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MockTurtle

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Boxing: Ali at 65
« on: January 17, 2007, 03:57:14 AM »
Boxing: Ali at 65
Muhammad Ali's birthday today is a time to celebrate his genius - and to reflect on the terrible sadness of his life

By James Lawton, Chief Sports Writer
Published: 17 January 2007



No one ever gave more of himself than Muhammad Ali - and anyone who saw him will never forget his fabulous gift There was a time, and it is not so distant, when it seemed almost enough to have Muhammad Ali in the same room, the same arena. However much he was reduced, however fleeting the evidence that came in some childish magic trick or mischievous eyes that still shone out from a sudden, mugging glance, you could, if you liked, believe there was still something left of the uniquely superior spirit that captivated the world.

Today, though, the truth on his 65th birthday is that it is no longer possible to scratch through layers of memory and troubled conscience for even such thin and self-deceiving consolation.

Maybe it was always so. Perhaps for the last 20 years, some people, and especially those who came to Ali only on the descent from glory, have seen through too sentimental eyes a beautiful human wreckage when really it was just wreckage. No longer is it easy to doubt the evidence provided by his most recent public appearances. The magic of what he was, what he represented to members of every race and creed, no longer has the bare sustenance of a party trick or a sudden, tremulous stance.

It is clear he is fast declining now as those around him make the last "greening" of an unrivalled reputation, and whatever is written on the certificate, however equivocal the blame placed on the sport which was his vehicle for a greatness that swept him beyond every boundary, every prejudice on his way to becoming the most charismatic - and most fiercely loved - man of the 20th century, there is no longer any question about how and where and when the process gathered pace.

Some of the milestones and the place names will always be central to the legend of The Greatest. Madison Square Garden, 8 March 1971 when, after three and a half years of exile after his refusal to go to war in Vietnam, and at the age of 29, and with his legs no longer a wonder of athleticism he went into the ring with amazing haste to produce with Joe Frazier one of the greatest fights of all time. Ali lost for the first time but over 15 rounds no fighter ever said more about the endless welling of his spirit and the resilience of his talent. Kinshasa, Zaire, 30 October 1974, the Rumble in the Jungle, the victory over George Foreman that staggered the world in its brilliant pragmatism and warrior improvisation. Quezon City, the Philippines, 1 October 1975, when in the 14th round Frazier's superb trainer Eddie Futch halted the fight because his man's rage to go on had not deflected him from the fact that he could no longer see. It was after this fight that Ali said he had felt close to death.

However, it was maybe two years later, back in Madison Square, against the heavy-hitting Earnie Shavers that some of Ali's entourage began to understand that he was indeed into the process of destroying his health.

Certainly it was this fight which showed beyond any doubt that Ali's endless courage had become his last and most dangerous asset, that the damage of the years had carried him to his most critical point.

To be in New York at that time was to know beyond doubt that you had arrived at perhaps the most pivotal phase in the most astonishing story sport would probably ever know.

Few disputed that the great fighter was possibly one stumble away from the abyss. Later, it was revealed that Ali also carried that brooding sense into the ring. The veteran boxing writer, and Ali confidant, Jerry Izenberg recalled 14 years later, "I remember sitting with Ali in the old Hotel Statler across the street from the Garden. It was a day or two before he fought Shavers. We were alone and Ali said to me, 'Do you know how many years I've been fighting? Do you know how tired I am? Do you have any idea how hard that man is going to beat on my head tomorrow night?' And then I asked him, 'Why do you do it?' He didn't really give me an answer, although it was clear that money and glory and other people's expectations were all part of it.

"And then I said, 'let me tell you something. Do yourself a favour. Sit down and play back the roach-spray commercial you just made, because I listened to it 10 times before I could make out the word 'fog.' I couldn't understand what you were saying. And then take any of the tapes you made over the years and listen to your voice the way it used to be.' And I told him, 'You know there was once in this world a pathologist named Martland. And Martland might not have had all the answers, but it was his theory that if you stop fighting tomorrow, and never go into the ring again, it will take two more years for the disintegration of your brain to stop. That's something you should think about after you fight Earnie Shavers tomorrow night. Because it would be a horrible tragedy if you were to wind up punch-drunk, which is what Martland's syndrome is all about.'"

