
Muhammad Ali would still tease George Foreman about Rumble in the Jungle 40 years on after they became best friends
Ali famously defeated Foreman in Zaire - now the Democratic Republic of the Congo - in 1974 with over ONE BILLION viewers watching worldwide.
5
And he did so using his famous rope-a-dope tactic - allowing Foreman to punch himself out before winning in round eight.
The build-up was bitter and the rivalry carried on post-fight to lead to what was an expected rematch.
But after Foreman claimed to have died in his dressing room after losing to Jimmy Young in 1976 - he found God and retired.
It also paved the way for Foreman to form a brotherhood with Ali - up until the boxing great's death in 2016.
Ali's grandson, MMA star Biaggio, told SunSport: "My grandpa and George, they were very, very close. They spoke all the time.
"The only memory I have with George myself was from my grandfather's 70th birthday party.
"We met George there, I was 12 years old and even at 12 years old, I knew who George Foreman was.
"I had seen the fight with him and Poppy and I was like, 'Oh, George Foreman, nice to meet you.'
"He was such a nice guy, like super humble, down to earth and of just a very successful businessman at that point too.
"So, really, that's like the only memory I have from George, but I do know that him and my grandfather, they were really close."
Ali retired in 1981 after 61 fights and three heavyweight title reigns - but he was sadly diagnosed with Parkinson's disease three years later.
Although that did not stop the quick-witted sports great from throwing verbal jabs to his rival-turned-friend Foreman.
Biaggio, 26, revealed: "Poppy was a jokester, man. Like he would always joke about certain things.
"It's crazy when I would visit him in Arizona and he'd be sitting on his like reclining chair, I would shake his hand and in my head, I'd be thinking, 'This hand knocked out George Foreman in Africa.'
"Certain things like that I would reminisce in my head and then at the same time I'm like, 'But you're just my grandpa.' It was a very strange feeling my whole life really.
"But yeah, they definitely had some banter, you know, Poppy was a jokester, he's always joking."
Foreman made a comeback in 1987 after ten years out and became the oldest heavyweight champion of all time aged 46.
I would visit him in Arizona and he'd be sitting on his like reclining chair, I would shake his hand and in my head, I'd be thinking, 'This hand knocked out George Foreman in Africa.'
Biaggio Ali Walsh
But the multimillionaire businessman - who made over £150million through his cooking grills - died in March at 76.
Ali meanwhile passed nearly ten years prior but Biaggio - an unbeaten MMA fighter and brother Nico a professional boxer - continue on the legacy.
Middleweight Nico has 12 wins, two losses and one no-contest in his 15 boxing bouts while Biaggio - a former American football prospect - is 2-0 in the cage.
Biaggio - signed to the Professional Fighters League - returns on June 27 in Chicago - but wants to compete all over the world - like his grandfather before him.
He said: "I wanna just fight. So, anywhere it is, that'd be great.
"And I think it's cool too, you get to travel and get to see a lot of new places and stuff. I'd never been to Saudi Arabia before until I fought there.
"That's what's so cool about this job, you get to travel and see new places and destinations, places you never been to.
"All are possibilities, especially with the PFL, man, I love the PFL."
