Former world heavyweight boxing 
champion  Joe Frazier, who was known for his personal and professional 
battles  with Muhammad Ali, has died at the age of 67 after a brief 
fight with  cancer.
The 
youngest of 12 children, Frazier was  born in 1944 into a working-class 
family on a farm in the  racially-segregated southeastern U.S. town of 
Beaufort, South Carolina.  Frazier dreamed of becoming a prize fighter 
from an early age, watching  boxing matches on his family’s 
black-and-white television.
After
 fighting as an amateur for several  years, Frazier won a gold medal for
 the United States at the 1964  Olympic Games.  But “Smokin’ Joe” 
Frazier really made his name in the  1970s during his epic rivalry with 
boxing legend Muhammad Ali.
Frazier
 became the first man to beat  Ali, winning the heavyweight title in 
1971 in a dramatic, 15-round  unanimous decision at New York’s Madison 
Square Garden. Dubbed the  “fight of the century,” an estimated 300 
million people worldwide viewed  the match, which left both men 
hospitalized.
After Ali 
responded with a 12-round  victory in 1974, the two men met in the 
Philippines for the famed  “Thrilla in Manila,” considered as one of the
 most famous sporting  events in history. After battering each other for
 14 rounds, Frazier was  forcibly held back by his trainer after nearly 
being blinded by Ali’s  punches. Ali later said the match was the 
“closest thing to dying” that  he had ever experienced.
The
 no-nonsense Frazier was often  overshadowed by Ali’s more aggressive 
and charismatic personality.  Frazier resented being verbally attacked 
by Ali, who referred to him as a  “gorilla” and accused Frazier of being
 too accommodating to the  white-dominated society.
The
 two men remained bitter enemies for  decades. But in later years, 
Frazier came to forgive Ali, saying he felt  no bitterness against him 
for his attacks outside the ring. Ali also  later apologized, saying the
 insults were only meant to promote the  fights. Ali said in a statement
 late Monday that “the world has lost a  great champion,” and that he 
will always remember Joe with “respect and  admiration.”
Frazier’s
 aggressiveness, close-range  style and devastating left hook 
compensated for his relative small size.  He weighed just 93 kilograms –
 considered small for a heavyweight  boxer. Frazier retired in 1976 with
 a record of 32 wins, 4 losses and 1  draw.  The boxing icon’s family 
said late Monday that he died in his  adopted hometown of Philadelphia –
 one month after being diagnosed with  an advanced form of liver cancer.
Source : www.bbc.co.uk



0 komentar:
Posting Komentar
Selamat Berdiskusi