The Province

Ali, Frazier paid the price

BOXING HISTORY: Boxers were never the same after brutal Thrilla in Manilla slugfest

- TIM DAHLBERG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It was, Muhammad Ali would later say, the closest thing to death he had ever known.

He and Joe Frazier had gone 14 brutal rounds in the stifling heat of a Philippine­s morning before Frazier’s trainer Eddie Futch mercifully signalled things to an end, his fighter blind and battered and feeling pretty close to death himself.

It was the final time the two fighters would meet in a trilogy that transcende­d the sport of boxing. The last meeting would take place in the most unlikely of places and be a fight so epic it would live up to its name.

It was 40 years ago, Oct. 1, 1975, and the “Thrilla in Manilla” was just that. Neither fighter gave an inch as Frazier relentless­ly pursued Ali and Ali responded by unleashing the fury of his fists on the oncoming challenger’s head.

“They told me Joe Frazier was washed up,” Ali said to Frazier at one point.

“They lied,” Frazier growled, throwing yet another left hook at a target he could barely see.

The fight was for the heavyweigh­t title that Ali won a year earlier from George Foreman in another fight with a memorable name. If the “Rumble in the Jungle” was Ali’s finest hour — at least in his late career — the defence against Frazier was surely his most gutty performanc­e.

Ali’s business manager, Gene Kilroy, was watching from ringside, fearful for the health of both fighters.

“I was thinking to myself, why don’t they just ban boxing now?” Kilroy said.

The president of the Philippine­s had welcomed the two fighters to his country and Ferdinand Marcos and his wife, Imelda, were among the 28,000 crowded inside the steamy Araneta Coliseum to watch the biggest sporting event the nation had ever hosted.

A fight of a different sort had broken out in the days before the bout when Ali’s wife Belinda arrived unexpected­ly after reports surfaced about the champion squiring a 20-year-old named Veronica around town and introducin­g her as his wife. She barged into Ali’s hotel suite and exchanged words with him for about 15 minutes before heading back to the airport.

Ali’s domestic issues hadn’t prevented him from training hard for Frazier. He knew from their first two fights — this was the rubber match — that there was never any quit in the former champion, despite his knockout loss to Foreman two years earlier.

Frazier would be especially relentless this time, angry with Ali for calling him a “gorilla” and belittling him as an Uncle Tom.

“He knew that Frazier would never be washed up against him,” Kilroy said. “If Frazier was 60, he would have still been ready to fight Ali.”

Ali came out throwing big punches, hoping to stop Frazier in his tracks. He buckled Frazier’s legs twice in the first round and was giving him a beating through the early rounds.

But Frazier began finding the mark with his signature left hook, snapping Ali’s head back. He began backing Ali up, taking the fight to him, and by the end of the 10th round, Ali sat exhausted on his ring stool, his head bowed and seemingly ready to quit.

“Ali took terrible punishment,” said retired Associated Press boxing writer Ed Schuyler Jr., who was ringside. “In the sixth round, he hit him with a hook that almost made it look like his head was on a swivel. Joe just wouldn’t stop.”

Somehow, Ali took the punches and remained upright. Somehow, he found a way to turn the fight back in his favour.

By the 14th round, the big right hands Ali was landing had made Frazier’s face almost unrecogniz­able. Frazier’s punches no longer had their zip, but even with his eyes almost completely swollen shut he continued throwing left hook after left hook, hoping one might find its mark.

Finally, Futch told Frazier he couldn’t go on. Frazier briefly protested, but Futch wouldn’t budge, knowing what one final round might bring.

“God knows what might have happened if they hadn’t stopped the fight,” Kilroy said.

Unfortunat­ely, it came at great cost. Frazier would fight ineffectiv­ely two more times and Ali was a shadow of himself even as he continued on.

“It was the last hurrah for both of them,” Schuyler said. “They both should have quit after that fight.”

 ?? — AP FILES ?? It may have been exactly 40 years ago, but the ‘Thrilla in Manilla’ heavyweigh­t title fight between Joe Frazier, left, and Muhammad Ali still lives on in sporting lore.
— AP FILES It may have been exactly 40 years ago, but the ‘Thrilla in Manilla’ heavyweigh­t title fight between Joe Frazier, left, and Muhammad Ali still lives on in sporting lore.

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