The 50th anniversary of Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier 1: A look back at the ‘Fight of the Century’
The 50th anniversary of the true “Fight of the Century” is here. Joe Frazier defeated Muhammad Ali on March 8, 1971, at Madison Square Garden.
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
The 50th anniversary of the true “Fight of the Century” is here. Joe Frazier defeated Muhammad Ali on March 8, 1971, at Madison Square Garden.
Ali vs. Frazier I: A look back at the ‘Fight of the Century’ 50 years later.
The “Fight of the Century” was much more than a prize fight.
Sports and politics collided in dramatic fashion on March 8, 1971, 50 years ago this Monday. That was the date when Hall of Famers Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier met in the first of their three historic heavyweight battles.
The fight itself was significant. Ali and Frazier were both unbeaten former Olympic gold medalists who had legitimate claims on the heavyweight championship, which had even casual boxing fans clamoring for a showdown to settle the matter.
That was only half of the equation, though. The country was in upheaval at the time, bitterly divided by racial issues and the Vietnam War. And the fighters took the ideological battles into the ring with them, which added fire to an event that already stirred passions.
Ali had become a polarizing figure after joining the separatist Nation of Islam and then refusing induction into the U.S. Army, which cost him his boxing license, his title and 3½ of his prime years at the same time he become a symbol of both the civil rights and anti-war movements. That made him a martyr in some circles, a villain in others.
The apolitical Frazier became an unwitting symbol of the white establishment, in part because that’s how Ali defined him. Frazier had lobbied for Ali to regain his license and helped him financially during the lean years of his hiatus only to become the target of nasty barbs in the lead-up to the fight.
The worst? Ali referred to him as an “Uncle Tom,” a label that cut Frazier and his family deeply.
As a result, fans backed one or the other fighter as much for what they symbolized as their abilities in the ring, which created a combustible event.
“I’ve never seen an athletic event divide the country like this one,” said journalist Jerry Izenberg, who covered the events leading up to the fight. “… The country was completely split. Part of it was Ali saying that he wasn’t mad at the Vietcong. Everyone just had an opinion on it.
“And it just built to a crescendo by the time of the fight. It was very emotional.”
The 20,000-seat Garden was packed on fight night. An arena executive said later that “we could’ve sold out 10 Madison Square Gardens.” A parade of celebrities was there to be seen, including Frank Sinatra, who was hired as a photographer by Life Magazine. More than 2,000 journalists from around the world applied for 600 credentials. An estimated 300 million people watched on TV.
And the fighters didn’t disappointment once the opening bell rang.
Ali (31-0, 25 KOs) had knocked out Jerry Quarry and Oscar Bonavena since he regained his license as a result of a court decision. Those fights allowed him to shed some rust, but he wasn’t quite as quick and fluid at 29 as he had been in his early years. The older Ali relied as much on guile and toughness as athleticism.
As his trainer Angelo Dundee once told me with great pain, “Muhammad lost his best years as a boxer when he was away.”
Frazier (26-0, 23 KOs) had picked up the heavyweight championship after Ali was stripped. And he was on a roll, overwhelming one elite opponent after another with his bobbing, weaving aggression and a left hook from hell.
The key to the fight was Frazier’s relentless pursuit of his prey and Ali’s inability to slow him down, at least long term. Ali, fighting more flatfooted than he had in the past, landed quick, accurate shots to dissuade Smokin’ Joe temporarily but he was stoppable this night.
By the late rounds Frazier had edged ahead of Ali and saved his best for last.
Ali was pushing the action in a bid to rally in the 15th and final round when Frazier connected on the greatest punch of his career, a perfect left hook that knocked Ali flat on his back. He got to his feet immediately and survived to hear the final bell but his fate seemed sealed.
All three judges (including referee Arthur Mercante) scored it for Frazier, 11-4-1, 9-6 and 8-6-1, which settled the debate – at least for the moment – over who was the best heavyweight in the world.
“I always knew who the champion was,” Frazier said.
Ali handled his first setback with dignity. And he made a promise: “Don’t worry, we’ll be back. We ain’t through yet.”
That turned out to be an understatement. Some of his greatest moments lay ahead, including his stunning knockout of George Foreman – who had taken the title from Frazier – to regain the heavyweight championship in 1974. He also would defeat Frazier in the second and third installments of their trilogy, including the unforgettable Thrilla in Manila, one of the great prize fights in history.
And, perhaps unthinkable in 1971, Ali would evolve into one of the most beloved sports figures in history. He would distance himself from radical organizations and his stand against the unpopular war eventually was embraced.
