Final tribute to 'The Greatest' unfolds in Muhammad Ali's hometown
LOUISVILLE: Fans chanting “Ali!” and throwing flowers lined the streets of Muhammad Ali's hometown in Kentucky on Friday for a funeral procession to celebrate the boxing champion who jolted America with his showmanship and won worldwide admiration as a man of principle.
Ali, a once-controversial convert to Islam who lost three years of his boxing career for refusing US military service during the Vietnam War, died a week ago at age 74 as one of the most respected men in the United States.
A hearse embarked on a route through Louisville, Kentucky, that would take Ali's body past landmarks such as his boyhood home on the West End, traditionally an African-American section of town, and the Muhammad Ali Center, a museum in the center of the Louisville. It was to end at Cave Hill National Cemetery with a private burial.
Thousands of people were later expected to fill the KFC Yum Center for a memorial featuring eulogies by former US President Bill Clinton and comedian Billy Crystal, beginning at 2pm (local time).