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Thrilla in Manila (part 2 of 6 )

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Uploaded by on Jun 1, 2009

No Soccermatch today but another historical sport event. I Hope you enjoy it :)

The Thrilla in Manila is the third and final famous boxing match between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier for the Heavyweight Boxing Championship of the World, fought at the Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines on October 1, 1975.

The bout is often ranked as one of the greatest fights of 20th century boxing, and is the climax to the bitter rivalry between Ali and Frazier over who was the legitimate Heavyweight Champion. That situation came about after Ali was stripped of the title over his refusal to join the armed forces when drafted during the Vietnam war. Some years later after repeated weekly prodding from Ali, Frazier petitioned President Nixon to restore Ali's right to box thereby bringing about the so called Fight of the Century between two undisputed heavyweight champions in 1971.

During the whole period between their first and their last face-off in Manila, including the years which preceded the restoration of Ali's right to fight, Ali had used his wit, sharp tongue, and position with the press to take characteristic verbal pot shots at Frazier (as was his practice with all opponents—and which made good copy and controversy) but these became controversial and at times ugly, after his loss in the fight of the Century, and this verbal battery heated the rivalry into new territory.

Both boxers battled each other into near incapacity, and Frazier's trainer determined he should stop the bout after the fourteenth round, so the decision went to Ali as a technical knockout (TKO). The early and middle parts of the fight were close, with spectacular ebb and flow, and in the later rounds things gradually swung Ali's way in the scoring for any likely decision. The final match up between Ali and Frazier was ultimately detrimental to the health of both fighters. The first fight in 1971 between these two pugilists went fifteen rounds and the second fight going 12 rounds, which were both similarly hard on the participants.

source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrilla_in_Manila

Aftermath:
Ali: I always bring out the best in men I fight, but Joe Frazier, I'll tell the world right now, brings out the best in me. I'm gonna tell ya, that's one helluva man, and God bless him

Frazier:Lawdy, Lawdy his a great and mighty champion. I hit him with punches that would have brought down the walls of a city."

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Top Comments

  • I would not like to take one of those body shots from Frazier. I would be on the floor puking blood.

  • Greatest battle between Yin & Yang

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All Comments (118)

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  • @XANSEM i know i sound stupid but im not sure on the terms of yin and yang so which is which

  • 4:03-DAMN!

  • @RoaChc0acH lol, u know nothing about boxing, cheap fighters? More like Intelligent, but you wouldn't know anything about that, not just because you made a silly point, but how would people agree with you when, you don't back it up.

  • Ali was way more succesful than Cat Stevens when it came to the whole name change thing.

  • 'ALI LEADING HIS OWN CHEERING'.. LOL.. HE IS FUNNY

  • Ali was one cheap-ass fighter, but then again those punches he threw were devastating.

  • Gota say Rocky Balboa aint got sh*t compared to these guys LOL 

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