The only one who wouldn’t forgive Ali was Frazier, at least not completely. The two became cordial over time but he never forgot the manner in which Ali treated him before all three of their fights.
I interviewed Frazier about 30 years after the “Fight of the Century.” The moment that stood out most was his response when asked about Ali’s deteriorating health, a result of Parkinson’s disease and the punches he had taken in his career.
“How do you think he got that way? It was me,” Frazier said, as if he took pride in the damage he might’ve caused.
They were rivals until the end.
Ali vs. Frazier I: A look back at the ‘Fight of the Century’ 50 years later.
The “Fight of the Century” was much more than a prize fight.
Sports and politics collided in dramatic fashion on March 8, 1971, 50 years ago this Monday. That was the date when Hall of Famers Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier met in the first of their three historic heavyweight battles.
The fight itself was significant. Ali and Frazier were both unbeaten former Olympic gold medalists who had legitimate claims on the heavyweight championship, which had even casual boxing fans clamoring for a showdown to settle the matter.
That was only half of the equation, though. The country was in upheaval at the time, bitterly divided by racial issues and the Vietnam War. And the fighters took the ideological battles into the ring with them, which added fire to an event that already stirred passions.
Ali had become a polarizing figure after joining the separatist Nation of Islam and then refusing induction into the U.S. Army, which cost him his boxing license, his title and 3½ of his prime years at the same time he become a symbol of both the civil rights and anti-war movements. That made him a martyr in some circles, a villain in others.
The apolitical Frazier became an unwitting symbol of the white establishment, in part because that’s how Ali defined him. Frazier had lobbied for Ali to regain his license and helped him financially during the lean years of his hiatus only to become the target of nasty barbs in the lead-up to the fight.
The worst? Ali referred to him as an “Uncle Tom,” a label that cut Frazier and his family deeply.
As a result, fans backed one or the other fighter as much for what they symbolized as their abilities in the ring, which created a combustible event.
“I’ve never seen an athletic event divide the country like this one,” said journalist Jerry Izenberg, who covered the events leading up to the fight. “… The country was completely split. Part of it was Ali saying that he wasn’t mad at the Vietcong. Everyone just had an opinion on it.
“And it just built to a crescendo by the time of the fight. It was very emotional.”
The 20,000-seat Garden was packed on fight night. An arena executive said later that “we could’ve sold out 10 Madison Square Gardens.” A parade of celebrities was there to be seen, including Frank Sinatra, who was hired as a photographer by Life Magazine. More than 2,000 journalists from around the world applied for 600 credentials. An estimated 300 million people watched on TV.
And the fighters didn’t disappointment once the opening bell rang.
Ali (31-0, 25 KOs) had knocked out Jerry Quarry and Oscar Bonavena since he regained his license as a result of a court decision. Those fights allowed him to shed some rust, but he wasn’t quite as quick and fluid at 29 as he had been in his early years. The older Ali relied as much on guile and toughness as athleticism.
As his trainer Angelo Dundee once told me with great pain, “Muhammad lost his best years as a boxer when he was away.”
Frazier (26-0, 23 KOs) had picked up the heavyweight championship after Ali was stripped. And he was on a roll, overwhelming one elite opponent after another with his bobbing, weaving aggression and a left hook from hell.
The key to the fight was Frazier’s relentless pursuit of his prey and Ali’s inability to slow him down, at least long term. Ali, fighting more flatfooted than he had in the past, landed quick, accurate shots to dissuade Smokin’ Joe temporarily but he was stoppable this night.
By the late rounds Frazier had edged ahead of Ali and saved his best for last.
Ali was pushing the action in a bid to rally in the 15th and final round when Frazier connected on the greatest punch of his career, a perfect left hook that knocked Ali flat on his back. He got to his feet immediately and survived to hear the final bell but his fate seemed sealed.
All three judges (including referee Arthur Mercante) scored it for Frazier, 11-4-1, 9-6 and 8-6-1, which settled the debate – at least for the moment – over who was the best heavyweight in the world.
“I always knew who the champion was,” Frazier said.
Ali handled his first setback with dignity. And he made a promise: “Don’t worry, we’ll be back. We ain’t through yet.”
That turned out to be an understatement. Some of his greatest moments lay ahead, including his stunning knockout of George Foreman – who had taken the title from Frazier – to regain the heavyweight championship in 1974. He also would defeat Frazier in the second and third installments of their trilogy, including the unforgettable Thrilla in Manila, one of the great prize fights in history.
