couldn't stand him back then
ALI: THE GREATEST
by
GORDON MARINO
_____________________________________________________
Gordon
Marino is a professor of philosophy at St. Olaf College, director
of the college’s Hong Kierkegaard Library, and editor of
The Quotable Kierkegaard (Princeton University Press,
2014). He is also a professional boxing trainer. You can follow
him on Twitter at twitter.com/@GordonMarino.
Let us
now praise famous men. Muhammad Ali is often touted for his courage
outside the ring, for his being a champion of justice, even when
it cost him his livelihood. But let us not forget his matchless
mettle in the ring. It could, after all, be argued that there
is a relationship between physical and moral courage, that Ali’s
ability to endure punishing fights bulked up his capacity to take
blows of a different kind for justice.
Heavyweight
championship boxing is nuclear war in a twenty-foot ring. When
Ali was coming up as a young fighter, the cynical cigar-chomping
boxing scribes were sure that one good lick from Sonny Liston
would button the “Louisville Lip.” Ironically—and
much to the detriment of his long-term health—no one could
absorb punches better than Ali. Take, for prime example, the ferocious
back-and-forth between Ali and his archrival Joe Frazier in their
1975 “Thrilla in Manila.” It was an oven-like 107
degrees, and considerably hotter under the klieg lights when the
fighters toed the line. The battle, which ended with an Ali victory
after the fourteenth round, was mind-boggling—first because
of the sheer superhuman grit of the combatants but also because
Ali and Frazier, by dint of their prowess and infinite resolve,
managed to transform an event so brutal that it almost made you
feel guilty to watch, into an exotic form of beauty.
For those
of us who preach about the importance of commitment, Ali is an
object lesson of someone who reached into the deepest parts of
himself to achieve victory. In YouTube clips you can see the ledge
that Ali pushed his body toward and over in his wars with Frazier,
Norton, Foreman and others.
His Achilles-like
courage duly noted, let me confess that as a teenager with boxing
aspirations I hated Muhammad Ali. Playful as he was, he had a
vicious streak, especially with other black fighters who somehow
threatened his center-stage status. I heard him disrespect Joe
Louis and watched him torture and humiliate a hobbled Floyd Patterson
in their 1965 fight. But Ali saved his real devils for my hero,
the noble Joe Frazier. Before their fights—and even though
Frazier had lent him money during the lean years when Ali was
deprived of his boxing license—Ali sadistically taunted
“The Smoke,” saying he was too ugly and stupid to
be champion. In the buildup to their final encounter, he started
calling Frazier “the Gorilla,” and even toted around
a toy gorilla to yank out and smack around at media events. It
stung Frazier and his family to the bone, so much so that in the
moments before their epic fray, Frazier, a devout Christian, literally
prayed to be forgiven for the murderous intentions he harbored
toward Ali.
To be
fair, Ali grew as a person after he grew out of boxing. Again
and again over the years, he personally and sincerely apologized
to Frazier and his family. Sadly, Joe was never able to pull the
stingers out, and it seems he took his resentment with him to
the grave in 2011.
But there
were other less substantive reasons that Ali was glass in the
gut for me. With his almost feminine good looks, his flitting
about the ring, and his incessant jibber-jabber, he was at odds
with the code of strong-and-silent masculinity that I instinctively
revered. And for all I know of my cultural unconscious, maybe
his flamboyant expressions of black pride chafed against the soft
underbelly of my “liberal” self. But again, I didn’t
like him back then. When Frazier knocked him on his rump in the
final stanza of their first fight, I almost jumped through the
ceiling with joy. Maybe it took Ali’s being defanged by
illness, but I finally began to grasp the radiant beauty of this
comet of a human being.
There
are people with egos that dwarf those of the merely driven and
highly ambitious. Muhammad Ali’s was one of them. Angelo
Dundee once confided, “Even when he started out you couldn’t
tell Muhammad what to do. Even then, he had too big of an ego.
So if I wanted to give him some instruction, I would compliment
him. If I wanted him to bend his knees more when he was jabbing,
I would wait until the end of the workout, slap him on the back
and say, ‘I loved the way you bent your knees today.’
Afterwards Muhammad would smile and say, ‘You liked that
huh?’”
Unlike
any braggart I have ever known, Ali’s self-love was transferrable.
While he beat up his opponents and pick-pocketed their confidence,
he miraculously helped millions see a fresh set of possibilities
in their bathroom mirrors.
Evander
Holyfield once told me, “In my neighborhood, when I was
just a boy, everyone was always telling me, ‘You ain’t
gonna be nothing.’ Then one day I heard Ali on television
boasting about how he was the greatest and telling people ‘you
can do anything.’ I was amazed. How could he talk that way?
But then I thought, if he can do it, I can do it. He changed my
life.”
