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Remembering Muhammad Ali, "The Greatest".

  


Remembering Muhammad Ali, "The Greatest".

Muhammad Ali was a three-time world heavyweight boxing champion, civil rights leader, and one of the most significant and celebrated sports icons of the 20th century. Nicknamed "The Greatest," Ali's career was as colorful as it was controversial. Born Cassius Clay, he changed his name and converted to Islam, refused to be drafted during the Vietnam War, and was banned from boxing as a result. But the boy from Louisville was always much more than a mere pugilist; he was an activist, entertainer, and philanthropist who inspired an entire generation.



Takes up boxing, wins his first bout.

Born Cassius Marcella Clay Jr. on January 17, 1942 in Louisville, Kentucky, he began training as a amateur boxer in 1954, aged 12, after his bike was stolen. The distraught youngster reported the theft to policeman and boxing enthusiast Joe E. Martin, who suggested he take up the sport and invited him to come around to his gym. It was there that Martin taught him to box. Six weeks later, the young athlete won his first bout.



Gold at the Rome Olympics.

In 1960, he won boxing gold at the Olympic Games in Rome, beating Poland's Zbigniew Pietrzykowski. He's seen standing tall on the winners' podium with Pietrzykowski, Italy's Giulio Saraudi and Anthony Madigan from Australia.



Self-confidence, self-promotion.

The boxer won a string of bouts after correctly predicting the round in which he'd floor his opponent. It was an early example of his burgeoning self-confidence. But occasionally, he would miss the mark. In February 1962, he stopped Don Warner (pictured) in four rounds, rather than the five forecast. He later said he deliberately brought his victory forward by one round because Warner had failed to shake hands. The boxer from Louisville was sharpening his promotional skills too!.




Out in five.

In this image, the boxer predicts knocking out Britain's Henry Cooper in five rounds after arriving in London in May 1963. He ultimately did get him in the fifth.




The Ring magazine.

The boxer on the cover of the September 1963 edition of The Ring magazine. He was named "Fighter of the Year" by the publication more times than any other fighter.



Beating the Beatles.

n 1964, he earned himself a fight with heavyweight champion Sonny Liston. While the boxer was training at the 5th Street Gym in Miami, he was visited by four young lads from Liverpool: John, Paul, George, and Ringo.



Winning the world heavyweight title.

In 1964, he "shook up the world" by dethroning Sonny Liston to take the title. The boxer predicted victory, boasting that he would "float like a butterfly, sting like a bee" and knock out Liston in the eighth round. In fact, he forced his opponent to quit in the sixth round. It's after this fight that the new champ declared to reporters that he was the "greatest."



Cassius Clay becomes Muhammad Ali.

Shortly after the Liston upset, the boxer announced that he no longer would be known as Cassius Clay, but as Muhammad Ali. He converted to Islam and affiliated himself with the Nation of Islam. His decision to do so ranks among the most defining moments of his extraordinary life. He is seen here as the Nation of Islam's Malcolm X takes his photograph.



Liston rematch.

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