And, perhaps unthinkable in 1971, Ali would evolve into one of the most beloved sports figures in history. He would distance himself from radical organizations and his stand against the unpopular war eventually was embraced.
The only one who wouldn’t forgive Ali was Frazier, at least not completely. The two became cordial over time but he never forgot the manner in which Ali treated him before all three of their fights.
I interviewed Frazier about 30 years after the “Fight of the Century.” The moment that stood out most was his response when asked about Ali’s deteriorating health, a result of Parkinson’s disease and the punches he had taken in his career.
“How do you think he got that way? It was me,” Frazier said, as if he took pride in the damage he might’ve caused.
They were rivals until the end.
Larry Holmes, the former heavyweight champion and Hall of Famer, recently said that today’s top heavyweights couldn’t have competed with the best big men from his era. True? Could Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and Deontay Wilder, et al have given the …
Larry Holmes, the former heavyweight champion and Hall of Famer, recently said that today’s top heavyweights couldn’t have competed with the best big men from his era.
True?
Could Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and Deontay Wilder, et al have given the likes of Holmes, Muhammad Ali, George Foreman and Joe Frazier a run for their money?
DAZN commentators Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora give their thoughts on that topic in this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora.
Hint: One of them sides with Holmes and the old-timers while the other believes the current crop of heavyweights shouldn’t be underestimated.
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Inspired by the five-year anniversary of Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao, here are six big fights fans had to wait for.
When it comes to whetting the appetite for the big event through a combination of chicanery, politicking and delaying tactics, boxing is a sport in a league of its own.
But, while most leading promoters view their abilities to let an anticipated bout “marinate” as something akin to an art, frustration among fans generally sets in long before the fights they want to happen come to fruition.
Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s unanimous decision over Manny Pacquiao in Las Vegas five years ago on May 2 is a case in point.
Talk of pound-for-pound king Mayweather taking on Pacquiao first emerged when the Filipino sensation jumped two weight classes to batter a shopworn Oscar De La Hoya in December 2008. The intervening period did Pacquiao and the sport itself few favors.
As the list below shows, it takes a special fight to handle the weight of such expectations.
We can’t really blame promoters for the wait for this one, as Ali endured a forced 3½-year ring absence following his refusal to be drafted into the U.S. Army. In his absence, Frazier became a formidable heavyweight champion in his own right and, four years on from his previous title defense, Ali had the chance to regain his title at Madison Square Garden.
Was it worth the wait?
Absolutely. It takes a special fight to live up to or even surpass the promotional banner of “The Fight of the Century.” This was special. Ali’s quicksilver skills were on display early on but Frazier was typically unrelenting and turned the tide on “The Greatest.” A signature left hook shook Ali to his boots in Round 11 and another put him on the seat of his shorts during a dramatic final round. Frazier won a unanimous points verdict and the most riveting rivalry in boxing history was on the road to the gripping and horrifying brutality of its final act in Manila.
Middleweight king Hagler was slated to face Hearns three years earlier before the latter suffered a hand injury. A delay became a cancellation, something that left simmering animosity within Hagler. That was stoked by a press tour of 21 cities to promote “The War.” Enough was enough and, when the first bell sounded at Caesars Palace, the two men promptly set about trying to take each other’s heads off.
Was it worth the wait?
Yes, yes and thrice yes. The eight minutes of unruly mayhem Hagler and Hearns shared together are frequently cited as the best fight of all time and serve as a barometer against which all other fights are measured. The first round remains scarcely believable as both men unloaded a torrent of heavy shots. Both were hurt, Hagler was cut badly, but the exertions took more out of Hearns, who was unable to beat the count when “Marvelous” deposited his exhausted frame on the canvas a minute into Round 3.
After sparring as teenagers, Lewis was unlikely to have anticipated both he and Tyson would be approaching 40 by the time they met in a professional ring. But the Briton’s first reign as heavyweight champion coincided with Tyson’s prison sentence for rape while Lewis won the title for a second time against an Evander Holyfield. Throw in the fact that the fighters were on either side of the HBO and Showtime pay-per-view divide, Lewis’ shock loss to Hasim Rahman and Tyson biting his foe at the initial media event and it’s a wonder their Memphis meeting ever came to pass.
Was it worth the wait?
Lewis will certainly think so because it left him emphatically as the last man standing from a great heavyweight era, with nothing left to prove. However, Tyson was a far cry from the “Baddest Man on the Planet” by this stage and offered little after a moderately encouraging first round. There was even a sense of Lewis propping him up until the Round 8 finale to prolong the punishment. In hindsight, Lewis scrambling through adversity against a prime Vitali Klitschko the next time out stands as a better achievement. Tyson was on his way to back-to-back losses against Danny Williams and Kevin McBride and a sorry career end.
