USA TODAY International Edition

Ali’s wife predicted first Frazier bout outcome

- Josh Peter Contributi­ng: Bert Randolph Sugar

Khalilah Ali, who was married to Muhammadi Ali 50 years ago at the time of the “The Fight of the Century,” told USA TODAY Sports she remembers what she wore that night to Madison Square Garden in New York.

“All black because I knew he was going lose,” she said.

Khalilah Ali said she even predicted as much before her famous husband, then 31- 0 with 25 knockouts, stepped into the ring with Joe Frazier, then 26- 0 with 23 knockouts, on March 8, 1971.

“He said, ‘ Why would you do that?’ ” Khalilah Ali recalled. “I said, ‘ Let me tell you something. You have not been training the way you’re supposed to train. And you know what? It’s time for you to lose. So I’m just going to sit back and watch.’ ”

Frazier won in 15 rounds by unanimous decision in what was the first fight of a trilogy, with Ali winning the next two fights. But the Fight of the Century was considered more than a fight.

It was an event – now considered one of the greatest boxing matches in the history of the sport.

Entertaine­r Frank Sinatra, actor Burt Lancaster and former Vice President Hubert Humphrey were among those in attendance in the sellout crowd of 20,000. They were there to watch something unpreceden­ted – two undefeated boxers fight for the heavyweigh­t title for the first time ever.

Tickets were sold outside the arena for up to $ 1,000, a then- astronomic­al sum.

Other fights have been billed as “Fights of the Century,” but none lived up to what transpired that night inside and outside of the ring.

At one point during the fight Ali told Frazier, “God wants you to lose tonight.”

Shot back Frazier, “Tell your God he’s in the wrong house tonight.”

For much of the fight, Ali retreated to the ropes. It was no surprise to Khalilah Ali, who watched Frazier knock her husband down with a crushing left hook in the 15th round. Although Ali got off the canvas, he lost the bout as scored by each of the three judges.

“He laughed at me when it was over,” Khalilah Ali recalled. “He said, ‘ Wow, you’re one of those crystal balls.’ I said, ‘ No, I don’t do all that. I know you. That’s why. It wasn’t hard to figure out.’ ”

But she said she knew the loss would prove pivotal down the road and explained as much.

“I’m telling you, there’s going to be a fight that’s more important than this one,” Khalilah Ali recalled saying. “‘ And if you act like this then, then you’ll lose at the big one.’ ”

That big fight, Khalilah Ali said, was the 1974 “The Rumble in the Jungle,” in which Ali knocked out George Foreman.

 ?? AP ?? Joe Frazier hits Muhammad Ali with a left during the 15th round of their heavyweigh­t title fight on March 8, 1971.
AP Joe Frazier hits Muhammad Ali with a left during the 15th round of their heavyweigh­t title fight on March 8, 1971.

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