Martland's or Parkinson's syndrome? Boxing's most obdurate defenders will still opt for Parkinson's and point out that Ali's father, a signpainter in Louisville, was afflicted with the same illness, but however much you care for the oldest and most dangerous of games, it is impossible to shake off the memory of that night in the Garden when Shavers, the hard, shaven-headed man from Ohio, came out punching with such withering power. Looking back it has always seemed less of a fight and more of a parable about the folly of pride, and if not that, of the corrosive power of any addiction, in Ali's case that of a glory that only came from the basics of danger and challenge.

Shavers hit Ali so hard in the second round for a moment it seemed that boxing's most famous building was shaking on its foundations. Ali admitted later that no one apart from Frazier had hurt him so much.

It dictated his fight, which was mostly about evasion and smoke and mirrors, deft jabs and clever retreat and, from time to time, a point-stealing flurry of a combination, a feint and a hook. Then, at the end, Ali reminded every one of the audience, the old fight men and the newly initiated, why it was that the Garden was jammed to bursting point and that three-quarters of all switched-on televisions in the United States were tuned to the fight. Ali rose up in the last round and fought with all the majesty at his command, which despite the pain and that weariness he confided to an old friend, was still an awesome amount.

It was as if Ali had, briefly, stopped time, arrested his own physical decline and any seepage of nerve, and later Shavers, at first convinced he had won, spoke generously. He said, "Fighting Ali was hard for me to do because he is such a good man. He is my idol. Before we fought, he helped me out several times, letting me use his training camp for free, giving me advice on what to do against other fighters. I love him personally, and you hate to see a legend defeated. But at the same time I was fighting for my family and myself.

"It was a good fight. In the second round I hit him with a right hand that hurt him. He wobbled, and then he wobbled some more. But Ali is so good at conning I thought he was playing possum with me. I didn't realise how bad off he was. Later, when I watched the tape I saw it, but at the time I was fooled. He can do that; it was why he is Ali and why he could beat me."

In the victorious dressing room Ali screamed for the lights to be turned off. He said the light was like needles in his eyes. His fight doctor, Ferdy Pacheco, handed in his resignation. He said that Ali was killing himself, bit by bit. "Everything is being damaged," said Pacheco. "Your brain, your kidneys, your liver, even your bowels. I can't be part of this anymore." Teddy Brenner, the Garden match-maker, shook his head and said, "I never thought I'd live to see the day when Muhammad Ali's greatest strength was his ability to take a punch." Pacheco's pleadings went unheeded, even after he sent to the Ali camp the most disturbing laboratory report.

Pacheco recalled, "The Shavers fight was the final straw for me. After the fight Dr Nardiello, who was with the New York State Athletic Commission, gave me a laboratory report that showed Ali's kidneys were falling apart. Instead of filtering out blood and turning it to urine, pure blood was going through. This was bad news for the kidneys and since everything in the body is interconnected, we were talking about the disintegration of Ali's health. I wrote to Ali and attached copies to Herbert [manager Muhammad], Angelo [trainer Dundee] and Veronica [Ali's then wife] and I didn't get a single reply."

Ali had four more fights, losing three, to Leon Spinks, his former sparring partner Larry Holmes and the tragically starred Trevor Berbick, who was recently murdered in his native Jamaica. The Holmes fight, on the back lot of Caesars Palace, was really the end. Ali looked like a miracle when he came into the ring. But the effect was entirely cosmetic. He had been filled with diuretics, and later it was alleged that before the fight Ali had been tested at the famous Mayo Clinic, and that a report suggesting brain damage had been suppressed. Ali was a shell and Holmes pounded him for 11 rounds. Then it was over and even some strong men had tears in their eyes, tears of regret and maybe no little shame that they had any played any part, however minuscule, in the over-reaching of the greatest man they were ever likely to see.

One summer's day before the Holmes fight, Ali was encountered in his training camp in Deer Lake, a remote and beautiful location in Pennsylvania. He talked for hours about his last stand against Holmes, how he would overwhelm the psyche of a good but overmatched opponent - and the sweep of his career. He insisted his visitor join him for lunch. It was a good day, his faithful retainer Gene Kilroy revealed later, simply because he had been visited by a sportswriter. "Every day," said Kilroy, "he keeps asking, 'where are those guys, why aren't they coming?'"