Waiting 17 years and the duration of a record-breaking run as middleweight champion for revenge would drive most men insane. Hopkins is not most men. During their initial fight in 1993, Jones befuddled him over 12 rounds. Both would go on to achieve greatness but stay away from one another’s orbits for almost two decades.
Was it worth the wait?
Like Lewis, Hopkins took huge satisfaction from this redemptive triumph. But the wily veteran’s age-defying exploits at the end of his career were often more enjoyable on paper than they were in the ring. A defensive master who frustrated the best, Hopkins in his 40s was never particularly easy on the eye. And while the Philadelphia great extended his peak impressively, Jones’ best days were far back in the rearview mirror. On either side of this fractious, foul-stained encounter, he was knocked out by Danny Green and Denis Lebedev.
***
As the sport’s biggest draw, Mayweather was a master at making sure he fought the best on his terms at a time of his choosing. Did the Pacquiao who scythed through Ricky Hatton and beat up Miguel Cotto in 2009 represent too much of a risk? Nine fights and five years later, “Pacman” was yet to record another stoppage and had been brutally knocked out by his nemesis Juan Manuel Marquez. The Money Team was ready to do business.
Was it worth the wait?
Mayweather was truly masterful here, perplexing Pacquiao and running out a clear winner. However, a brilliant performance does not necessarily make for a brilliant contest — a near constant during Mayweather’s peerless late career. The prospect of Pacquiao throwing fewer punches than his rival would have been unfathomable five years earlier, when this contest would have been far more competitive and rewarding.
***
Mayweather’s astute timing of when to box an opponent was also evident when he schooled a greenhorn Alvarez in 2013. The Mexican pretender to his pound-for-pound crown was paying attention. Middleweight title wins against Cotto and Amir Khan came at catch weights below the 160-pound limit before he stepped down a division to dethrone Liam Smith as opposed to facing Golovkin, who was busy standing a succession of full-fledged middleweights on their heads. After an all-Mexican grudge match against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., the time was right.
Was it worth the wait?
Yes. A big drama show! Canelo and GGG served up 12 rounds of high-skilled, pulsating action and soaked up one another’s best shots, a particular novelty for any Golovkin opponent. Few doubted the Kazakhstani superstar had done enough to take the verdict on the cards but a split decision draw meant they were obliged to reconvene in Las Vegas a year later. That time another disputed decision in an even better fight went Alvarez’s way, and a third encounter is in the works.
Boxing Junkie gives you 10 fights that all true boxing fans absolutely must see.
Boxing fans have been treated to a long list of ring battles they’ll never forget.
To whittle these classics down to the 10 best was essentially an impossible task. So what we decided to do was choose 10 that we know will satisfy the craving you have for some insane in-the-ring action.
Sit back and enjoy.
***
Archie Moore vs. Yvon Durelle I
Date / site: Dec. 12, 1958 / Montreal
Result: Moore KO 11
Moore vs. Durelle might be the best example of resilience in the history of the sport. The 40-something “Old Mongoose,” defending his light heavyweight title, went down hard three times in the opening round and once more in Round 5 at the hands of his rugged Canadian challenger. It wasn’t a matter of “if” Moore would lose his title but “when.” Well, when never came. Moore somehow tapped into a deep reservoir of energy, turned the tide and put a fading Durelle down four times before referee Jack Sharkey finally counted him out 49 seconds into Round 11. Moore, an all-time great, had many special performances. None of the others could top this.
ESPN’s replay of the “Thrilla in Manila” was the sixth-most-watched sports-related show of the past week.
Fans are watching boxing even when there’s no boxing.
ESPN’s replay of the third fight between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier in 1975 – The “Thrilla in Manila” – was the sixth-most-watched sports-related show of the past week, according to ShowBuzzDaily. An average of 699,000 people watched the fight, Forbes reported.
As Forbes pointed out, that figure is higher than the 683,000 who viewed the Wednesday episode of the new professional wrestling outfit AEW Dynamite.
Classic boxing shows made up eight of the 20 most-watched sports programs this past week. That also included Ali-Frazier I, Mike Tyson-Michael Spinks and Oscar De La Hoya-Julio Cesar Chavez.
An ESPN boxing analyst Tweeted: “Amazing numbers on ESPN Linear. … Boxing Library works amazing! Perhaps better than any other Sport.”
