Muhammad
Ali (born Cassius
Marcellus Clay, Jr.; January 17, 1942) is an American former professional boxer,
philanthropist, social activist and philosopher. Considered a cultural icon,
Ali has both been idolized and vilified
Originally
known as Cassius Clay, at the age of 22 he won the world heavyweight
championship from Sonny Liston. Ali changed his name after joining the Nation
of Islam in 1964, subsequently converting to Sunni Islam in 1975. In 1967,
three years after Ali had won the heavyweight championship; he was publicly
vilified for his refusal to be conscripted into the U.S. military, based on his
religious beliefs and opposition to the Vietnam War. Ali was eventually
arrested and found guilty on draft evasion charges; he was stripped of his
boxing title, and his boxing license was suspended. He was not imprisoned, but
did not fight again for nearly four years while his appeal worked its way up to
the U.S. Supreme Court, where it was eventually successful.
Ali
would go on to become the first and only three-time lineal World Heavyweight
Champion.
Nicknamed
"The Greatest", Ali was involved in several historic boxing matches.
Notable among these were three with rival Joe Frazier, which are considered
among the greatest in boxing history, and one with George Foreman, where he
finally regained his stripped titles seven years later. Ali was well known for
his unorthodox fighting style, epitomized by his catchphrase "float like a
butterfly, sting like a bee", and employing techniques such as the Ali
Shuffle and the rope-a-dope. Ali brought beauty and grace to the most
uncompromising of sports and through the wonderful excesses of skill and
character; he became the most famous athlete in the world. He was also known
for his pre-match hype, where he would "trash talk" opponents, often
with rhymes.
In 1999,
Ali was crowned "Sportsman of the Century" by Sports Illustrated
and "Sports Personality of the Century" by the BBC.
Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr., was born on
January 17, 1942, in Louisville, Kentucky. The older of two boys, he was named
after his father, Cassius Marcellus Clay, Sr., who was named after the 19th
century abolitionist and politician of the same name. His father painted billboards
and signs, and his mother, Odessa O'Grady Clay, was a household domestic. Although
Cassius Sr. was a Methodist, he allowed Odessa to bring up both Cassius and his
younger brother Rudolph "Rudy" Clay (later renamed Rahman Ali) as Baptists.
He is a descendant of pre-Civil War era American slaves in the American South,
and is predominantly of African-American descent, with Irish and English
ancestry.
Clay was first directed toward boxing by
Louisville police officer and boxing coach Joe E. Martin, who encountered the
12-year-old fuming over a thief taking his bicycle. He told the officer he was
going to "whup" the thief. The officer told him he better learn how
to box first. For the last four years of Clay's amateur career he was trained
by legendary boxing cutman Chuck Bodak.[
Clay won six Kentucky Golden Gloves titles, two
national Golden Gloves titles, an Amateur Athletic Union National Title, and
the Light Heavyweight gold medal in the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. Clay's
amateur record was 100 wins with five losses. Shortly after his return home
from Rome following the Olympics, Ali would claim in his 1975 autobiography
that he threw his medal into the Ohio River after he and a friend of his were
being refused service at a "whites-only" restaurant, and fighting
with a white gang. However, two years later, in the 1977 biopic, The
Greatest, a film scene depicting the medal-throwing incident only has Ali
being forced out of the diner due to his race quickly cutting to the scene
where Clay threw the medal into the river in disgust. Ali brought up the latter
story of events in later years in interviews. Both stories have been heavily
debated and several of Ali's friends from photographer Howard Bingham and
Bundini Brown disputed this story calling it false, with Brown later telling Sports
Illustrated writer Mark Kram, "Honkies sure bought into that
one!"
It was stated that Ali kept his medal until
"the gold rubbed off". This incident is not mentioned in Thomas
Hauser's own official biography of Ali, who confirmed that Ali was refused
service at the diner but said he lost his medal a year after he won it. Ali
later received a replacement medal at a basketball intermission during the 1996
Olympics in Atlanta, where he lit the torch to start the games.
By: Kazim Agha
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