Times-Herald (Vallejo)

The Fight of the Century lived up to the hype

Ali-Frazier I was a classic battle

- Contact reporter Matt Sieger at (707) 453-8156.

This month marks the 50th anniversar­y of the first heavyweigh­t championsh­ip fight between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier.

The March 8, 1971, contest, billed as the Fight of the Century, was the first heavyweigh­t title fight between two undefeated fighters and lived up to all of its publicity. At that time, the fight, which took place at New York’s Madison Square Garden, was probably the most hyped and highly anticipate­d event in the history of sport.

For those readers who weren’t alive at the time or who don’t recall the outcome, I will just say that Ali’s prediction that he would knock out Frazier in the sixth round did not come true and that the 15-round battle went the distance.

I don’t want to spoil the enjoyment for those who might want to watch the fight in its entirety for free on YouTube. For that matter, I won’t tell you how the second Ali-Frazier contest (Super Fight II), also at Madison Square Garden, and the third Ali-Frazier bout (the Thrilla in Manila) turned out. You can watch both those fights in their entirety on YouTube as well.

There was considerab­le drama around the first fight due to the political climate of the times.

Born Cassius Marcellus Clay in Louisville, Kentucky in 1942, Ali won the gold medal at the Rome Olympics in 1960 and in February 1964 became world heavyweigh­t champion by defeating Sonny Liston. The day after he defeated Liston, Ali rejected the name Cassius Clay given to his family by a slave owner and said he had joined the Nation of Islam.

In the mid-1960s America was being torn apart by the issues of the Vietnam War and civil rights. When Ali was ordered to report to the draft board, he was confronted by reporters. He asked them why he should travel thousands of miles to kill people on behalf of a nation that treated him and his fellow African Americans as second-class citizens.

On April 28, 1967, Ali made his refusal to join the armed forces official, claiming conscienti­ous objector status. That same day, the New York State Athletic Commission took away his boxing license and stripped him of his title. Boxing commission­s across the nation would not let Ali fight, effectivel­y banishing him from boxing.

In late 1970, when the tide of public opinion had turned against the Vietnam War, the city of Atlanta allowed Ali to return to the ring, where he stopped Jerry Quarry in three rounds. Ali then knocked out Oscar Bonavena in the 15th round at Madison Square Garden in December of the year. After the win, Ali shouted “I want Joe Frazier!”

Two courts had upheld the government’s refusal to accept Ali as a conscienti­ous objector and the case was headed to the Supreme Court in June 1971. Ali, expecting the Supreme Court to decide against him, was eager to fight Frazier for the title before that date. He got his wish with the bout in March of that year with Frazier, who had ascended to the throne in Ali’s absence,

The two fighters were polar opposites. Ali was talkative, brash and boastful and an anti-establishm­ent hero. Frazier just went about his business in the ring. Broadcaste­r Tim Ryan described Frazier as “a workaday guy, who lived the way he fought: just get in there, throw a hundred punches, be strong, and mind your own business.”

Frazier never made any political statements. He actually helped Ali financiall­y during his exile and appealed to President Richard Nixon to grant Ali clemency. But Frazier became the hero of the establishm­ent, just because he was not Ali. As author Jerry Izenberg wrote, “many whites who disliked Ali on racial grounds adopted Frazier as their designated Black representa­tive.”

Ali, as he always did, poured fuel on the fire and unfairly called Frazier an “Uncle Tom” and said he was too ugly and stupid to be heavyweigh­t champion. Izenberg described the fight as the hippies against the hardhats, but noted that “as dramatic as the story was, this was still just a prizefight between two very good heavyweigh­t boxers.”

The fight lived up to all the hype. The pace of the fight, especially for heavyweigh­t fighters, was incredible. Both fighters showed they could take extreme punishment and both engaged in verbal sparring as well.

In the 15th and final round, Ali taunted Frazier, saying, “Fool! Don’t you know that God’s ordained I be champion?”

“Well, God’s going to get his ass whupped tonight,” retorted Frazier.

Partial spoiler alert: For those who don’t want to watch the entire fight, just watch the 15th round.

Three months later, Ali won his battle with the U.S. government when the Supreme Court ruled 8-0 that the government had not provided good reason to deny Ali conscienti­ous objector status.

As noted in an article on the fight in history.com, “In the end, for all the import and symbolism that had been assigned to it, the Fight of the Century was… just a fight. The Vietnam War continued for another four years; 50 years later America remains riven by racial injustice, and sports figures continue to use their platforms to call for social and political change.”

 ??  ?? Matt Sieger
Matt Sieger
 ?? KEYSTONE — HULTON ARCHIVE, GETTY IMAGES ?? The World Heavyweigh­t title fight between Joe Frazier (left) and Muhammad Ali at Madison Square Garden, New York City on March 8, 1971.
KEYSTONE — HULTON ARCHIVE, GETTY IMAGES The World Heavyweigh­t title fight between Joe Frazier (left) and Muhammad Ali at Madison Square Garden, New York City on March 8, 1971.

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