ESPN devoted 11 hours to boxing on Saturday, including the first time the first Ali-Frazier has been televised since 1991. That fight had an average audience of 641,000. The second Ali-Frazier fight averaged 607,000.
The only live card on ESPN this year — headlined by Eleider Alvarez vs. Michael Seals — averaged 704.000 viewers.
Live sports have been sidelined as a result of the corona virus pandemic.
Amazing numbers on ESPN Linear. Congrats to ESPN @matthewkenny and Top Rank.
Boxing Library works amazing! Perhaps better than any other Sport = Viva! pic.twitter.com/pSCIMqOyJ0
— @BarbosaBox (@BarbosaBox) April 21, 2020
For the first time since 1991, the first of three fights between Muhammad Ali and arch rival Joe Frazier will appear on U.S. television.
ESPN has planned a special treat for boxing fans.
For the first time since August 1991, the first of three fights between Muhammad Ali and arch rival Joe Frazier will appear on U.S. television. The fight, labeled “The Fight of the Century,” has never aired on an ESPN platform.
The telecast highlights 11 consecutive hours of classic fights beginning at noon ET this Saturday (April 18). All three Ali-Frazier fights will be showcased, as well as Ali’s classic encounter with George Foreman.
These fights also will be available on ESPN+ beginning Saturday.
Here is the full lineup for Saturday (all times ET):
Noon — Muhammad Ali vs. George Foreman
1 p.m. — Evander Holyfield vs. George Foreman
2 p.m. – Oscar De La Hoya vs. Julio Cesar Chavez I
3 p.m. — Oscar De La Hoya vs. Felix Trinidad
4 p.m. — Marvin Hagler vs. Thomas Hearns
4:30 p.m. — Mike Tyson vs. Trevor Berbick
5 p.m. – Mike Tyson vs. Larry Holmes
5:30 p.m. — Mike Tyson vs. Michael Spinks
6 p.m. — Sonny Liston vs. Cassius Clay I
7 p.m. — Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier I
9 p.m. — Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier II
10 p.m. — Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier III
Boxing Junkie presents in the special feature the shortest heavyweight champions of all time.
Boxing Junkie recently presented a list of the tallest heavyweight champions of all time, with the 7-foot skyscraper Nikolai Valuev at the top of the angular heap.
Now it’s the little guys’ turn. In this special feature, we give you the shortest men to hold one world heavyweight title or another since John L. Sullivan opened the modern era when he was recognized as champion in the mid-1880s.
Only eight men under 6 feet have won the sport’s greatest prize in 135 years and no one has done it since the 5-11 Roy Jones Jr. beat John Ruiz in 2003.
Note: The heights used for this feature come from BoxRec.com, the official record keeper for professional boxing.
Here is the list (by height, or lack thereof).
NO. 1 TOMMY BURNS
Height: 5-7
Active: 1902-20
Record: 47-4-8 (35 KOs)
Reign(s): 1906-08
Background: What Burns lacked in height he made up for with quickness and pluck. The French-Canadian, whose real name was Noah Brusso, defeated bigger men by moving inside to inflict damage and then getting out quickly to avoid it. That’s how he beat the sub-6-foot, but heavier Marvin Hart to win the heavyweight title by decision in 1906 in Los Angeles. Burns made several defenses and then took his championship belt on a successful world tour, finishing his title run with eight consecutive knockouts. Disaster loomed, though. Following him on much of that tour was Jack Johnson, whose goal was to lure Burns into the ring. Johnson finally convinced Burns to fight him on Dec. 26, 1908 in Sydney. A $30,000 payday for Burns, the most ever earned by a boxer to that point, made it impossible to say no. Police halted Johnson’s slaughter of Burns, who officially lost a decision. He still has the distinction of being the shortest heavyweight champion.
Mike Tyson over Muhammad Ali? That was the result of a simulated heavyweight tournament conducted by the World Boxing Super Series. Tyson defeated Ali in the championship match of the competition, which raised some eyebrows worldwide. Most observers …
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Mike Tyson over Muhammad Ali?
That was the result of a simulated heavyweight tournament conducted by the World Boxing Super Series. Tyson defeated Ali in the championship match of the competition, which raised some eyebrows worldwide.
Most observers seem to believe that Ali, who defeated the likes of Sonny Liston, Joe Frazier and George Foreman during a golden era of heavyweights, could’ve handled anything Tyson threw at him and then some.
What do DAZN commentators Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora think? They give their thoughts on the Jabs with Mannix and Mora show.
Listen to what they have to say.
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