5
5
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
23 minutes ago
- BBC News
Young Whitchurch boxers hike raises £17k for club minibus
A group of young boxers have raised £17,000 for a new club minibus by walking 89 miles in four group, from Fort Boxing Club in Whitchurch, trekked close to Hadrian's Wall near the Scottish club said it urgently needed the new minibus to provide the boxers with training and educational opportunities - it would help them to travel across the country for various events and competitions."The kids did absolutely amazing I couldn't be more proud of them," said coach Dan Bailey. "It was a challenge, and I don't think they quite actually knew what they were going to be up against."They camped between each day - a first for some of the young people involved. The team's first leg was 22 miles, day two saw them walk 19 miles, while day three was their most challenging."We were trying to aim for 16 to 19 minute miles, so the third day was a 13-miler," said Mr Bailey."We managed to do the 13 miles in just under four hours."The last day saw them on their feet for 34 miles."We were hiking for 15 hours, and then in the last four miles our bodies were switching off," he said."It just brought everyone's true characters and qualities out, and it was amazing to see such young people be able to take themselves out of their comfort zones."Not one of them ever said they couldn't do it and they didn't want to do it." Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


The Guardian
26 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Christopher Nolan criticised for filming in occupied Western Sahara city
The organisers of the Western Sahara international film festival (FiSahara) have criticised Christopher Nolan for shooting part of his adaptation of the Odyssey in a Western Saharan city that has been under Moroccan occupation for 50 years, warning the move could serve to normalise decades of repression. The British-American film-maker's take on Homer's epic, which stars Matt Damon, Charlize Theron, Zendaya, Lupita Nyong'o and Anne Hathaway, is due to be released on 17 July 2026. According to the Hollywood studio Universal, which is backing the project, the film will be 'a mythic action epic shot across the world' made 'using brand new Imax film technology'. But the decision to film in the Western Saharan coastal city of Dakhla has provoked fierce criticism from Sahrawi activists and those who were forced to live under occupation or to go into exile after Morocco annexed the country following the withdrawal of its former colonial power, Spain, in 1976. The UN classifies Western Sahara as a 'non-self-governing territory'. In a report last year, the UN secretary-general noted that the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) had not been granted access to the territory since 2015, adding that OHCHR 'continued to receive allegations relating to human rights violations, including intimidation, surveillance and discrimination against Sahrawi individuals particularly when advocating for self-determination'. In its most recent country report, Amnesty International said that the 'authorities continued to restrict dissent and the rights to freedom of association and peaceful assembly in Western Sahara'. Reporters Without Borders has described Western Sahara as a 'desert for journalists' and said that 'torture, arrests, physical abuse, persecution, intimidation, harassment, slander, defamation, technological sabotage, and lengthy prison sentences are daily fare for Sahrawi journalists'. Last month the UK suggested it supported a proposal for Western Sahara to remain under Rabat's sovereignty but with a degree of self-rule. FiSahara's organisers say the recent presence of Nolan's high-profile cast and crew in Dakhla will help whitewash the Moroccan occupation and normalise the repression. The festival's directors said that while Dakhla was 'a beautiful location with cinematic sand dunes', it was, 'first and foremost … an occupied and militarised city whose indigenous Sahrawi population is subjected to brutal repression' by Moroccan occupation forces. 'By filming part of The Odyssey in an occupied territory … Nolan and his team, perhaps unknowingly and unwittingly, are contributing to Morocco's repression of the Sahrawi people and to the Moroccan regime's efforts to normalise its occupation of Western Sahara,' said María Carrión, the festival's executive director. 'We are sure that if they understood the full implications of filming a high-profile film in a territory whose Indigenous peoples cannot make their own films about their stories under occupation, Nolan and his team would be horrified.' FiSahara said it was calling on Nolan and his crew and cast to 'stand in solidarity with the Sahrawi people who have been under military occupation for 50 years and who are routinely imprisoned and tortured for their peaceful struggle for self-determination'. Carrión said Morocco was keen to control how its occupation was perceived abroad, and used tourism and culture to project a distorted view of life in Western Sahara. 'Morocco only allows entry into occupied Western Sahara to those who fit its strategy of selling its occupation to the outside world,' she said. 'Tourists who go to Moroccan-built and -owned resorts to practise kitesurfing, companies willing to participate in its plundering of natural resources, journalists willing to toe its line, and high-profile visitors like Nolan and his team who help Morocco sell the narrative that Western Sahara is part of Morocco and that the Sahrawis are content to live under its rule are given the red carpet treatment.' But she said Amnesty International, the UN commissioner for human rights, and 'the hundreds of journalists and observers who have been barred or deported from the territory' would tell 'a very different story'. The Guardian has contacted Nolan's representatives for a response, but the director has yet to comment. FiSahara, which was founded in 2004, is held in Sahrawi refugee camps in the Algerian desert. Labelled 'the Cannes of the desert', it aims to use film to 'entertain, convey knowledge and empower refugees from the Western Sahara'.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
