The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Savvy Ali talks up price of Shields mega-fight

Daughter of ‘The Greatest’ demands $5m to come out of retirement, writes

- Molly Mcelwee

A return to the ring would put Ali’s entire boxing legacy on the line

As the world prepared last month for a heavyweigh­t mega-fight in Las Vegas, women’s boxing somehow wedged its way into the crowded commentary.

No, it was not given a boost by promoters of Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder’s rematch, as unfortunat­ely none of the nine undercard fights featured women. But Laila Ali, the former world middleweig­ht champion, made sure the focus was not entirely male-dominated when, in her role as an ESPN pundit, she threw her hat into the ring.

After 13 years in retirement, Muhammad Ali’s daughter responded to suggestion­s that Claressa Shields, the current leading American boxer, might tempt her back into action.

“Have I been sitting around and thinking about boxing? No. But lately there’s been a little chatter,” Ali said at the MGM Grand on Feb 21, the night before Fury’s win over Wilder. “She [Shields] has been calling me out … and people are asking me: would you come back? Well, I have to be inspired by the opponent. I have to be inspired by the purse, because I have multiple things going on, multiple streams of income. I don’t need to do it. I have to want to do it.”

The apparent beef between the two undefeated champions had been bubbling away, sparked by Ali, 42, saying in January that there were no active boxers she would consider returning to the canvas for.

Shields, 24, who calls herself the “GWOAT” – Greatest Woman of all Time – retorted by saying: “I don’t think Laila Ali could beat me in her prime.”

The back and forth escalated from there.

Ali laid down the gauntlet in a radio interview, naming her price at $5million (£3.9million) to come out of retirement, before Shields confirmed “the money is there” ahead of the Fury/wilder fight. “Enough talking,” Shields wrote on her Twitter account later that day. “Let’s fight, make it big for women’s boxing.”

Two boxers embroiled in public feuding and theatre to increase interest in their bout – or potential bout – is nothing new. But to watch two women engaging in the practice does have a novel feel to it, not to mention female athletes discussing prize money in the multiplemi­llion dollar bracket.

Ali, now a mother of two, won four world super-middleweig­ht belts, and another at light-heavyweigh­t, over a career in which she went 24-0, with 21 knockouts before her retirement in 2007.

Meanwhile, Shields is still in the prime of her career, as a two-time Olympic gold medallist who is undefeated over 10 profession­al bouts. She is the undisputed female middleweig­ht world champion and the fastest boxer – male or female

– to secure three division world titles.

A return would put Ali’s entire legacy on the line, but the story here is not just whether she will be tempted to. If this was all just talk, the fact remains that these two were savvy enough to use the most saturated moment in the boxing calendar to their advantage, and found multiple platforms for their own narrative.

Ali first gave her ballpark figure on Sirius XM radio, the video version of which was watched by more than 200,000 people. Then, she continued the conversati­on when speaking on ESPN’S hugely popular talk show, First Take, which has 1.5 million Twitter followers. The video of her speaking about the possibilit­y of a Shields fight got more than 500,000 views. Shields’s response, via a popular boxing Youtube channel, was viewed more than 200,000 times.

That they are throwing around prize-money figures of such astronomic­al proportion­s is even more anomalous in women’s sport. Shields’s last bout reportedly earned her $300,000 but in generating the kind of attention they have, in simply floating the idea of a fight, she and Ali seem confident in the knowledge it would be a huge payday for them if it materialis­ed.

These two female athletes used the platforms they had been afforded – not on the main stage, but in a commentary capacity – to push their own agendas unashamedl­y and succeeded in generating the kind of hype they deserve. If this fight ever does happen, you would back the pair to secure it the kind of showing it merits – and the purse.

 ??  ?? Friendly fire: Laila Ali (left) and Claressa Shields share a hug before engaging in fighting talk
Friendly fire: Laila Ali (left) and Claressa Shields share a hug before engaging in fighting talk
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