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Boxing
great
Joe
Frazier
dies
after
cancer
fight
By DAN
GELSTON
and TIM
DAHLBERG
AP
Sports
Writers
PHILADELPHIA
(AP) --
Joe
Frazier
had to
throw
his
greatest
punch to
knock
down
"The
Greatest."
A
vicious
left
hook
from
Frazier
put
Muhammad
Ali on
the
canvas
in the
15th
round in
March
1971
when he
became
the
first
man to
beat him
in the
Fight of
the
Century
at
Madison
Square
Garden.
"That
was the
greatest
thing
that
ever
happened
in my
life,"
Frazier
said.
It was
his
biggest
night,
one that
would
never
come
again.
The
relentless,
undersized
heavyweight
ruled
the
division
as
champion,
then
spent a
lifetime
trying
to fight
his way
out of
Ali's
shadow.
Frazier,
who died
Monday
night
after a
brief
battle
with
liver
cancer
at the
age of
67, will
forever
be
associated
with
Ali. No
one in
boxing
would
ever
dream of
anointing
Ali as
The
Greatest
unless
he, too,
was
linked
to
Smokin'
Joe.
"I will
always
remember
Joe with
respect
and
admiration,"
Ali said
in a
statement.
"My
sympathy
goes out
to his
family
and
loved
ones."
They
fought
three
times,
twice in
the
heart of
New York
City and
once in
the
morning
in a
steamy
arena in
the
Thrilla
in
Manila
in the
Philippines.
They
went 41
rounds
together.
Neither
gave an
inch and
both
gave it
their
all.
In their
last
fight in
Manila
in 1975,
they
traded
punches
with a
fervor
that
seemed
unimaginable
among
heavyweights.
Frazier
gave
almost
as good
as he
got for
14
rounds,
then had
to be
held
back by
trainer
Eddie
Futch as
he tried
to go
out for
the
final
round,
unable
to see.
"Closest
thing to
dying
that I
know
of," Ali
said
afterward.
Ali was
as
merciless
with
Frazier
out of
the ring
as he
was
inside
it. He
called
him a
gorilla,
and
mocked
him as
an Uncle
Tom. But
he
respected
him as a
fighter,
especially
after
Frazier
won a
decision
to
defend
his
heavyweight
title
against
the
then-unbeaten
Ali in a
fight
that was
so big
Frank
Sinatra
was
shooting
pictures
at
ringside
and both
fighters
earned
an
astonishing
$2.5
million.
The
night at
the
Garden
40 years
ago
remained
fresh in
Frazier's
mind as
he
talked
about
his
life,
career
and
relationship
with Ali
a few
months
before
he died.
"I can't
go
nowhere
where
it's not
mentioned,"
he told
The
Associated
Press.
Bob
Arum,
who once
promoted
Ali,
said he
was
saddened
by
Frazier's
passing.
"He was
such an
inspirational
guy. A
decent
guy. A
man of
his
word,"
Arum
said.
"I'm
torn up
by Joe
dying at
this
relatively
young
age. I
can't
say
enough
about
Joe."
Frazier's
death
was
announced
in a
statement
by his
family,
who
asked to
be able
to
grieve
privately
and said
they
would
announce
"our
father's
homecoming
celebration"
as soon
as
possible.
Manny
Pacquiao
learned
of it
shortly
after he
arrived
in Las
Vegas
for his
fight
Saturday
night
with
Juan
Manuel
Marquez.
Like
Frazier
in his
prime,
Pacquiao
has a
powerful
left
hook
that he
has used
in his
remarkable
run to
stardom.
"Boxing
lost a
great
champion,
and the
sport
lost a
great
ambassador,"
Pacquiao
said.
Don
King,
who
promoted
the
Thrilla
in
Manila,
was
described
by a
spokesman
as too
upset to
talk
about
Frazier's
death.
Though
slowed
in his
later
years
and his
speech
slurred
by the
toll of
punches
taken in
the
ring,
Frazier
was
still
active
on the
autograph
circuit
in the
months
before
he died.
In
September
he went
to Las
Vegas,
where he
signed
autographs
in the
lobby of
the MGM
Grand
shortly
before
Floyd
Mayweather
Jr.'s
fight
against
Victor
Ortiz.
An old
friend,
Gene
Kilroy,
visited
with him
and
watched
Frazier
work the
crowd.
"He was
so nice
to
everybody,"
Kilroy
said.
"He
would
say to
each of
them,
`Joe
Frazier,
sharp as
a razor,
what's
your
name?'"
Frazier
was
small
for a
heavyweight,
weighing
just 205
pounds
when he
won the
title by
stopping
Jimmy
Ellis in
the
fifth
round of
their
1970
fight at
Madison
Square
Garden.
But he
fought
every
minute
of every
round
going
forward
behind a
vicious
left
hook,
and
there
were few
fighters
who
could
withstand
his
constant
pressure.
His
reign as
heavyweight
champion
lasted
only
four
fights -
including
the win
over Ali
- before
he ran
into an
even
more
fearsome
slugger
than
himself.
George
Foreman
responded
to
Frazier's
constant
attack
by
dropping
him
three
times in
the
first
round
and
three
more in
the
second
before
their
1973
fight in
Jamaica
was
waved to
a close
and the
world
had a
new
heavyweight
champion.
Two
fights
later,
he met
Ali in a
rematch
of their
first
fight,
only
this
time the
outcome
was
different.
