Friday, April 25, 2025
7:27 AM
Doha,Qatar
tribute

Ali was the greatest in more ways than one

Muhammad Ali used to say that he was the greatest, and I began to guess as much when he was still Cassius Clay and arrived at the Louisville, Kentucky, airport after boxing his way to an Olympics gold medal in Rome.
I lived in Louisville myself and tuned into the live broadcast on local TV to watch this amazing, funny, hometown athlete I had been cheering.
“Where is that Floyd Patterson?” he asked a man with a microphone.”I want that Floyd Patterson.” The fact that I still remember those words 56 years later tells you something.
Here was this precocious amateur, having won the light heavyweight division in Rome, saying in so many audacious words that he was ready to whip the heavyweight champion of the world.
While I knew he had a way to go, I also figured he would eventually arrive at some supreme destination, either by knocking people out with his lightning-fast jabs or flabbergasting the world with his personality.
Boxing back then was still a major sport in America, and I loved it.
I had studied it, sat with my father to watch the fights on TV every Friday night and boxed some myself at the YMCA.
I came to see with ever greater clarity how exceptional this local guy was with his grace, his big-man speed, his dodging, weaving and dancing and not least his ring intelligence.
He would figure out strategies and they would work, such as leaning on a rope while someone he called a dope wore himself out.
OK, George Foreman was no dope, but he did get tricked and, as Ali said about himself, he could be so mean he could make medicine sick.
In those days, you would mostly see truly major fights by means of live broadcasts at movie theatres.
I could easily share a story about each of those I witnessed, such as one in Albany, New York, where the guy next to me was a professional fighter and would stand up and throw his own combinations every time Ali did something amazing.
The memory I like best, however, is about the time in 1975 when I was on a fellowship at the University of Michigan.
Going for the heavyweight championship again, Ali was facing Joe Frazier, who had beaten him once.
The theatre was full for this so-called “Thrilla in Manila”. It was as if the several hundred black folks in the Ann Arbor audience had a compact.
Every time Ali would connect with one of his jabs, they’d all shout, “pow!” He landed a lot of them, sometimes one right after another, and so you would hear this loud chorus singing, “Pow...pow, pow, pow... pow... pow, pow.”
There was no questioning that this audience was on Ali’s side, and no wonder: He was a messenger about black pride, about standing up for yourself, about the need for justice.
And so, when Frazier failed to come out of his corner after the 14th round, they stood and cheered not just for Ali, but for what he represented, or so it seemed to me.
Ali especially enlisted in causes bigger than himself when he changed his name, adopted the Islamic faith, began speaking out for peace and was a conscientious objector to the draft.
It was sad when blows to the head helped induce Parkinson’s disease, leaving him slow of mouth and minus the old vigour.
But his efforts in reaching out only increased and he became a symbol of caring.
He achieved fame by fighting. He achieved more by gentleness.

- Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service. Readers may e-mail him at speaktojay@aol.com

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