Lord of the ring
Muhammad Ali was a champion in the true sense. He fought as bravely inside the ring as he did outside it. He fought for his titles and for his beliefs. He was not afraid of hitting or speaking out.
He showed speed, grace, power, resilience and rebellion. This won him fans and followers. Then having knocked out every boxer worth fighting at the time to prove that he was the greatest, Ali won people’s hearts and admiration by being a champion of civil rights and a philanthropist. This made him one of the greatest human beings of the 20th century along with being its greatest sports personality.
Ali’s charisma and commitment to social and political causes — against public opinion when he converted to Islam, against the US government when he refused to be inducted into the army during the Vietnam War and against Parkinson’s disease which he battled with for more than three decades — make him endearing to even those who have never seen him enter a boxing ring or move without shaking and speak without a slur.
Here is a glimpse into the life of Muhammad Ali, “the greatest” as he called himself, and what made him the greatest.