“Only a man who knows what it is like to be
defeated can reach down to the bottom of his soul and come up with the extra
ounce of power it takes to win when the match is even.”Muhammad Ali
By Alex P. Vidal
ON October 1, 1975 or 39 years ago, the biggest
heavyweight boxing title fight in the world was held at the Araneta Colesium in
Cubao, Quezon City.
It was a duel that defined Muhammad Ali both as
a sports icon and as a human being.
Ali (48–2, 35 KOs) settled his feud with Joe
Frazier on a spectacular 14th round TKO (technical knockout).
Frazier (32–2, 27 KOs) did not fall flat on his
face from Ali’s barrage of howitzers.
Trainer Eddie Futch refused to let him continue
before the 15thround sensing the fight Frazier and Ali were in no
longer was a sport.
Referee Carlos Padilla terminated the bout as
Frazier loudly protested to no avail wailing at Futch, “I want him, boss.”
"It's all over. No one will forget what you
did here today," Futch barked at Frazier, whom Ali slandered earlier and
called “ape.”
Both ring titans were exhausted and standing
only on survival instinct.
Frazier’s lips had been busted and his face was crimson.
BLACKEYE
Ali also suffered a black eye in both eyes.
Ali described that third duel with Frazier as
“next to death.”
The charismatic heavyweight champion admitted
later that he asked Frazier to quit after 10 rounds.
“C’mon, Joe, that’s enough. There's still life
after this fight,” Ali allegedly whispered to his nemesis while they were swapping
bombs.
I asked Padilla if he heard those words when I
had a chance to work with him in 1996 during the 12-round WBF welterweight
fisticuffs between Amerasian William Magahin and Australian Brad Moderidge.
Padilla, who was the referee while I was a judge
in the fight, told me he didn’t exactly hear the sentence uttered by Ali, but
confirmed Ali was saying something that only the two boxers had understood.
I was a kid wearing shorts at that time of the
historic tussle between two of the heavyweight’s most feared fisttossers.
We watched the fight on a black and white TV set
in Molo district, Iloilo City after our classes at the Iloilo Central Commercial
High School (ICCHS) in the morning.
My recollection of the astonishing showdown was
based on the journals, magazines and newspaper clippings I gathered.
I also watched some of the videos of the fight
and interviewed some personalities involved in the epic battle here and in the
United States.
SCOOP
Three years ago, I met Sports Communicators Organization
of the Philippines (SCOOP) president Eddie Alinea, who acted as Frazier’s press
liaison officer, when we covered Manny Pacquiao’s fight against Joshua Clottey
in Arlington, Texas.
Alinea said he was assigned by the Office of
Media Affairs (now the Philippine Information Agency) to accompany Team Frazier
while the boxer was in Manila.
He described challenger Frazier as “a monster in
the ring but a gentleman outside.”
Alinea showed to me a black and white photo of a
press briefing taken at the Manila Hotel where he sat beside the behemoth
champion from Louisville, Kentucky who called himself as “The Greatest” and was
formerly known as Cassius Clay.
Alinea, now in his 60s, also kept some souvenir
items bearing the signature of Frazier who thanked Alinea for the Filipino
scribe’s services and presence in Team Frazier.
EXPERTS
According to some boxing experts and historians
I met in the United States, the “Thrilla in Manila” is the greatest ever world
heavyweight championship in history.
In terms of heated rivalry, intensity,
brutality, action and courageous display of skills, talent and spirit, nothing
can beat the “Thrilla in Manila.”
There have been great marquee names in world
heavyweight that emerged after Ali's exit.
Trevor Berbick, Greg Page, Larry Holmes, Evander
Holyfield, Riddick Bowe, Mike Tyson, to mention only a few.
But none of them could match his charisma and
impact in the hearts of sports fans all over the universe.
The record established by “Thrilla in Manila”
has not been broken until today.
As a member of the world boxing fraternity and
as a sportswriter, I agree.
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