The
reminder that yet another anniversary is here had George Foreman thinking that
maybe it’s time to visit an old friend.
They once
had their differences, once came to blows. Time, though, is a great healer.
“Maybe I
should go and see him,” Foreman said. “He’s like a brother. We’re that close.”
They
weren’t 35 years ago, on an early morning in
Africa
when all Foreman had in mind was dealing some serious hurt to Muhammad Ali. He
had been in
Zaire
way too long as it was, and the big, brooding heavyweight champion was in no
mood to take any nonsense from anybody. Read on for more…
That
included Ali, whom Foreman saw as little more than his next knockout victim.
“I figured
no one could stand up to me,” Foreman said during a recent telephone interview
from his home in
Houston.
“I went out there to knock him out.”
Ali had
other ideas. Ten years had passed since he shocked the world by winning the
heavyweight title against Sonny Liston, and he knew a thing or two about
beating a bully.
The great
trainer Cus D’Amato had given him a piece of advice for the fight: Hit him as
hard as you can with the first punch, Cus said, and let him know you’re there.
Others had
tried it, others had failed. But none was Muhammad Ali.
In
Foreman’s dressing room before the fight, the mood was as dark as the African
night. This wasn’t going to last long, and the price Ali would pay would be
dreadful.
“There’s
death in the air,” a Foreman camp member kept shouting.
Back in
Ali’s dressing room, the challenger wanted to know what they were saying just
before they went to battle.
“They’re
saying your kids will soon be in an orphanage,” Ali’s confidante, Gene Kilroy,
told him.
“I can’t
wait,” Ali thundered. “Let me at him. I’m going to teach George Foreman a
lesson.”
We know it
now as the Rumble in the Jungle, a fight so epic that it had to have a name just
as memorable. Ali coined the name himself, but to boxing fans at the time it
was just Foreman versus Ali for the heavyweight title.
It ended up
in
Zaire
because the country’s brutal dictator, Mobutu Sese Seko, put up the $10 million
purse to bring it there. It was, he said, his gift to the people for the “honor
of the black man” and a way to put the former
Belgian
Congo on the world map.
Don King
was just learning how to promote fights, and got this one mostly because he
talked Foreman into signing for a $5 million share of the purse. King was also
trying to make some money on the side, selling charter flights to
Africa that included hotel rooms and tickets to the fight
for $2,500.
He expected
5,000 people to fly from the United States, but then Ali began ranting about
being in the jungle and having the natives boil reporters he didn’t like in
pots. King was forced to lower the price to $1,500, prompting one scribe to ask
whether the people who had already bought packages would get the lower rate.
“Well, we
haven’t sold any,” King said.
The claims
that 1 billion people would watch the fight from around the world would turn
out to be wildly inflated, too. But the fight between the brutish Foreman and
the man who called himself The Greatest was primed to be a major event.
How much of
a fight it would be was debatable. Foreman had knocked out his last 24
opponents and spent barely more than 11 minutes in the ring in winning and
defending the title twice. He was a 3-1 favorite in the Vegas sports books, and
many feared he would seriously hurt Ali.
People were
eager for a diversion, though, even from a fight so far away. Inflation was up,
Watergate had just toppled a president, and the fight offered a temporary
escape from the problems of the world.
Ali, as
always, was eager to entertain.
“You think
the world was shocked when Nixon resigned,” he said. “Wait till I whup George
Foreman’s behind.”
Before
Foreman reinvented himself as a lovable lug of a heavyweight, and long before
he sold
America
millions of hamburger grills, he was an angry fighter. Taking his cues from
Liston, he scowled at anyone who came close and scared other fighters before
they even entered the ring.
Ali, he
figured, would be no different.
At a boxing
writers’ dinner in
New York
a few months before the fight, Foreman ripped Ali’s suit and the two had to be
pulled apart. As he was escorted out by his handlers, Ali threw water glasses
at him, and they smashed to pieces on the ground.
“Ali had no
fear of him, no fear,” said Kilroy, who was Ali’s business manager and now is
an executive at the
Luxor casino in
Las Vegas.
Maybe that
was because Ali knew something. After the fight was signed he watched tapes of
Foreman’s bouts, at one point telling Kilroy to run it back when he saw Foreman
lumbering to a corner after knocking Joe Frazier down for the umpteenth time.
“Look! No
stamina. No stamina,” Ali shouted.
He would
later hint to reporters what would happen, though few believed him. Foreman, he
said, would fall flat on his face after the 10th round, felled by sheer
exhaustion.
Foreman
didn’t pay attention to any of it. He knew he would knock Ali out early. He
couldn’t wait to get the chance.