They would never come again, not in their old volume, at least, and not in their expectation of deeds and style beyond the common imagination. Kilroy sat in the dusk and talked of earlier, more tumultuous days; he recalled how it was when the airplane was on its descent into Kinshasa, and Ali shouted back down the cabin, "Hey Kilroy, who do my kinfolk down there hate most in all the world?" Kilroy guessed that it might be the Belgians because of their often cruel colonisation of the Congo. When a huge crowd gathered at the airport Ali came down the steps of the plane with his fist in the air and with the declaration, "George Foreman is a Belgian."

That is the Ali Kilroy, and all those who were touched by a man who could create gridlock in any city street on earth simply by taking a stroll, will conjure for himself today. The toast will be the one that never varies, the one to grace and courage and a humour that lit up the world. And the one, maybe, to an understanding that sooner or later the world does indeed break everyone, in some way or another, and that sometimes it is those who have given more than anyone else who are hurt most.

Maybe it also means that today's celebration is inevitably poignant. It is that no one ever gave more of himself than Muhammad Ali - and that anyone who saw him will never forget the most fabulous gift.
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MockTurtle

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Re: Boxing: Ali at 65
« Reply #1 on: January 17, 2007, 04:08:33 AM »
Fighting talk
Last Updated: 2:42am GMT 17/01/2007


Muhammad Ali shoots from the lip...

Cassius Clay is a slave name. I didn't choose it and I don't want it. I am Muhammad Ali, a free name – it means beloved of God, and I insist people use it when people speak to me and of me.

Announcing his conversion to the Muslim faith after beating Sonny Liston in February 1964.

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I'm the greatest thing that ever lived. I'm so great I don't have a mark on my face. I shook up the world.

After fighting Liston in 1964.

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Get up sucker and fight. Get up and fight.

During the second Liston fight in May 1965.

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What's my name, fool? What's my name?

During Ernie Terrell fight, February 1967. Terrell had refused to recognise Ali's name change.
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I ain't got no quarrel with them Vietcong.

On refusing induction into the US armed services in 1967 during the Vietnam war.

I'll beat him so bad he'll need a shoehorn to put his hat on.
Prior to fighting Floyd Patterson in September 1972.
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I never thought of losing but, now that it's happened, the only thing is to do it right. That's my obligation to all the people who believe in me. We all have to take defeats in life.

After losing his fight to Ken Norton in March 1973.
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I'm so fast that last night I turned off the light switch in my hotel room and got into bed before the room was dark.

Before George Foreman fight in October 1974.
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Float like a butterfly sting like a bee, his hands can't hit what his eyes can't see.
Also before the Foreman fight in October 1974.
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It will be a killer and a chiller and a thriller when I get the gorilla in Manila.

Before the third Joe Frazier contest, the 'Thrilla in Manila', in October 1975.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/sport/2007/01/17/soaliq17.xml
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kban1

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Re: Boxing: Ali at 65
« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2007, 04:11:33 AM »
MT:

Wonderful finds -- Thank you for posting
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MockTurtle

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Re: Boxing: Ali at 65
« Reply #3 on: January 17, 2007, 04:37:59 AM »
thanks, kban.

here's a more realistic and critical take on Ali's life.

Boxing: Lord of the ring suffers as history is rewritten around him

Matthew Syed


Our correspondent believes that the legend surrounding 'The Greatest' continues to be wilfully distorted by the Establishment


 
The tributes that have been issued to greet Muhammad Ali’s 65th birthday on Wednesday provide further confirmation of how the legacy of the former heavyweight champion has been appropriated by the conservative establishment. His life is eulogised as that of a peace-loving, all-American hero. Few even allude to his subversive role in radicalising a generation of blacks and denouncing the war in Vietnam.
Inevitably, it was George W. Bush who epitomised the rewriting of history when he handed the former world heavyweight boxing champion the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005, the President’s eyes twinkling with suppressed excitement as he described Ali as a “man of peace” and having “a beautiful soul”.

Ali performed a little pirouette as onlookers grinned. In many ways, it represented the apogee of Ali’s rehabilitation in the eyes of white America and the culmination of the long and dubious process of historical revisionism.

 
 
Every nation fights for the way its heroes are remembered, but in the case of Ali it has been a knockout blow for the conservative elite, something that is rendered more poignant because Ali, quivering under the affliction of Parkinson’s disease, is in no fit state to have a say in the matter. In the eyes of a new generation, he is a *hi-esque caricature: non-controversial, utterly non-threatening and devoid of the contradictions that symbolised the deep divisions in postwar American consciousness.

