Fight of the Century

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Fight of the Century
Frazier Ali Official Onsite Poster.jpeg
The onsite poster for Joe Frazier vs. Former undisputed heavyweight champion of the world Muhammad Ali.
DateMarch 8, 1971
VenueMadison Square Garden, New York City, New York, US
Title(s) on the lineWBA, WBC, and The Ring heavyweight titles
Tale of the tape
Boxer United States Joe Frazier United States Muhammad Ali
Nickname Smokin' Joe The Greatest
Hometown Beaufort, South Carolina, US Louisville, Kentucky, US
Pre-fight record 26–0 (23 KO) 31–0 (25 KO)
Height 5 ft 11+12 in (182 cm) 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight 205 lb (93 kg)[1] 215 lb (98 kg)[1]
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA, WBC, and The Ring heavyweight champion Former undisputed heavyweight champion
Result
Frazier wins via 15-round unanimous decision (8-6-1, 9-6, 11-4)

Joe Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali, billed as The Fight,[2] was a heavyweight championship boxing match between WBA, WBC, and The Ring heavyweight champion Joe Frazier and former undisputed heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali, on Monday, March 8, 1971, at Madison Square Garden in New York City.[3][4][5]

The fight is widely regarded as the biggest boxing match in history and arguably the single most anticipated and publicized sporting event ever. It was the first time that two undefeated boxers who held or had held the world Heavyweight title fought each other for that title.

The bout held broad appeal for many Americans, including non-boxing and non-sport fans. Ali, who had been stripped of his titles by boxing authorities for refusing to submit to the draft for the Vietnam war, had become a symbol of the anti-establishment public during his government-imposed exile from the ring,[6] while Frazier had been adopted by the pro-war public.

Frazier won in 15 rounds by unanimous decision. It was the first of a trio of fights, followed by the rematch fights Super Fight II (1974) and Thrilla in Manila (1975), both won by Ali.

Background and cultural significance[]

In 1971, both Ali and Frazier were undefeated champions (in Ali's case, actually, former champion) who held legitimate claims to the title of "World Heavyweight Champion". Ali had won the title from Sonny Liston in Miami Beach in 1964, and successfully defended his belt up until he had it stripped by boxing authorities for refusing induction into the armed forces in 1967. In Ali's absence, Frazier won two championship belts through elimination tournaments, knocking out Buster Mathis and Jimmy Ellis, to replace Ali as the acknowledged world champion. Frazier was plausibly Ali's equal, which created a tremendous amount of hype and anticipation for a match pitting the two undefeated fighters against one another to decide who was the true heavyweight champ.[7]

Ringside seats were $150 (equivalent to $1,004 in 2021) and each man was guaranteed $2.5 million.[8] In addition to the millions who watched on closed-circuit broadcast screens around the world, the Garden was packed with a sell-out crowd of 20,455 that provided a gate of $1.5 million (equivalent to $10,036,565 in 2021).[9]

Prior to his enforced layoff, Ali had displayed uncommon speed and agility for a man of his size. He had dominated most of his opponents to the point that he had often predicted the round in which he would knock his opponent out. In October 1970, he knocked out Jerry Quarry in three rounds in his first match after a three-and-a-half-year layoff. However, in his next fight, the last preceding the Frazier fight, Ali struggled at times during his 15th-round TKO of Oscar Bonavena, an unorthodox Argentinian fighter who was prepared by Hall of Fame trainer Gil Clancy.[10] On the March 4, 1971 episode of The Dick Cavett Show, Howard Cosell, Joe Louis and Jimmy Breslin all correctly predicted that because of Ali's lengthy layoff, Frazier would prevail.

