Boxing legend Muhammad Ali dies aged 74
Boxing legend Muhammad Ali dies aged 74
Former heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali has died aged 74, after a 30-year battle with Parkinson's disease
Boxing legend Muhammad Ali has died at the age of 74, a spokesman for his family has confirmed.
The three-time world heavyweight champion had suffered from
Parkinson's disease since 1984 - three years after he retired from the
sport.
Muhammad Ali retired in 1981 after winning 56 of his 61 fights
Reports had suggested his breathing problems had been complicated by his neurological disorder, which had long impaired his speech.
A statement from spokesman Bob Gunnell said: "Muhammad Ali's funeral will take place in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky.
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Reaction to Muhammad Ali's death from around the world
Sky Sports boxing pundit Johnny Nelson told Sky Sports News HQ: "This guy was very, very humble. He'd joke with you to say: 'I am the greatest', I know it's a silly thing to say, but he knew how good he was.
"They use the words legend and great too freely in this world - Ali was a true legend and a true great, a living legend and a living great and now he's passed away more people will appreciate who this man was and what he achieved.
"The things he said when he refused to enter the Vietnam War, when he embraced Islam, when he hit racism head on in America at a very sensitive time, he was the face of a changing era, and all he did was box "
Matchroom Boxing promoter Eddie Hearn said: "Everybody involved with boxing, and everyone who has even watched boxing, will feel the element of sadness this morning.
"Icon is a word that gets banded around, but I think it's the best word to use to describe Muhammad Ali. He transcended the sport.
Boxing promoter Eddie Hearn says Muhammad Ali was an instantly recognisable icon to people around the world
Sky Sports' Adam Smith added: "Muhammad Ali was quite simply the greatest. Not just the greatest of fighters but the greatest of people.
"What he did in boxing was phenomenal. He was the first three-time world champion in boxing's blue riband division at a time when there were all there - Joe Frazier, Sonny Liston, George Foreman, Ken Norton, Floyd Patterson, Ernie Shavers, Larry Holmes….that era was incredible.
Sky
Sports Boxing's Adam Smith says Muhammad Ali was 'one of the greatest
men that ever lived' and that his death has left a gaping hole
"It's really tough because he leaves such a gaping hole because he was so brilliant."
Born in January 1942 as Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr, a name shared with a 19th century slavery abolitionist, the boxer changed his name to Muhammad Ali after his conversion to Islam.
Although he had shied away from public life in recent years, Ali spoke out against Donald Trump's calls for Muslims to be banned from entering the United States.
Tributes have been flooding in from around the sporting world for Muhammad Ali
One of the boxing legend's final public appearances was in April, when he attended a Celebrity Fight Night in April to benefit a Parkinson's treatment facility in his name.
Fox News reporter Matt Finn has been reporting from Phoenix, Arizona, where Ali passed away in hospital
Many of his loved ones reportedly flew to Arizona to be by his bedside following his admission to hospital on Thursday.
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