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Joe Frazier Signed Boxing Glove
An Everlast Boxing Glove signed by Heavyweight
Great - Smokin Joe Frazier. This wonderful item comes complete
with our Certificate of Authenticity and a photograph of
Frazier signing and all attached security holograms so you
can be rest assured you are buying a genuine autograph.
Joe Frazier
£99.00
"Joe Frazier would come out smoking. If you hit him,
he liked it. If you knocked him down, you only made him
mad," says George Foreman on ESPN Classic's SportsCentury
series.
In the ring, Joe Frazier was a bull who didn't need a red
cape. Provocation or prodding wasn't necessary for him to
come charging after the man in front of him, his head down,
his fists acting as sharp horns and inflicting similar damage.
Joe Frazier won the first of his three epic battles with
Muhammad Ali.
It was that relentlessness -- the near-total abandonment
of duck-and-cover, the philosophy that one must absorb punishment
before one can properly distribute it -- that defined Frazier's
boxing career and has defined his life. It carried him to
an Olympic gold medal and to the heavyweight championship
of the world.
And it was that relentlessness that made him the perfect
foil for his nemesis, Muhammad Ali. Discussing Frazier's
boxing career without bringing up Ali is like talking about
Neil Armstrong without mentioning the moon. The two are
forever linked, thanks to their three timeless bouts --
Frazier won only the first, and the third was a near-death
experience for both of them -- the contrasting styles with
which they fought, and the vitriol they hurled at each other
for so long.
For years, Frazier has voiced his bitterness over the way
Ali had insulted him, over how Ali had called him "ugly,"
"a gorilla," and an "Uncle Tom." His
anger was never in fuller view than when Ali, stricken with
Parkinson's disease, lit the Olympic flame at the 1996 Games
in Atlanta, and Frazier said he would have liked to have
"pushed him in."
"Technically the loser of two of the three fights,
[Frazier] seems not to understand that they ennobled him
as much as they did Ali," wrote Pulitzer Prize-winning
author David Halberstam, "that the only way we know
of Ali's greatness is because of Frazier's equivalent greatness,
that in the end there was no real difference between the
two of them as fighters, and when sports fans and historians
think back, they will think of the fights as classics, with
no identifiable winner or loser. These are men who, like
it or not, have become prisoners of each other and those
three nights."
Born on Jan. 12, 1944, in Beaufort County, S.C., Joe was
the 11th child of Rubin and Dolly Frazier. The Fraziers
had a 12th child, David, who died of diphtheria at nine
months old.
Rubin was a sharecropper, who, according to Frazier's 1996
autobiography, "Smokin' Joe," ran a moonshine
still and grew "this musk, which I figure now must've
been tobacco or marijuana."
By 1959, Joe was on his own, and that year, at 15, he moved
to New York to live with an older brother, Tommy, and Tommy's
wife, Ollie. He had a difficult time finding work, so difficult
that he began stealing cars and selling them to a Brooklyn
junkyard for $50 apiece.
"It got to a point, finally, where I was just too
embarrassed to keep leaning on my brother," Frazier
wrote. "I decided to head to Philadelphia, where I
had relatives that would put me up, and see if my luck would
change."
Did it ever. While working at a slaughterhouse, he punched
sides of beef in a refrigerated room (giving Sylvester Stallone
some inspiration for "Rocky") and took up bona-fide
boxing in December 1961 when, 30 pounds overweight at 220,
he entered a Police Athletic League gym in the city.
Joe Frazier lands one of his trademark left hooks.
A few months later, he met Yank Durham, a trainer at the
gym. Durham turned Frazier into a champion, shortening his
punches, improving his leverage, adding speed and power
to what would become Frazier's signature weapon -- his famous
left hook.
Frazier began traveling around the country, boxing regularly.
He was the Middle Atlantic Golden Gloves heavyweight champ
for three straight years but lost to Buster Mathis in the
finals of the 1964 U.S. Olympic Trials. However, during
a subsequent exhibition bout between the two, Mathis injured
his hand, paving the way for Frazier to replace him at the
Olympics in Tokyo.
