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George Foreman Everlast
Glove Autograph
It does not get any rarer than this! An Everlast
boxing glove signed by George Foreman. A real tough autograph
especially on a boxing glove as he usually refuses to sign
gloves. Comes with an additional certificate of authenticity
from Mounted Memories, so you can be assured you are getting
the real deal.

SOLD
Foreman had only eighteen amateur fights
before he won the Olympic gold medal as a heavyweight in
1968. He also won immediate fame by parading around the
ring holding a small U. S. flag after his victory; the scene
was captured on live television from Mexico City and the
photo appeared in newspapers across the country.
He became a professional in June of 1969
and won his first 34 fights to gain a shot at the heavyweight
championship against Joe Frazier. Thirty-one of those victories
came on knockouts, 29 of them before the 6th round.
Frazier was a 3-1 favorite in their January 22, 1973, fight
in Kingston, Jamaica, but Foreman knocked the champion down
six times in less than two round to win the titles. After
two defenses, Foreman suffered his first loss, an 8th-round
knockout by Muhammad Ali on October 30, 1974, at Kinshasha,
Zaire.
After a series of exhibitions in 1975, Foreman won his
next five fights by knockout but he retired after losing
a 12-round decision to Jimmy Young in 1977. Ten years later,
he came out of retirement and knocked out thirteen opponents
before meeting Evander Holyfield for the heavyweight title
in 1991. Holyfield retained the championship with a 12-round
decision.
Foreman briefly retired in 1993, but remained very popular
because of several television commercials in which he poked
fun at himself about his eating habits while selling a grill
named for him.
He returned to the ring in 1994, after being away for nearly
a year and half, and became the oldest champion ever in
any weight division by knocking out Michael Moorer in the
10th round of their IBF/WBA heavyweight title fight on Nov.
5.
However, Foreman held the joint title only briefly. Because
he refused to fight top-rated contender Tony Tucker, the
WBA stripped him of that title on March 4, 1995. When the
IBF insisted that Foreman should give Axel Schulz a rematch,
he relinquished that title.
Although he hasn't formally announced retirement, Foreman
hasn't fought since losing a decision to Shannon Briggs
on Nov. 22, 1997. A much-ballyhooed fight with Larry Holmes,
originally scheduled for Jan. 12, 1999, was called off after
a couple of postponements.
Even when not fighting, Foreman has been very much in the
public eye as the TV spokesman for the George Foreman Grill.
He has also served as a commentator on HBO's "World
Championship Boxing." Foreman announced in February
of 2004 that he wanted to come back for one more fight,
in honor of the 30th anniversary of his bout with Ali.