The rare career of Josh Taylor showed the privileged burden that boxing can bring
It is not going to be easy for Josh Taylor to walk off into the boxing sunset after a remarkable career inside the ropes. It was also a brutally short career, a rare career in British boxing; it was unusual because of the speed, the relentless hard matchmaking and the success. Taylor, who is now 34, is the only British boxer to have held all four of the accepted and respected belts in the modern era of a sport packed with division and false claims. In a business where men – it is different for the women – often have 20 or more fights before finally getting a chance at a world title, Taylor held a version of the world title after just 15 fights. He had been a professional for less than four years at that time. In British boxing history, the world champions have been seasoned by years of learning their trade and being used as part of a bargaining system by promoters and managers. Taylor broke with tradition, altered the expected path of boxers and in just his 18th fight, he held all four of the belts. He was Josh Taylor, undisputed champion. World champions like John Conteh in the Seventies, Alan Minter in the Eighties, and Lennox Lewis in the Nineties served typically extended apprenticeships, featuring for long spells on undercards and waiting for an opening, waiting for a chance. Conteh won his world title in his 27th fight, Minter his 43rd fight, and Lewis in his just his 23rd. Lewis had the benefit of two Olympics as experience, including the gold in Seoul, but still danced slowly down the well-trodden and careful path. It was a path that Taylor seemed to reject; he was ready to be fast-tracked by the time he became a professional boxer. Taylor had two Commonwealth Games medals and had been to the Olympics in 2012 when he finally turned professional in 2015. He had stayed after the London Olympics to compete and win a gold at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. He was the unofficial mascot for the Games, used in adverts, and his face was plastered all over Glasgow and Edinburgh. It was a privileged burden and one he comfortably repaid. He had hard fights early on, winning the Commonwealth professional title in just his seventh fight when he stopped Dave Ryan, a noted hard man, in the fifth round in front of a devoted flock in Edinburgh. The real fights were getting closer for Taylor. The bigger wins followed: unbeaten Ohara Davies ruined in seven in 2017, former world champion Viktor Postol given a boxing lesson in 2018, and the unbeaten and dangerous Ryan Martin stopped in seven. All three fights were in Glasgow; Scotland had a boxing hero. Postol had just lost to the great Terrence Crawford – Taylor possibly did a better job. This was not a hype gravy train. In 2019, also in Glasgow, Taylor met the IBF light-welterweight champion, Ivan Baranchyk, who was 19-0 with 12 knockouts; Taylor won on points, he had his first world title, but the boxing world was about to shrink. The run continued, the darkness of Covid was coming. Taylor fought six unbeaten men in a stunning consecutive sequence, including five in world title fights; he unified the titles, fighting in front of a sold-out O2 in London when he beat the fancied Regis Prograis in late 2019. Prograis was the WBA champion. It was a stunning fight, contender for Fight of the Year. Prograis was shell-shocked at the end – it should have been the fight that transformed Taylor, made him a star, but his next fight was nearly a year later and behind closed doors at York Hall in front of less than 50 people; Covid hit hard and few in boxing suffered more from the fallout than Taylor. It robbed him of momentum and a chance to win all four belts in front of an outdoor crowd in Scotland. That is the harsh reality. Taylor travelled under too many radars during this exceptional sequence because of the Covid restrictions. It was a cruel twist, a twist as cruel as the eye injury that forced him after just 23 fights to walk away last week. 'I have certainly not had the best of luck,' he said, and he is right. He won his first world title in May of 2019 and lost the last of the four belts he owned in June of 2023; he fought just four times in the middle during a four-year spell when, under different circumstances, he could have become a major star. In 2021, he went to Las Vegas to fight Jose Ramirez; all four of the recognised belts and the Ring magazine belt were on the line; Ramirez was unbeaten in 26, but he was dropped twice and lost. Taylor had become the undisputed world champion in just his 18th fight. There were just a hundred or so in the Virgin complex on the night to witness history. None of Taylor's family and friends could be there. The bad nights followed, including last year, when Jack Catterall avenged a heavily debated loss to Taylor from 2022. In May of this year, he lost for the third consecutive time when he was narrowly beaten by Ekow Essuman. The eye injury was there; the end was near. Taylor will not make an easy traveller, but he will go off into the horizon with a spectacular legacy. The first and only undisputed British world champion in modern boxing. That is, trust me, enough.