Ali won
a
12-round
decision,
and
later
that
year
stopped
George
Foreman
in the
Rumble
in the
Jungle
in
Zaire.
There
had to
be a
third
fight,
though,
and what
a fight
it was.
With
Ali's
heavyweight
title at
stake,
the two
met in
Manila
in a
fight
that
will
long be
seared
in
boxing
history.
Frazier
went
after
Ali
round
after
round,
landing
his left
hook
with
regularity
as he
made Ali
backpedal
around
the
ring.
But Ali
responded
with
left
jabs and
right
hands
that
found
their
mark
again
and
again.
Even the
intense
heat
inside
the
arena
couldn't
stop the
two as
they
fought
every
minute
of every
round
with
neither
willing
to
concede
the
other
one
second
of the
round.
"They
told me
Joe
Frazier
was
through,"
Ali told
Frazier
at one
point
during
the
fight.
"They
lied,"
Frazier
said,
before
hitting
Ali with
a left
hook.
Finally,
though,
Frazier
simply
couldn't
see and
Futch
would
not let
him go
out for
the 15th
round.
Ali won
the
fight
while on
his
stool,
exhausted
and
contemplating
himself
whether
to go
on.
"It was
unworldly
what we
had just
seen,"
Arum
said.
"Two men
fighting
one of
the
great
wars of
all
time.
It's
something
I will
never
forget
for all
the
years I
have
left."
It was
one of
the
greatest
fights
ever,
but it
took a
toll.
Frazier
would
fight
only two
more
times,
getting
knocked
out in a
rematch
with
Foreman
eight
months
later
before
coming
back in
1981 for
an ill
advised
fight
with
Jumbo
Cummings.
"They
should
have
both
retired
after
the
Manila
fight,"
former
AP
boxing
writer
Ed
Schuyler
Jr.
said.
"They
left
every
bit of
talent
they had
in the
ring
that
day."
Born in
Beaufort,
S.C., on
Jan 12,
1944,
Frazier
took up
boxing
early
after
watching
weekly
fights
on the
black
and
white
television
on his
family's
small
farm. He
was a
top
amateur
for
several
years,
and
became
the only
American
fighter
to win a
gold
medal in
the 1964
Olympics
in Tokyo
despite
fighting
in the
final
bout
with an
injured
left
thumb.
"Joe
Frazier
should
be
remembered
as one
of the
greatest
fighters
of all
time and
a real
man,"
Arum
told the
AP in a
telephone
interview
Monday
night.
"He's a
guy that
stood up
for
himself.
He
didn't
compromise
and
always
gave 100
percent
in the
ring.
There
was
never a
fight in
the ring
where
Joe
didn't
give 100
percent."
After
turning
pro in
1965,
Frazier
quickly
became
known
for his
punching
power,
stopping
his
first 11
opponents.
Within
three
years he
was
fighting
world-class
opposition
and, in
1970,
beat
Ellis to
win the
heavyweight
title
that he
would
hold for
more
than two
years.
A woman
who
answered
Ellis'
phone in
Kentucky
said the
former
champion
suffers
from
Alzheimer's
Disease,
but she
wanted
to pass
along
the
family's
condolences.
In
Philadelphia,
a fellow
Philadelphia
fighter,
longtime
middleweight
champion
Bernard
Hopkins,
said
Frazier
was so
big in
the city
that he
should
have his
own
statue,
like the
fictional
Rocky
character.
"I saw
him at
one of
my car
washes a
few
weeks
ago. He
was in a
car,
just
hollering
at us,
'They're
trying
to get
me!'
That was
his hi,"
Hopkins
said.
"I'm
glad I
got to
see him
in the
last
couple
of
months.
At the
end of
the day,
I
respect
the man.
I
believe
at the
end of
his
life, he
was
fighting
to get
that
respect."
He was a
fixture
in
Philadelphia
where he
trained
fighters
in a gym
he owned
and made
a cameo
in
"Rocky."
It was
his
fights
with Ali
that
would
define
Frazier.
Though
Ali was
gracious
in
defeat
in the
first
fight,
he was
as
vicious
with his
words as
he was
with his
punches
in
promoting
all
three
fights -
and he
never
missed a
chance
to get a
jab in
at
Frazier.
Frazier,
who in
his
later
years
would
have
financial
trouble
and end
up
running
a gym in
his
adopted
hometown
of
Philadelphia,
took the
jabs
personally.
He felt
Ali made
fun of
him by
calling
him
names
and said
things
that
were not
true
just to
get
under
his
skin.
Those
feelings
were
only
magnified
as Ali
went
from
being an
icon in
the ring
to one
of the
most
beloved
people
in the
world.
After a
trembling
Ali lit
the
Olympic
torch in
1996 in
Atlanta,
Frazier
was
asked by
a
reporter
what he
thought
about
it.
"They
should
have
thrown
him in,"
Frazier
responded.
He
mellowed,
though,
in
recent
years,
preferring
to
remember
the good
from his
fights
with Ali
rather
than the
bad.
Just
before
the 40th
anniversary
of his
win over
Ali
earlier
this
year - a
day
Frazier
celebrated
with
parties
in New
York -
he said
he no
longer
felt any
bitterness
toward
Ali, who
suffers
from
Parkinson's
disease
and is
mostly
mute.
"I
forgive
him,"
Frazier.
"He's in
a bad
way."
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