Boxing legend Barry McGuigan has looked back at the Rumble in the Jungle, 50 years on from Muhammad Ali’s stunning upset victory over George Foreman in Zaire
Boxing legend Barry McGuigan has looked back at the Rumble in the Jungle, 50 years on from Muhammad Ali’s stunning upset victory over George Foreman in Zaire Boxing legend Barry McGuigan has looked back at the Rumble in the Jungle, 50 years on from Muhammad Ali’s stunning upset victory over George Foreman in Zaire
The 50th anniversary of the Rumble in the Jungle triggered justifiable coverage of one of the greatest spectacles in sporting history.
As astonishing as Muhammad Ali’s performance was in downing George Foreman in Zaire, the fight itself was eclipsed a year later by the Thrilla in Manila. The first fight between Ali and Joe Frazier at Madison Square Garden in 1971 triggered a golden decade in heavyweight boxing and was later judged the fight of the 20th Century.
Ali avenged defeat in their second meeting in New York in early 1974, which set the trilogy bout in context. Ali had done the unthinkable lowering the monster that was Foreman. To beat him in such cinematic circumstances, a 25 year-old champion who had thrashed Ken Norton and Frazier, took the breath away. But the Thrilla was a better fight, an incredible contest.
Ali could handle the powerful explosiveness of Foreman but the relentlessness of Frazier was more difficult for him. For someone like Ali, who threw rapid combinations, Frazier was all wrong. The volume of punches Frazier threw made him so effective.
Frazier didn’t bother Foreman because big George was such a brutal puncher and physically more imposing. Styles make fights. Foreman would always have knocked out Frazier and Norton but never Ali. It’s just the way boxing works.
The Rumble in the Jungle was amazing for its conclusion, how Ali, who had spent eight rounds on the ropes, suddenly sprung into attack to put a punched-out Foreman away. Psychologically he destroyed him.
But in the Thrilla in Manila he was required to dig deeper in a more profound way. It was a totally different fight, a different demand. The rivalry between the two brought its own unforgettable, unique energy, which left both fighters exhausted.
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Image:
Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)
It ended with Frazier’s trainer Eddie Futch waving the towel at the end of the 14th round, famously saying to his man: “It’s all over. No one will forget what you did here today.” He was right.
Those words have echoed down the years, an accompaniment as powerful as any of the images taken that night. Each left a bit of themselves in the ring that they could never get back.
Though Ali won, it is impossible to judge Frazier, who begged Futch to continue, the loser in the conventional sense. Indeed Ali said afterwards it was the closest to death he ever felt in the ring.
Follow Barry on X at @ClonesCyclone @mcguigans_Gym
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