Despite fighting the final bout with a broken left thumb,
Frazier won gold at the '64 Olympics by decision over German
Hans Huber.
Later in the year, Frazier learned he had cataracts in
his left eye. Though he was visually impaired, he turned
pro as some Philadelphia boxing fans formed a group called
Cloverlay and bankrolled him to the tune of $20,000.
Frazier's pro debut came on Aug. 16, 1965, and within 12
months he was 11-0, with every victory coming by knockout.
While Ali defied the U.S. Army in 1967, refusing to be
inducted, the WBA stripped him of his heavyweight title.
Frazier bypassed an eight-boxer tournament the WBA established
to determine a new champion -- a tournament that included
Floyd Patterson, Jerry Quarry and Jimmy Ellis -- and padded
his record against other fighters.
He knocked out Buster Mathis in the 11th round in 1968
to become the New York State champion, floored Quarry in
eight rounds in 1969, and dispatched Ellis, the WBA champ,
in five on Feb. 16, 1970, to become the undisputed heavyweight
champion.
Then Ali returned, as his boxing license was reinstated.
On Dec. 30, 1970, the two signed to fight, and the name-calling
began.
"A white lawyer kept him out of jail. And he's going
to Uncle Tom me," Frazier wrote in his autobiography.
"THEE Greatest, he called himself. Well, he wasn't
The Greatest, and he certainly wasn't THEE Greatest. . .
. It became my mission to show him the error of his foolish
pride. Beat it into him."
On March 8, 1971, in the "Fight of the Century"
at Madison Square Garden, Frazier landed a left hook in
the 15th round that sent Ali careening to the canvas. The
unbeaten Frazier won a unanimous decision as he handed Ali
the first defeat of his pro career.
Frazier successfully defended his title against Terry Daniels
and Ron Stander (both on early-round TKOs) before meeting
George Foreman on Jan. 22, 1973, in Jamaica. Stronger and
quicker, Foreman knocked Frazier down six times in the first
two rounds before the fight was stopped. Frazier's title
was gone.
A year later, he met Ali again, in a non-title bout. On
Jan. 28, 1974, in a fight to determine who would get the
next shot to dethrone Foreman, Ali won a decision in Madison
Square Garden, though Frazier and several sportswriters,
including The New York Times' Red Smith and Dave Anderson,
thought he had won.
With the cataract in his left eye growing increasingly
worse, he defeated Quarry and Ellis again, then agreed to
fight Ali one final time, on Oct. 1, 1975, in Manila. In
arguably the greatest heavyweight bout in boxing history
-- Ali called it the "closest thing to dyin' I know
of" -- the two men clubbed each other with their fists
for 14 rounds. Frazier's trainer, Eddie Futch, wouldn't
let his fighter come out for the 15th.
"Once more," Sports Illustrated's Mark Kram wrote
of the "Thrilla in Manila," "had Frazier
taken the child of the gods to hell and back."
Frazier finished his career with a 32-4-1 record and 27
knockouts.
Frazier retired after his next fight -- when he was knocked
out by Foreman in the fifth round in 1976. He came out of
retirement five years later for one fight, a draw with a
former convict, Floyd "Jumbo" Cummings, and finished
his career with a 32-4-1 record and 27 knockouts.
Frazier lives in Philadelphia, owns and runs a gym there.
His health is not the best as he has diabetes and high blood
pressure. He and his nemesis have alternated between public
apologies and public insults.
One exchange came in 2001 after Ali told The New York Times
he was sorry for what he said about Frazier before their
first fight. At first, Frazier accepted the apology, but
then …
"He didn't apologize to me -- he apologized to the
paper," Frazier said in a June issue of TV Guide. "I'm
still waiting [for him] to say it to me."
Ali's response: "If you see Frazier, you tell him
he's still a gorilla."