50th Anniversary of the Rumble in the Jungle (1 Viewer)

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Muhammad Ali defies the odds and wins his title back after having it unfairly stripped
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Fifty years ago, in a corner of white South Africa, Muhammad Ali already seemed a miracle-maker. Deep in our strictly regimented and divided country, Ali danced rings around apartheid. I had first heard about the inspirational boxer from a black man, Cassius, who sold bottles of beer from the illegal shebeen he and his friends ran across the road from our house.

Cassius and his crew kept their illicit stash hidden in the drains outside the corner shop owned by an irritable Greek man. Whenever my football was booted over the garden wall, Cassius chased after it. After a dazzling display of slightly drunken footwork he would return the ball with a cackle. One day, while showcasing his trickery, he sang a strange song: “Ali, Ali, float like a butterfly, sting like a bee, Ali, Ali, Muhammad Ali.”

Cassius flicked rangy left jabs into the winter sunshine as his huge feet danced. He wore a pair of battered brown sandals that had split at the seams. They fluttered over the tar while the soles flapped in a jitterbug of their own. He pretended to be outraged when I asked who he was singing about: “You mean the baasie [Afrikaans for little boss] don’t know?” When I shook my head he became serious: “Ali is the heavyweight champion of the world.”

A thrill surged through me. Cassius told me how he was nicknamed after Ali – who had been born as Cassius Clay. I struggled to understand how one man could have two names. Cassius explained that the master boxer was a black American who dreamed up those happy bee and butterfly lines.

Years later, in 1974, when I had just turned 13, I learned that Ali had been stripped of his world title in 1967 when he refused to fight in the Vietnam war. But he had become even more of a mythical figure to me because Ali entranced our frightening Afrikaans teacher with the same spell he cast over Cassius.

When we summoned the courage to ask him why he liked Ali so much, while suspecting he was a staunch racist, the teacher softened. He spoke of the beauty and brilliance of Ali in the ring. Rather than being “one of our blacks”, Ali resembled the king of the world.

On 30 October 1974, Ali finally had a chance to regain the title when he faced George Foreman. We were agog that the fight would take place not too far from us, in Zaire [now the Democratic Republic of Congo].

The Rumble in the Jungle was promoted by Don King who underlined his ingenuity by taking the bout “back to Africa”. Zaire’s dictatorial President, Mobutu Sese Seko, agreed to pay the boxers an unprecedented $5m each.

Although the rest of Africa felt as far removed from our privileged suburb near Johannesburg as it did in Hertfordshire or New Hampshire, King brought the continent into our classrooms. Other kinder teachers confessed their fondness for Ali and favoured him over Foreman. Ali was also hailed by the black cleaners and gardeners who serviced the school and our homes. And the shebeen corner – from the Greek shop owner to the biggest drinkers – still belonged to him. Only Ali could forge such an alliance.

No heavyweight was bigger or more threatening than Foreman, who had become world champion when demolishing Joe Frazier in two rounds. Frazier was so good he had beaten Ali in the Fight of the Century in 1971 – but he was blown away by Foreman who had a 40-0 record with 38 stoppages. Big George rained down bludgeoning punches, bringing sorrow to every fighter he faced. Only the 32-year-old Ali remained.


“Foreman by knockout,” I predicted mournfully. Maybe I made that pessimistic forecast because I feared so much for Ali. A quick knockout would save him from permanent damage. But Bennie da Silva, my friend’s dad and the only real boxing expert we knew, backed Ali. He was a stocky Portuguese man who made us laugh while flooring us with his ring knowledge.

He promised that Ali would dance the night away until Foreman was so dizzy he wouldn’t know what hit him. Ali would rumba through the rumble and be crowned world champion again..............


 
Thirty-five years ago, I sat on the sofa in my living room watching a tape of The Rumble in the Jungle with Muhammad Ali beside me. I was researching the book that ultimately became Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times. Over the course of a year, Ali and I watched tapes of every one of his fights together.

Time plays funny tricks. Ali v George Foreman seemed like long ago history on that afternoon in 1989. And now …

This Wednesday will mark the 50th anniversary of Ali-Foreman. There have been other sporting events that captured the imagination of the world. But no athletic contest in history inspired as much global joy as Muhammad’s victory in Kinshasa, Zaire, during the pre-dawn hours of 30 October 1974. It was the classic tale of a handsome prince, unfairly stripped of his crown, who battles back against adversity to recapture what rightfully belongs to him. Let’s put that night in perspective.