There
are a few rare people who see themselves as the sun and the moon,
but who are still somehow able to get outside their own orbit
and care about others. For all his bluster about being the greatest
and most beautiful, Ali was no narcissist: he noticed the people
around him.
When
I travelled to Louisville for the opening of the Ali Center in
2005, I met one person after another whose life had been pushed
in a new direction by a fortuitous encounter with Ali. One fellow
in his fifties told me that many years earlier he had given Ali
a cookie. The champ, who had a sweet tooth, thought it was delicious
and helped get the man started in what would become a thriving
business. Howard Bingham, who would become of one of Ali’s
lifelong friends, told me the tale of bumping into Ali in 1962
in Los Angeles. At the time, Bingham was a fledgling photographer.
By giving him access, Ali catapulted him into a stellar career
behind the lens. Over the course of the event, I heard many other
testimonies from folks Ali had simply put his arms around at a
difficult moment. Like a great cornerman, he gave them the fortitude
to deal with the foe of a disease or a death in the family.
In his
Works of Love, Søren Kierkegaard observed that
we humans tend to identify need with weakness: the needier you
are, the weaker you are. Then Kierkegaard reminds us that the
need for God is the highest perfection. Likewise, we ungrateful
bipeds heap praise upon the mighty men and women who overflow
with strength and creativity; we are not as impressed with those
possessed of an overabundance of love and need for others. That
was Ali. He was blessed with a boundless affection for his fellow
human beings. Even though he was arguably the most recognizable
person on the planet, he always needed to immerse himself in crowds;
he would wade into them, shaking hands, hugging and kissing babies
like a presidential candidate, and bantering with fans. In our
time, celebrities have become secular saints, but I don’t
know of anyone with the Hollywood halo whose boundaries with mere
mortals were as tender and porous as Ali’s. Sure, your Oscar-winning
actor might donate a million dollars to a shelter for battered
woman, but he is not likely to invite you to take a ride in his
RV, hang out with you all day, and stay in touch for years.
One of
my favorite tales about Ali comes from the author Davis Miller,
who as a young man was a fanatical Ali devotee. After his retirement,
Ali agreed to meet with Miller at his farm in Michigan. Naturally,
Miller was star-struck, but Ali, who was a first-rate magician,
knew how to put the rabbit of nervousness back in the hat. Within
an hour or so the two were hanging around like old pals, slap-boxing
and going out to McDonalds together. But now and again, Miller
would remember who he was with. At one point, he excused himself
to use the bathroom. After he closed the door, Ali quietly padded
over and held the door handle so that Miller couldn’t get
out—all the while knowing that Miller was too bedazzled
by the champ to start yelling for help.
Ali’s
sense of humor was as deep as his boxing talent. Years ago, he
was being interviewed by a cadre of renowned reporters who saw
him as a minor deity but at the same time felt something bordering
on pity about his Parkinson’s. They sat down at a table
for a bite to eat and Ali, in the middle of the conversation,
pretended as though he were slowly drifting off to sleep. There
was an awkward couple of moments when the media pros scratched
their heads and looked at each other as if to say “what
do we do now?” Seconds later Ali, still seemingly asleep,
started throwing punches. The reporters pulled back, embarrassed
and trying to figure out how to respond. Then Ali seemed to slip
back into a quiet sleep only to erupt with another flurry a few
seconds later. No doubt Ali recognized that the guys with the
notebooks saw him as punchy. About a minute later, he leapt up
wide-eyed and with a beaming gotcha smile.
But what about all those dark years when Ali slowly closed up
in the clam shell of Parkinson’s? Looking back, Dundee,
his cornerman for twenty-plus years sighed, “Even when he
got afflicted by Parkinson’s, I believed in my heart that
he would beat it. That’s the kind of faith he built up inside
of you because he was such a remarkable human being.” But
Parkinson’s was not something Ali or anyone else could rope-a-dope.
Was it worth it? He was frequently asked whether he would do it
all over again, knowing the illness those hurricane blows would
eventually lead to. The answer was always the same: No regrets.
When
I met the Great One at the opening of the Ali Center, he was already
enveloped in the disease that would rob him of his divine wit
and supernal gift of gab. That day there was a long line of adult
fans waiting to have their photo taken with Ali as though he were
Santa Claus. Sick and exhausted as he was, Ali wanted to accommodate
everyone. At times, his once-beautiful countenance would contort
and freeze in the grotesque shape of someone bolting up from a
nightmare. It was a shot to the liver to see. For a moment, I
could not help imagining that, for whatever bizarre inscrutable
reason, the silver-tongued trickster—half-huckster, half-sage—was
being played by the ultimate Trickster.
In his
marvelous The Tao of Ali, Davis Miller recalled that
when, near tears, he told Ali how sorry he was about his illness,
Ali repeatedly assured him that this was just God’s way
of reminding Ali that he was just like everyone else.
Yes and
no, God. Yes and no.
This
piece first appeared in Commonweal