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- Muhammad Ali
- began his boxing
- career as Cassius
- Clay. He was
- handsome, and
- quick with his
- wits as well as
- with his fists.
- This, and his
- engaging
- arrogance (he
- liked to predict
- the round in
- which he would
- win), won him
- many fans
- #
- Clay's style was
- unconventional,
- flying in the
- face of boxing
- wisdom. He held
- his hands too low,
- leaned back too
- far, crossed his
- legs, retreated
- when he should
- have been coming
- forward, and
- seldom went for
- the body. It is
- amazing that he
- ever won a fight
- #
- After adopting
- Islam and taking
- the name
- Muhammad Ali,
- Clay refused on
- grounds of
- conscience to be
- inducted into the
- US army, then
- active in Viet-
- nam. His prose-
- cution for draft
- dodging caused a
- sensation, but it
- showed that Ali
- was not just a
- loud-mouthed
- buffoon. "I ain't
- got no quarrel
- with the Viet-
- cong," he said
- #
- Ali was notorious
- for taunting
- opponents prior
- to a fight and in
- the ring. At one
- bout he was
- infuriated that
- the World Boxing
- Association
- insisted on
- addressing him
- by his 'slave
- name' Cassius
- Clay. "What's my
- name?" screamed
- Muhammad Ali
- with every blow
- he landed on his
- opponent's face
- #
- The "Rumble in
- the Jungle" was
- one of the highest
- viewed sporting
- events ever
- staged. It was
- also one of the
- high points of
- Ali's career.
- There was no
- love lost between
- Ali and Foreman:
- months earlier
- they had been
- involved in a
- brawl at the
- Boxer of the Year
- ceremony
- #
- Ali was not often
- knocked down in
- his career. One of
- the few to do it
- was Joe Frazier in
- 1971, who broke
- Ali's jaw with the
- same blow. But by
- the late Seventies
- the years of
- punishment were
- telling, and Ali,
- the Prettiest and
- the Greatest, hung
- up his gloves
- #
- After his
- retirement Ali
- was diagnosed as
- suffering from
- Parkinson's
- Disease, which
- was possibly the
- result of years of
- pummelling to
- the head. But
- though his sparkle
- is gone, Ali is not
- forgotten. He is
- still "the most
- recognisable face
- in the world"
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