Ali was a great fighter and possibly the most beautiful fighting machine ever. His victories over Sonny Liston were the stuff of legend. In the two years immediately after those triumphs, he dominated a pretty good crop of heavyweights, rarely losing a round.

But Ali was more than a fighter. He was a beacon of hope for oppressed people all over the world. Every time he looked in the mirror and preened, “I’m so pretty,” he was saying “Black is beautiful” at a time when many people of color thought it was better to be white. When he refused induction into the United States Army during the height of the war in Vietnam, he stood up for the principle that, unless there’s a very good reason for killing people, war is wrong.

It’s hard to understand the shockwaves that Muhammad sent through society in the 1960s unless one lived through those years and experienced them one day at a time.

“To say Ali is an original is to understate the truth,” Dave Kindred later wrote. “He is a universe of one. He is the first, the last, and the only. What he did, he did. Only he could have done it.”

But as the 1960s progressed, forces beyond Ali’s control weighed against him. He was indicted, tried, and convicted for refusing induction into the Army and faced five years imprisonment. He was stripped of his title and precluded from fighting for more than three years. Richard Nixon, who mocked everything that Ali stood for, ascended to the presidency. When, at last, Ali was allowed to return to the ring, his legs were no longer young. He lost to Joe Frazier and then to Ken Norton.

Ali avenged his defeats to Frazier and Norton. But by then, a new king had been crowned. George Foreman’s professional record stood at 40 wins with no losses and 37 knockouts. His eight most recent bouts had ended in the first or second round. His victims in those fights included Frazier and Norton. This was the mountain that Ali had to climb.

“My opponents don’t worry about losing,” Foreman bragged. “They worry about getting hurt.” That view was seconded by Dave Anderson of the New York Times who wrote, “George Foreman might be the heaviest puncher in the history of the heavyweight division. For a few rounds, Ali might be able to escape Foreman’s sledgehammer strength, but not for 15 rounds. Sooner or later, the champion will land one of his sledgehammer punches and, for the first time in his career, Muhammad Ali will be counted out. That could happen in the first round.”

The fight began in the early hours of the morning to accommodate closed-circuit audiences in the United States. Had Muhammad fought Foreman in Las Vegas or New York, the mystique of that night and the Ali legend would not have been the same. Foreman was a three-to-one betting favorite. Sixty thousand fans jammed Stade du 20 Mai.

Heavy storm clouds had gathered overhead by the time the bell for round one rang. But the night was touched by stardust.

In round one, Ali tested Foreman at long range. Then, 30 seconds into the second stanza, he retreated to the ropes. Conventional wisdom dictated that the ropes were the last place an opponent wanted to be against the most feared puncher in boxing. Ali’s corner was screaming at him to dance. But Muhammad remained in place, determined to fight out of a defensive posture, blocking some punches, leaning back against the ropes to avoid others, and absorbing the sledgehammer blows that landed.

For the next six rounds, that was how he fought. But Ali didn’t just take punches. He threw them as well. Fighting off the ropes, he won three of the first four rounds. Then, in round five, Foreman began landing thunderous right hands to Muhammad’s body. Ali looked tired. The end seemed near. But Muhammad rallied at the end of the round, survived rounds six and seven, and at the start of round eight, told Foreman, “Now it’s my turn.”

“I didn’t really plan what happened that night,” Ali told me as we watched the fight together. “But when a fighter gets in the ring, he has to adjust to the conditions he faces. Against George, the ring was slow. Dancing all night, my legs would have got tired. And George was following me too close, cutting off the ring. In the first round, I used more energy staying away from him than he used chasing me. I was tireder than I should have been with 14 rounds to go. I knew I couldn’t keep dancing, because by the middle of the fight I’d be really tired and George would get me. So between rounds, I decided to do what I did in training when I got tired. It was something Archie Moore used to do. He let younger men take their shots and blocked everything in scientific fashion. Then, when they got tired, Archie would attack. Not everyone can do that. It takes a lot of skill. But I figured I’d be able to handle George off the ropes early in the fight when I was fresh. And if he hit too hard, I’d just start dancing again.

“So starting in the second round, I gave George what he thought he wanted. And he hit hard. A couple of times, he shook me bad, especially with the right hand. But I blocked and dodged most of what he threw. And each round, his punches got slower and hurt less when they landed. Then I started talking to him. ‘Hit harder! Show me something, George. That don’t hurt. I thought you were supposed to be bad.’ And George was trapped. I was on the ropes, but he was trapped because attacking was all he knew how to do. By round six, I knew he was tired. His punches weren’t as hard as before. And because of the way George fought, one punch at a time with his head not moving, it was getting easy to hit him with counterpunches.”...............

 

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