The suspicion that Ali’s handlers have conspired in this anti-historical process is confirmed by the hagiographic Muhammad Ali Center in Kentucky, a temple inscribed with simpering platitudes and pacificatory iconography.

It is difficult to imagine that any youth who happened to strut in from the ghettos of downtown Louisville would leave with any authentic sense of the provocative role that Ali played in the ructions of the Civil Rights movement, or the polemical way he asserted his opposition to Vietnam: “No Vietnamese ever called me a nigger.” But even more disturbingly, the youth would walk away oblivious to the shocking fact that the cause to which Ali gave his puff has failed in many of its most basic objectives.

The 2000 census was unequivocal, recording the enduring concentration of poverty, drug abuse and criminality among black Americans. Is it any wonder that liberal intellectuals discern the rancid whiff of tokenism in the accolades that continue to rain down on the former champion?

Of course, many of Ali’s acolytes will be pleased that in the rush to sanitise him in the eyes of white America, some of the hypocritical aspects of his character have been glossed over. There is little mention of the fact that he proclaimed white people were “blue-eyed devils” while not only enjoying friendships with whites but also employing many in his vast entourage. Or that he evangelised about the value of liberty while courting some of the world’s most sadistic dictators, including Idi Amin, Ferdinand Marcos and President Mobutu.

Many will argue that Ali was misled by his devotion to the Nation of Islam, the black religious sect headed by Elijah Muhammad, but this hardly excuses the tendency to omit all reference to its implications. Although the Nation’s theology was crudely apocalyptic — it believed white people were congenitally unjust, having been bred in a malign historical experiment, and that blacks will be rescued from Judgment Day by a wheel-shaped spaceship — it was its policies on social housing and family values that captivated Ali and other disaffected blacks.

But even here there was hypocrisy. Ali followed the example of Elijah Muhammad in moralising about the virtues of sexual abstinence while living a life of rampant promiscuity. This was never better illustrated than at the Thrilla in Manila in 1975, when Ali caused a diplomatic incident at a presidential reception by introducing Veronica Porsche, his girlfriend, as his wife. Belinda Ali, who had put up with the boxer’s philandering for years, flew to the Philippines for an explosive confrontation. They divorced two years later.

Ali’s seminal historical influence derived not only from his sporting and oratorical genius but from his intuitive grasp of his country’s traumatic history. Martin Luther King started fully to comprehend the cultural and psychic depths of racial division only after the signing of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act. But this is something Ali understood deep in his bones and articulated with a poetic thrust that cut to the quick of a new generation of politically self-conscious African Americans.

But where is that melodious voice now? Who knows how Ali, freed from the terrible restrictions of Parkinson’s, would have pronounced upon the great issues that defined his era and have yet to be resolved? Who can tell how a new generation of black Americans would have reacted to his historical legacy had it not been drowned in a torrent of mushy and historically misleading sentimentality?

Ali’s tragic mistake was to ignore the evidence of his body after the bouts that left him urinating blood. He should have retired after his defeat of Joe Frazier in Manila, but no one was around to tell him. His vast entourage wanted him to box on, as did his religious mentors. Indeed, the wider world, still traumatised by Watergate and Vietnam, yearned for the escapism provided by Ali’s global roadshow, with its glorious pre-bout vaudeville.

But Ali would not have retired had the world begged him. As Ferdie Pacheco, his long-time physician, put it: “His tragedy was that he loved his life so much that he wanted to prolong it in the spotlight. The tragedy became that a man who could have been a tremendous leader for his people became muted by an illness caused by boxing. And that is when the Muhammad Ali I knew came to an end.”

 
 
In many ways, Ali delivered on his promise to shake up the world. He wielded a heady combination of sporting prowess, pungent oratory and breathtaking handsomeness to shape global consciousness for more than a decade. But we perpetrate a serious injustice upon the textured history of the era if we accept the onedimensional parody that has become the conventional wisdom.

And we will fail to understand the love, fear and loathing he inspired if we ignore his many contradictions.

The greatest? Yes, warts and all.

Ali on Vietnam

“Why should they ask me to put on a uniform and go 10,000 miles from home and drop bombs and bullets on brown people while so-called Negro people in Louisville are treated like dogs?”

Ali on race

“I am America. I am the part you won’t recognise, but get used to me. Black, confident, cocky — my name, not yours. My religion, not yours. My goals. Get used to me.”

