However, few boxing experts, not even longtime booster Howard Cosell, believed he could. Foreman, a 3-1 betting favorite and seven years Ali’s junior, had not lost any of his 40 fights. He had annihilated Ken Norton and Joe Frazier, two fighters who had defeated Ali, in second-round knockouts. Ali’s backers feared the former champion risked his legacy—and even his life—getting in the ring with Foreman.
Day of the Fight
When the fighters entered the ring on October 30, 1974, Foreman possessed the heavyweight title, but Ali owned the hearts of the crowd. In order to beam the fight by satellite in prime time back to the United States, where fans crowded into 450 theaters to watch the fight on closed-circuit television, the fight began at 4:30 a.m. It was just one more annoyance for Foreman who “wanted to end the fight, collect my money and get home.”
Literary heavyweights such as Norman Mailer and George Plimpton covered the fight from ringside. Mobutu watched the bout from his palace on the only closed-circuit broadcast in Zaire, but a huge portrait of him gazed down from the rafters of the stadium, named for the day in which he had seized power in 1965.
Even in the pre-dawn hours, the temperature hovered around 80 degrees Fahrenheit as both fighters hit each other with big blows in the opening rounds. As the bout progressed, Ali began to retreat, put up his defenses and lean back on the loose ring ropes in order to absorb Foreman’s onslaught in a quest to tire out his opponent in the oppressive heat. Although the champion punched hard, he inflicted little damage on Ali, thanks to what became known as his “rope-a-dope” strategy.