“I just had
so much rage,” Foreman said. “It was just the fighter in me. I didn’t know any
different.”
The fight
was originally set for Sept. 25, 1974, but Foreman was cut in sparring soon
after arriving in
Zaire.
He wanted to go home to heal, but Mobutu’s men weren’t about to let anyone
leave before there was a fight.
The
heavyweight championship would finally be decided on Oct. 30. The day before,
Foreman and Ali made separate trips to the presidential palace to pay homage to
the dictator. Ali hugged Mobutu and kissed him on both cheeks, startling the
security guards who figured someone would pay for touching the president.
It was 4
a.m. in
Zaire
when the bell sounded for the first round and Ali came out and did just what
D’Amato wanted him to do, landing a big right hand to open the fight. Foreman
shook it off and quickly went to work himself, ripping powerful punches to
Ali’s head and body.
The same
shots had dropped Frazier six times, and stopped Ken Norton in the second
round. Foreman was sure Ali would fall, and the time looked ripe in the third
round when he landed a savage right hand to Ali’s neck.
“I hit him
hard and he looked at me like he was going to fight back, then just covered
up,” Foreman recalled. “He figured, ‘I’m not going to let this guy do this to
me.’ After the bell he looked up and said ‘I made it, I made it.’ He realized
that he had taken the best I had and gotten through it.”
Indeed, Ali
had found his way to win. He laid on the ropes, covering up and letting Foreman
punch him at will. The “rope-a-dope” may have been born out of desperation, but
there was no question what it was doing to Foreman.
He began to
tire, just as Ali had predicted. Then, with just seconds left in the eighth
round, Ali landed a left hook that snapped Foreman’s head up, then followed it
with a right that sent him staggering to the canvas.
The fight
was over, but it could have been worse. As Foreman was going down, Ali had the
perfect chance to hit him with another right hand, but didn’t.
“He started
to do it, then put the gun back in the holster,” Foreman said. “He had mercy on
me. Would I have done the same for him at that time? No.”
Foreman had
barely gotten off the plane from
Zaire
when he held a press conference in
Paris
and called for an investigation of the fight. The ropes had been too loose, he
said, the count too quick, the canvas too soft.
It had to
be something because there was no way he could have lost, something he had
trouble coming to grips with for years. In his 2007 book, “God In My Corner,”
he claimed that someone had spiked his water to drug him into submission.
But he’s
done making excuses. Ali, he now says, was simply smarter than he was that day.
“This man
could think. He understood I would go out there to try and knock him out,”
Foreman said. “But no one had ever knocked him out. Where in the world did I
get it in my mind I could knock him out? That’s why I lost.”
Foreman
would come back 20 years later to become the oldest man to win the heavyweight
title at age 45, knocking out Michael Moorer in an upset almost as huge as the
one Ali pulled off in
Zaire.
He couldn’t have imagined that, just as he could never have imagined becoming
hugely rich as a popular pitchman.
“Thirty-five
years ago I walked off that canvas thinking I was dead,” Foreman said. “Turns
out I hadn’t even begun to live.”
Ali had
said he was going to retire after the fight, and Kilroy pleaded with him to do
it. But he liked the idea of being heavyweight champion once again, and soon
there was an offer of another $5 million to defend against Joe Bugner in what
would be little more than a glorified sparring session.
Ali is
muted now, his once magnificent voice not heard publicly in years. He lives
mostly in
Arizona
with his wife, Lonnie, and, though Parkinson’s Syndrome has taken a terrible
toll on him, still travels frequently.
Foreman and
Ali became friends over the years and until recently would talk on the phone.
If there’s a rumor about Ali’s health, one of his daughters will call Foreman
to reassure him that things are fine.
He hasn’t
seen him in a few years, but thinks it could be time.
“He’s
always coming to you, but he’s not getting around well these days,” Foreman
said. “I guess I will have to go to him. This will probably push me out the
door to find him.”
Foreman
knows that he will always be defined by what happened in that faraway ring, but
that’s OK now, too. He understands that maybe he was just a part of something with
Ali that was much bigger than either of them could understand at the time.
Yes, he
lost to Ali in the ring, but in the end he may have gained even more.
“I don’t
call him the best boxer of all time,” Foreman said, “but he’s the greatest
human being I ever met.”
Savannah Marshall (R) of England celebrates following her win against Elena Vystropova (C) of Azerbaijan during their middleweight 75kg final bout at the Women's World Boxing Championships in Qinhuangdao on May 19, 2012. Eight places in the three Olympic weight categories, flyweight, lightweight and middleweight, are up for grabs at the world championships, with another four awarded to small and developing countries. Marshall won 17:15. AFP PHOTO / Ed JonesEd Jones/AFP/GettyImages