Joe Frazier battles liver cancer

FIGHTING FOR HIS LIFE: Former world champion 'Smoking' Joe Frazier
FIGHTING FOR HIS LIFE: Former world champion 'Smoking' Joe Frazier

NEW YORK - Former world heavyweight champion Joe Frazier, who battled Muhammad Ali in a famed 1970s boxing trilogy, is fighting for his life with advanced liver cancer.

Frazier, 67, was the first man to defeat the legendary Ali, taking the heavyweight title with a unanimous 15-round decision over Ali in 1971 at Madison Square Garden in what was dubbed the "Fight of the Century".

Ali won a unanimous 12-round decision in a 1974 rematch and famously completed the trilogy with a victory in 1975 at the "Thrilla in Manila" by stopping Frazier after 14 rounds in their epic slugfest in the Philippines.

A year later "Smokin' Joe" lost for the fourth and final time in his career when George Foreman knocked him down twice before the fight was stopped in fifth round.

Frazier's illness was first reported by the New York Post, citing an unidentified source. Frazier won the heavyweight title in 1970 by stopping Jimmy Ellis in the fifth round of their fight at Madison Square Garden. He defended the title four times before running into the bigger and stronger Foreman in their first fight in 1973. Frazier began his career with 29 consecutive wins before suffering that first loss and his heavyweight title when he was knocked down six times in two rounds by Foreman in 1973 in Kingston, Jamaica.

He retired following the second Foreman fight in 1976 but returned for one more bout in 1981 at age 37.

In recent years, Frazier turned to singing, forming a back-up group called the Knockouts.

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.