Frazier had an outstanding left hook and was a tenacious competitor who attacked the body of his opponent ferociously. Despite suffering from a serious bout of hypertension in the lead-up to the fight, he appeared to be in top form as the face-off between the two undefeated champions approached.[7]

Prior to the fight, Mark Kram wrote in Sports Illustrated:

The thrust of this fight on the public consciousness is incalculable. It has been a ceaseless whir that seems to have grown in decibel with each new soliloquy by Ali, with each dead calm promise by Frazier. It has magnetized the imagination of ring theorists, and flushed out polemicists of every persuasion. It has cut deep into the thicket of our national attitudes, and it is a conversational imperative everywhere—from the gabble of big-city salons and factory lunch breaks rife with unreasoning labels, to ghetto saloons with their own false labels.[8][11]

As Gil Clancy, who was in Frazier's corner that night, would later comment:

The electricity in the air then was just unbelievable. If they would have dropped the bomb on Madison Square Garden that night, the country wouldn't have been able to run.[12]

Fight[]

On the evening of the match, Madison Square Garden had a circus-like atmosphere, with scores of policemen to control the crowd of outrageously dressed fans and countless celebrities, from Norman Mailer to Woody Allen. Unable to procure a ringside seat, Frank Sinatra took photographs for Life magazine instead. Nelson Mandela, who was in prison in South Africa during the event, spoke about how excited everybody was about this fight.[13][14] Artist LeRoy Neiman painted Ali and Frazier as they fought. Burt Lancaster served as a color commentator for the closed-circuit broadcast. Though Lancaster had never performed as a sports commentator before, he was hired by the fight's promoter, Jerry Perenchio, who was also a friend. The other commentators were famed boxing play-by-play announcer Don Dunphy[15] and former light-heavyweight boxing champion and heavyweight competitor Archie Moore.[16] The fight was sold, and broadcast by closed circuit, to 50 countries in 12 languages via ringside reporters to an audience estimated at 300 million, a record viewership for a television event at that time. Riots broke out at several venues as unresolvable technical issues interrupted the broadcast in several cities in the third round.[17] And, although no live radio coverage of the fight itself was allowed under the terms of the promotion, the Mutual Radio Network did broadcast the fight the night of March 8, with announcers Van Patrick and Charles King, together with many other sports commentators, providing round-by-round summaries live as they came out over the UPI and AP wire services.[18][19]

The referee for the fight was Arthur Mercante, Sr., who spent the night breaking up Ali's clinching and holding Frazier behind the head. After the fight, Mercante, a veteran referee of hundreds of fights, said: "They both threw some of the best punches I've ever seen."[20]

The fight itself exceeded many fans’ expectations and went the full 15-round championship distance.[21] Ali dominated the first five rounds, peppering the shorter Frazier with rapier-like jabs that raised welts on the champion's face.

Ali was visibly tired after the sixth round, and though he put together some flurries of punches after that round, he was unable to keep the pace he had set in the first third of the fight. At 1 minute and 59 seconds into round eight, following his clean left hook to Ali's right jaw, Frazier grabbed Ali's wrists and swung Ali into the center of the ring; however, Ali immediately grabbed Frazier again until they were once again separated by Mercante.

Nine seconds into the eleventh round, Frazier caught Ali with a left hook to the right jaw and a fraction of a second later, Ali dropped to the canvas with both gloves and right knee touching. Despite this, Mercante did not signal a knock down, and neither did Mercante call time to wipe the canvas as if Ali had slipped on a wet spot. Instead Mercante waved off the knock down as if it had never happened. At 18 seconds into round 11, Mercante signaled the fighters to engage once again. At 2:10 of the round, Frazier staggered Ali with another left hook, Ali's knees buckling -- only bouncing off the ropes keeping Ali from again hitting the canvas. For the remainder of the round, Ali stumbled around the ring backing again and again into the ropes and grabbing at Frazier as Frazier continued battering him until the fighters were separated by Mercante at 2:55 into the round. All this can clearly be seen on the video of the fight.

Heading into round 15, all three judges had Frazier In the lead (7–6–1, 10–4–0, and 8–6–0), and Frazier closed convincingly. Early in the round, Frazier landed a left hook that put Ali on the canvas. Ali, his jaw swollen noticeably, got up at the count of four and managed to stay on his feet for the rest of the round despite several terrific blows from Frazier. A few minutes later, the judges made it official: Frazier had retained the title with a unanimous decision, dealing Ali his first professional loss.[22]

Scorecard[]

Round  1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10 11 12 13 14 15 Total [5][dead link]
Artie Aidala (judge) A A F F F F F A A F F F A A F Frazier, 9–6–0
Bill Recht (judge) F A F F A F F F A F F F F A F Frazier, 11–4–0
Art Mercante (referee) A A F F F A A F A A F F F F Frazier, 8–6–1

Viewership and revenue[]

The fight was broadcast live pay-per-view on theatre television in the United States,[23][24] where it set a record with 2.5 million tickets sold at closed-circuit venues,[25] grossing $45 million.[26] It was also shown closed-circuit during the middle of the night in London theatres, where it set a record with 90,000 tickets,[27] grossing $750,000.[28] Combined, the fight sold 2.59 million tickets in the United States and London, grossing $45.75 million (inflation-adjusted $300 million).

