Clinton hails Ali at 70

Three-time world heavyweight champion Ali won 56 bouts over a 21-year career.
He also made plenty of headlines outside of the ring with his sharp words and refusal to take part in the Vietnam War.
But Clinton believes his fellow American’s legacy will be the way he got the whole world talking about boxing again in the 1960s.

“People had moved away from boxing. It was a huge deal in America in the 1940s and 1950s and then they wrote it off,” he told BBC Sport boxing commentator Mike Costello.
“Then here comes Muhammad Ali, first as Cassius Clay, looking like a ballerina in the boxing ring — reminding people it was a sport.
“He made it exciting and meaningful again. He was entertaining and when he was younger he was always mouthing off. But it was part of his schtick.

“He made it part theatre, part dance and all power.”
Ali risked his glittering career, and his reputation, to oppose the Vietnam War. He refused to serve in the US Army when he was called up for service and was subsequently arrested for committing a felony.

Boxing authorities suspended his licence and stripped him of his titles before he was found guilty of the offence after a 1967 trial. The US Supreme Court reversed the conviction four years later.
“It could have destroyed him but it didn’t — because people realised he had been very forthright and he was prepared to pay the price for his convictions,” said Clinton. “On balance he won more admirers than detractors.”

Ali’s success helped break down racial barriers in the US and create the path which eventually led to President Obama’s election in 2008, according to Clinton.
“All those people from the Civil Rights years and also every African-American who did everything that destroyed the old stereotypes have helped,” said Clinton, 65.

“There was nothing inferior about Ali — he was superior on merit without regards to his race when it came to what he loved.
“All this stuff played a role. Society changes slowly, like icebergs turning in the ocean. Sometimes great symbolic events affect changes of consciousness of a whole country. Ali reflects a lot of that.”—BBC.

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