Tin Sign - more on Muhammad Ali

posted by pbwethy @ 12:00 PM
May 28, 2009

After a long court battle, Ali was convicted of draft evasion and sentenced to five years in jail and fined $10,000 fine, but  in another lawsuit in 1970, a judge ruled that Ali could still box professionally.  The new heavyweight champion was Joe Frazier, and a match was scheduled et for 8 March 1971. Newspapers called it “The Fight of the Century.” In the fifteenth round, Frazier knocked Ali down. Ali got back up, but all the judges named Frazier the winner.
 
That same year, Ali won his legal battle when the U.S. Supreme Court said he was not guilty of draft evasion–He should not have been drafted at all. Ali spent the next three years fighting other champions, including Jerry Quarry, Floyd Patterson (making a brief comeback attempt), Joe Bugner and Ken Norton, winning all but one fight to Ken Norton. He also won a unanimous decision over Frazier on 28 January 1974, but Frazier had lost the heavyweight title to George Foreman.  So Ali next had to fight Foreman.
 
Millions of people sat before their televisions to watch the fight between Ali and Foreman, staged as “The Rumble in the Jungle.” Sixty thousand fans gathered at the stadium in Kinshasa in Zaire on 30 October 1974. People favored Foreman, who was seven years younger than the 32-year-old Ali, but Ali fought brilliantly, tiring his opponent using “rope-a-dope” tactics. In round eight, Ali knocked out Foreman. He could still “float like a butterfly and sting like a bee,” as he liked to say.  Ali had regained the undisputed world heavyweight title.
 
After defending his heavyweight title six times–including a third fight with Joe Frazier–Ali lost it to Leon Spinks on 15 February 1978 in a split decision. He regained the WBA title from Spinks seven months later in a unanimous decision, becoming the first boxer to win the heavyweight championship three times. In 1979 Ali announced his retirement, at that point having lost only three times in 59 fights, but he returned to fight World Boxing Council champion Larry Holmes in 1980 and Trevor Berbick of Canada in 1981, losing both.  Ali then retired permanently.
 
As Ali entered his forties, he looked ill. In 1984 it was assumed that he was suffering from a series of symptoms variously known as “punch drunk” syndrome, or chronic encephalopathy of boxers, but Ali had Parkinson’s disease, an illness of the nervous system for which he was taking medication. “I feel fine,” he insisted. “I’m older and fatter, but we all change.”
 
Ali was selected to light the Olympic flame at the 1996 summer games in Atlanta, Georgia. Muhammad Ali is one of the all time greats in boxing and you can have one of his famous tin signs for your collection.


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