On both closed-circuit and free television, the fight was watched by a record 300 million viewers worldwide.[29] It was watched by a record 27.5 million viewers on BBC1 in the United Kingdom, about half of the British population.[30] It was also watched by an estimated 5.4 million viewers in Italy,[31] and 2 million viewers in South Korea.[32]

Aftermath[]

Ali refused to publicly admit defeat and sought to define the outcome in the public's mind as a "White Man's Decision". Frazier lost the title 22 months later, when he was knocked down six times in the first two rounds by George Foreman in their brief but devastating January 22, 1973, title bout in Kingston, Jamaica.[33][34]

Ali split two bouts with Ken Norton in 1973 and was viewed by many as on a downward slide before a win in a rematch—Ali–Frazier II—in January 1974. That October, Ali shocked the world with a victory in Kinshasa, Zaire, over the heavily favored Foreman to regain the heavyweight title in The Rumble in the Jungle.[2]

Ali later went on to defeat Frazier in their third and final bout, The Thrilla in Manila. By the time of the rematches the social climate in America had settled down, with the Vietnam War having ended in early 1973. Many dismissed the notion that Ali was a traitor, and he was once again accepted as the heavyweight champion. People who had supported Frazier on political and racial grounds in the first bout so that they could see Ali get beat were less effusive and abandoned him after he lost his championship. Without the same social divide, with the unknown of whether Ali could ever regain enough of his former greatness to dominate post-layoff partially answered, and without the impetus of two unbeaten champions meeting one another for the first time, neither their second nor their third matchup would attain the unprecedented hype of the first.[35]

Ali biographer Wilfrid Sheed wrote rather hyperbolically of the fight:

Both men left the ring changed men that night. For Frazier, his greatness was gone, that unquantifiable combination of youth, ability and desire. For Ali, the public hatred he had so carefully nursed to his advantage came to a head and burst that night and has never been the same. To his supporters he became a cultural hero. His detractors finally gave him grudging respect. At least they had seen him beaten and seen that smug look wiped off his face.[36]

Boxing historian Bert Sugar said:

"As Ali's image and myth and name and reputation grew, Joe's was sure to suffer. The winner that night was the loser and the loser that night was the winner."[1]

COINTELPRO[]

The fight provided cover for an activist group, the Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI, to successfully pull off a burglary at an FBI office in Pennsylvania, which exposed the COINTELPRO operations that included illegal spying on activists involved with the civil rights and anti-war movements, on the basis that guards listening to radio coverage of the fight would be distracted from their duties. One of the COINTELPRO targets was Muhammad Ali, and the FBI's goals included their gaining access to his records as far back as elementary school.[37]

See also[]

Comics[]

  • Combat du siècle (Le) in french, by Loulou Dédola and Luca Ferrara, Éditions Gallimard, Futuropolis, 2021, ISBN 978-2-7548-2541-2(nISSM)

