The Chronicle

Touching tribute to The Greatest

-

IT’S almost a year since the world learned legendary boxer Muhammad Ali had passed away.

His was a life filled with incredible stories, triumphs and challenges. Famous across the globe, enthrallin­g and entertaini­ng generation­s of fans both in and outside the ring, he was also an important figure in the American civil rights movement. Now superfan Frank Skinner has been granted unbelievab­le access to the people closest to Ali to find out what made him The Greatest.

Visiting locations in the US and the UK, Frank meets his childhood neighbours in Louisville – back when he was Cassius Clay – and learns that even then he had the confidence and swagger of a champ. He meets his first wife Khalilah, who stood by him when the champ refused to go to war in Vietnam and was stripped of his title and boxing licence.

He talks to his business manager Gene Kilroy, who tells tales of life in Ali’s inner circle, and visits the boxer’s old training camp in Pennsylvan­ia.

Then there’s the rather bizarre story of the bareknuckl­e boxer Paddy Monaghan, who started a campaign of support for Ali which saw the pair become lifelong friends.

Paddy would often stay at Ali’s house in America, and the champ made more than a dozen visits to Paddy’s Oxfordshir­e council house to spend time with his family.

Frank gets the background to the iconic Rumble in the Jungle fight in 1974, and learns from his former sparring partner Larry Holmes just what happened the night Ali lost to his great friend.

Entertaini­ng and informativ­e, there are moments that reduce lifelong fan Frank to tears, as he recalls what Ali meant to him and his father.

It’s a touching and fitting tribute to a truly remarkable man.

 ??  ?? Frank Skinner with Muhammad Ali’s former sparring partner Larry Holmes. Inset right the champ himself pictured in 1967
Frank Skinner with Muhammad Ali’s former sparring partner Larry Holmes. Inset right the champ himself pictured in 1967

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom