New York Post

Presence of grandfathe­r was felt at debut fight

- By JARED SCHWARTZ

It wasn’t supposed to happen, but Nico Ali Walsh insists it was fate.

Nico, the grandson of Muhammad Ali, was packing for his first profession­al fight in Cleveland. He had custom white trunks with “Nico” written on them made for the fight, but he was going to pick them up in Cleveland. As a precaution, his trainer told him to bring an extra pair of white shorts in case his new ones weren’t ready.

As the middleweig­ht searched for a backup pair, he realized the only other pair of white shorts he owned were his

grandfathe­r’s, which were passed down to him when Ali died in 2016. Ali sported the look for a majority of his fights throughout his career — white trunks with black trim and the “Everlast” logo around the waist. Nico didn’t expect to wear them, instead hoping to cherish the shorts as a memento to remember his grandfathe­r.

When he arrived in Cleveland, his new shorts weren’t ready. When he tried on his grandfathe­r’s pair and started to move around in them, they felt natural around his legs. With no other option, Nico donned his grandfathe­r’s famous colors.

“I just think it was fate, but it wasn’t intentiona­l or planned in any way,” Nico told The Post.

It was Nico’s first time stepping through the ropes and fighting in front of a real, large crowd as a profession­al, which he described as “nothing on earth is more nerve-wracking than the first fight.” He handled himself admirably, however, defeating Jordan Weeks via a first-round TKO.

Nico is now 2-0 in his young career, and faces his next challenge in the form of Reyes Sanchez on the Vasiliy Lomachenko-Richard Commey main card at Madison Square Garden Saturday night.

No, Nico doesn’t plan on wearing the shorts again — they are too special to him. But on the first night of his profession­al career, a night that featured a lot of nerves and emotions, he got some help along the way.

“It was so special,” Nico said. “I felt like my grandfathe­r was alive that night, it really felt like that.”

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