____________________________________________________________________dagosd2000 wrote:THE MOUTH THAT BORED
I remember when Muhammad Ali was in town to train for the Norton fight. Both boys were training at some swank hotel in Mission Valley putting the last touches on their upcoming fight. Ali would come out first. He drew a big crowd. Only fighter I can remember who trained with a microphone in the ring. Oh,he was charming all right. I don't know if San Diego saw him as a fighter or some sort of curiosity piece. Between Ali and Bundini Brown,there was enough laughter to fill up a week on Laugh In.
Ali did his thing of mostly letting his sparring partners,Billy Joiner,Tony Doyle,and Alonzo Johnson work him against the ropes and deal out shots to the his body and head as Muhammad protected himself with his arms against his sides and raised up. I think the public wanted to see him dance,but Ali's days as a hoofer were long behind him. Even so,I didn't think Norton had much of a chance.
During Ali's stay he was scheduled to work a day in Tijuana. There was a lot of hype in TJ with fight posters in Spanish nailed on every telephone pole and light post. But when the time came for Ali's sojourn south of the border,he was a no show. He cancelled. Never got a straight answer on that,but my feeling was that Ali wasn't going to charm the socks off the Mexican "aficianados."
Ali wasn't Mexico's "type" of fighter. Ali was a dancer.By that time, was more of a holder and staller. He could get away with that in the U.S.,but in Mexico they can't stand a fighter that holds and stalls. Maybe they could have bought the dancing,but even then,Mexicans like the "killer." The guy who says "screw defense. I'm wading in throwing everything I have." Frazier anf Tyson were popular. Ali never was.
Ali was smart not going down to TJ to do his act with his mouth. That's another thing Mexican fans can't stand. A cutesy mouth. A guy that talks too much.Add to it that Ali was African/American and that sealed the deal. You see Archie Moore and Joe Louis were gentlemen aside from being great fighters. Frazier and Tyson were scary and relentless. They were accepted African/American fighters.You could say they were even embraced . But Ali? All the wrong ingredients for Mexico. He knew that.
Muhammad Ali knew that if he went to Mexico the"aficianados"wouldn't be laughing with him,but at him. He would have been the mouth that bored.
http://boxrec.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f ... tart=25750Chuck1052 wrote:It is amazing that Joe Frazier wasn't more popular because he was extremely aggressive and had a tremendous workrate when in the ring. Of course, Muhammad Ali was a very charismatic individual, which is a major reason why he overshadowed Frazier even though the latter was much more of an "action" fighter.
- Chuck Johnston