his champion. So long great one.”
Tributes flooded in from the world of boxing, the wider
sporting community and well beyond them. The former US president Bill Clinton
described him as “courageous in the ring, inspiring to the young, compassionate
to those in need, and strong and good-humoured in bearing the burden of his own
health challenges”.
Ali’s influence out
of the ring was no less marked. Having appalled white America by converting to
the Nation of Islam and changing his name from Cassius Clay to Cassius X and
then to Muhammad Ali, he later refused to be drafted into the army, telling
reporters: “Man, I ain’t got no quarrel with them Vietcong.”
In 1967, still unbeaten and with no obvious challenger in
sight, Ali was stripped of his titles and for three-and-a-half years had to
scrape a living making campus speeches and appearing on Broadway. He lost his
best years as a fighter yet as the opposition to Vietnam war grew, so did Ali’s
popularity. By the mid 1970s he was the biggest sports star on the planet.
In his physical prime, a decade earlier, Ali had such grace
and foot speed that watching him perform almost became an extension of the
balletic arts. He won Olympic light-heavyweight gold as an 18-year-old at the
Rome Olympics and four years later, in 1964, he won the heavyweight title for
the first time by stopping Liston in a major upset. Challengers were dispatched
with a surgical beauty, although there was a vicious streak to him too: when
Ernie Terrell called him by his birth name, Cassius Clay, Ali shouted at him
“What’s my name?” as he inflicted a terrible beating.
In 1971, within five
months of his return in 1970, he earned a shot at his old title against
Frazier, but no longer was he as elusive or brilliant. A thrilling contest
ended with Ali suffering his first defeat, on points, after being dropped by a
left hook in the 15th round.
A loss to the fit but limited Ken Norton appeared to confirm
Ali’s decline – until, in 1974, he knocked out Foreman after using what he
called “rope-a-dope”; lying on the ropes to conserve energy as his opponent
punched himself out. Later, when Ali was asked when he should have retired, he
admitted it was after that fight.
But he ploughed on,
to a desperately gruelling decider with Frazier in Manilla which he won after
Frazier’s trainer Eddie Futch pulled his man out before the 15th round. Ali
would later call it the closest thing to dying he could imagine.
In 1978, after winning the title for a third time by
avenging a loss to Leon Spinks, Ali retired. When he dragged himself back into
the ring in 1980 to face his old sparring partner Larry Holmes, aged 38, he was
probably in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease. Tests carried out by the
Mayo Clinic found he couldn’t hop on one foot well and had trouble
co-ordinating his speech.
After a final fight, against Trevor Berbick in 1981, he retired
but three years later Parkinson’s disease was diagnosed. By the end of the
decade the speech of the man once dubbed “the Louisville Lip” for brash
predictions before fights was reduced to a mumble.
Ali was well enough to light the torch to start the 1996
Olympics in Atlanta, though his hands shook as a result of the disease taking
further hold. After that there was further retreat into privacy and prayer.
But even in death his legacy burns on.
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