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Weigh-ins held". Milwaukee Journal. Associated Press. March 8, 1971. p. 10.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Thriller in Manila". Top Documentary Films. 2009. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  3. ^ "The Great Fights: Ali vs. Frazier I". Life. Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  4. ^ Kram, Mark (March 15, 1971). "The battered face of a winner". Sports Illustrated. p. 16.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Zavoral, Nolan (March 9, 1971). "Frazier bores in and Ali is kaput". Milwaukee Journal. p. 11.
  6. ^ George, Thomas (February 24, 2011). "Fight of the Century: Muhammad Ali's legacy grows in defeat". AOL News. Archived from the original on November 27, 2012.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Ali-Frazier I: One Nation... Divisible. HBO Sports. 2000. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Kram, Mark (March 8, 1971). "At the bell..." Sports Illustrated. p. 18.
  9. ^ Mee, Bob (2006). The Heavyweights; The Definition of the Heavyweight Fighters. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Tempus. pp. 107, 108.
  10. ^ Anderson, Dave (1992). In the Corner: Great Boxing Trainers Talk About Their Art. William Morrow & Co. ISBN 978-0688119041.
  11. ^ Kevin Iole (2013-03-08). "Fight of the Century? Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier put on the event of all-time on March 8, 1971". Sports.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  12. ^ SportsNight, Satellite News Channel, June 1988.
  13. ^ "When Nelson Mandela met the champ". POLITICO. Associated Press. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  14. ^ "What others say about 'The Greatest' of all, Muhammad Ali". www.independent.co.uk. 4 June 2016. Archived from the original on 2022-06-09. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  15. ^ "Don Dunphy, 90, Distinctive Fight Broadcaster", Gerald Eskanazi, New York Times, July 24, 1998
  16. ^ "50 years ago, March 8th, 300 million fans worldwide watched Ali-Frazier I, a fight with political overtones", David J. Halbertram, Sports Broadcast Journal, 3/21/2021
  17. ^ "Joe Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali (1st meeting)". BoxRec. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  18. ^ https://radiotapes.com/KDHL/KDHL-AM_Ali-Frazer_3-8-1971_1.mp3[bare URL AV media file]
  19. ^ https://radiotapes.com/KDHL/KDHL-AM_Ali-Frazer_3-8-1971_2.mp3[bare URL AV media file]
  20. ^ "Referee Mercante Calls. Punches Best He's Seen". The New York Times. March 9, 1971. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  21. ^ Orlando, Joe. Collecting Sports Legends: The Ultimate Hobby Guide. Zyrus Press, 2009. ISBN 9781933990217. Page 361.
  22. ^ "From the Vault: Joe Frazier v Muhammad Ali, part one". The Guardian. London. November 8, 2011.
  23. ^ "Joe Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali". Pittsburgh Press. (advertisement). March 7, 1971. p. 6, sec. 4.
  24. ^ "Joe Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali". Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). (advertisement). March 8, 1971. p. 13.
  25. ^ Frazier, Joe; Berger, Phil (2013). Smokin' Joe: The Autobiography of a Heavyweight Champion of the World, Smokin' Joe Frazier. AudioGO. p. 104. ISBN 9781620642160.
  26. ^ Ryan, Joe (2013). Heavyweight Boxing in the 1970s: The Great Fighters and Rivalries. McFarland. p. 65. ISBN 9780786492497.
  27. ^ "The Promoters Loved the Fight But Some Fans Call It 'a Bore'". Detroit Free Press. March 10, 1971.
  28. ^ "'Bugner's British Bunch' Travels To See Ali Bout". The News-Press. February 2, 1973.
  29. ^ "History of Prizefighting's Biggest Money Fights". Bloody Elbow. SB Nation. August 24, 2017.
  30. ^ Green, Timothy (1972). The Universal Eye: The World of Television. Stein and Day. p. 86. ISBN 9780812814248. The annual Miss World Contest, which is often the single most popular program of the year—attracting half the British population—is a natural for BBC 1; so was the Ali-Frazier fight, which was watched by 27.5 million people.
  31. ^ "Joe Keeps Crown". The Terre Haute Tribune. March 9, 1971.
  32. ^ "Most Boxing Buffs Agree With Outcome". Poughkeepsie Journal. March 9, 1971.
  33. ^ "Foreman beats Frazier to win heavyweight title in Jamaica" Archived 2019-06-07 at the Wayback Machine, "This Day in History – 1/22/1973". History.com. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  34. ^ "Foreman stops Frazier in 2nd". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. January 23, 1973. p. 1-part 2.
  35. ^ Hudson Jr, David (2006). Combat Sports; An Encyclopedia of Wrestling, Fighting, And Mixed Martial Arts. Westport CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 6, 7.
  36. ^ Sheed, Wilfrid (1975). Muhammad Ali: A Portrait in Words and Photographs. Crowell Publishing. ISBN 9780690009583. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  37. ^ Medsger, Betty (June 6, 2016). "In 1971, Muhammad Ali Helped Undermine the FBI's Illegal Spying on Americans". The Intercept. Retrieved April 17, 2017.

Coordinates: 40°45′01″N 73°59′37″W / 40.7504°N 73.9935°W / 40.7504; -73.9935

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