The Great Muhammad Ali Passes on
The Great Muhammad Ali Passes On
Muhammad Ali, the
silver-tongued boxer and civil rights champion who famously proclaimed himself
"The Greatest" and then spent a lifetime living up to the billing, is
dead.
Ali died Friday at a
Phoenix-area hospital, where he had spent the past few days being treated for
respiratory complications, a family spokesman confirmed to NBC News. He was 74.
After a 32-year battle
with Parkinson's disease, Muhammad Ali has passed away at the age of 74. The
three-time World Heavyweight Champion boxer died this evening," Bob
Gunnell, a family spokesman, told NBC News.
Ali had suffered for
three decades from Parkinson's, a progressive neurological condition that
slowly robbed him of both his legendary verbal grace and his physical
dexterity. A funeral service is planned in his hometown of Louisville,
Kentucky.
Even as his health
declined, Ali did not shy from politics or controversy, releasing a statement
in December criticizing Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's
proposal to ban Muslims from entering the United States. "We as Muslims
have to stand up to those who use Islam to advance their own personal
agenda," he said.
The remark bookended
the life of a man who burst into the national consciousness in the early 1960s,
when as a young heavyweight champion he converted to Islam and refused to serve
in the Vietnam War, and became an emblem of strength, eloquence, conscience and
courage. Ali was an anti-establishment showman who transcended borders and
barriers, race and religion. His fights against other men became spectacles,
but he embodied much greater battles.
Born Cassius Marcellus
Clay on Jan. 17, 1942 in Louisville, Kentucky, to middle-class parents, Ali
started boxing when he was 12, winning Golden Gloves titles before heading to
the 1960 Olympics in Rome, where he won a gold medal as a light heavyweight.
He turned professional
shortly afterward, supported at first by Louisville business owners who
guaranteed him an unprecedented 50-50 split in earnings. His knack for talking
up his own talents — often in verse — earned him the dismissive nickname
"the Louisville Lip," but he backed up his talk with action,
relocating to Miami to train with the legendary trainer Angelo Dundee and build
a case for getting a shot at the heavyweight title.
As his profile rose, Ali acted out against American racism.
After he was refused services at a soda fountain counter, he said, he threw his
Olympic gold medal into a river.
Recoiling
from the sport's tightly knit community of agents and promoters, Ali found
guidance instead from the Nation of Islam, an American Muslim sect that
advocated racial separation and rejected the pacifism of most civil rights
activism. Inspired by Malcolm X, one of the group's leaders, he converted in
1963. But he kept his new faith a secret until the crown was safely in hand.
That
came the following year, when heavyweight champion Sonny Liston agreed to fight
Ali. The challenger geared up for the bout with a litany of insults and rhymes,
including the line, "float like a butterfly, sting like a bee." He
beat the fearsome Liston in a sixth-round technical knockout before a stunned
Miami Beach crowd. In the ring, Ali proclaimed, "I am the greatest! I am
the greatest! I'm the king of the world."
Muhammad Ali, the silver-tongued boxer and civil rights champion who famously proclaimed himself "The Greatest" and then spent a lifetime living up to the billing, is dead.
The Great Muhammad Ali Passes on
Reviewed by Dipo Sobaki
on
07:46:00
Rating:
Reviewed by Dipo Sobaki
on
07:46:00
Rating:




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