“Cassius Clay is a slave name. I didn’t choose it and I didn’t want it. I am Muhammad Ali, a free name — it means beloved of God — and I insist people use it when speaking to me and of me.”

Ali on his opponents

“Frazier is so ugly that he should donate his face to the US Bureau of Wildlife.”

“If you even dream of beating me you’d better wake up and apologise.” (To various challengers)

Ali on Ali

“I’m so fast that last night I turned off the light switch in my hotel room and was in bed before the room was dark.”

“I figure I’ll be champ for about ten years and then I’ll let my brother take over — like the Kennedys down in Washington.”



Ali on boxing


“Boxing is a lot of white men watching two black men beat each other up.”

“I hated every minute of training, but I said, ‘Don’t quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion.’ ”

Friend and foe

Joe Frazier (former world heavyweight champion)

“The Butterfly and me have been through some ups and downs and there have been lots of emotions, many of them bad. But I have forgiven him. I had to. You cannot hold out for ever. There were bruises in my heart because of the words he used. I spent years dreaming about him and wanting to hurt him. But you have got to throw that stick out of the window. Do not forget that we needed each other, to produce some of the greatest fights of all time.”

Angelo Dundee (Ali’s trainer)

“If I had to pick one memory from my years with Muhammad, it would be the Thrilla in Manila. The two men were fighting under a tin roof in the kind of heat that you can scarcely imagine. But Muhammad went toe to toe for 14 rounds of the most intense action you ever saw. He sucked up energy from nowhere and channelled it into a performance that left Frazier — a great fighter with a difficult style for Muhammad — out on his feet. I was his trainer, but I could not tell you how he did it. That is the thing about the man. Even after all those years together, he still possessed the power to shock.”


Neil Allen (Boxing Correspondent of The Times during the Ali years)

“The last Ali fight I covered for The Times was his third battle with Ken Norton in 1976. I managed to get into the dressing-room as Ali was undergoing an examination by Ferdie Pacheco (his doctor). Ali said, ‘I’m so tired. My nose might be broken and my ribs may be bust, but that’s not what it’s all about. It’s just that I am so tired, so tired to death, that I don’t think I have it any more. I can see the things to do, but I can’t do them. Should I quit, Doc?’ Pacheco nodded and muttered that it was high time. But you could see he believed he was wasting his breath. Ali was not going to stop for anyone. That is why his descent into illness was almost inevitable.”

Anthony Badger (Professor of American History at Cambridge University)

“Ali symbolised the new, aggressive approach of black America in the 1960s. He surfed the wave of heightened militancy as African-Americans sought to dictate the timetable of racial change, something that even liberals believed would be ultimately determined by whites.”

Lennox Lewis (former world heavyweight champion)

“Very few sportsmen stand up for what they believe, because they are worried about how it might impact upon sponsorship and image. Ali was different. He put his principles first and changed the course of history. He made it easier for the black athletes that followed. But he was also a brilliant fighter. I remember watching his second fight with Leon Spinks (in 1978) as a kid and being blown away . . . He showed that intelligence is the key to success in boxing, a philosophy I always adopted.”
 
 
 

 
 
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kban1

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Re: Boxing: Ali at 65
« Reply #4 on: January 17, 2007, 04:54:24 AM »
yeah, again a sportsperson without peer.

If you have watched the ESPN Classic features on Ali or the HBO show on his life --its fascinating, his life, his character, his struggles.

The man not only had the gumption to say it but the resolve to back it up --inside the ring, but more impressively, outside the ring.

A true hero, IMO
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shahzaddddd

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Re: Boxing: Ali at 65
« Reply #5 on: January 17, 2007, 09:02:56 PM »
Here are a couple of legendary tv interviews with Muhammad Ali held by Michael Parkinson in 1971 and 1974. Even while discussing the most serious issues , Ali doesn't fail to entertain.

http://www.shazmalik.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=15&Itemid=9
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dhruvdeepak

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Re: Boxing: Ali at 65
« Reply #6 on: January 19, 2007, 04:29:19 PM »
great article, MT. have you guys seen the movie with will smith?
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In the attitude of silence the soul finds the path in a clearer light, and what is elusive and deceptive resolves itself into crystal clearness. Our life is a long and arduous quest after Truth.
-- Mohandas K *hi
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