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Muhammad Ali vs Derek Jeter!
Photos by Kathy Willens
Muhammad Ali adjusts a New York Yankees cap given to him by Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter before the Red Sox faced the Yankees in a baseball game at Yankee Stadium in New York, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2009.

Muhammad Ali inspects an award presented to the Yankees from the American Academy of Hospitality Sciences before the Yankees’ baseball game against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium in New York, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2009.

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October 17, 2009, 12:30AM
View full sizeAP Fight PhotoMuhammad Ali reacts after being struck by Larry Holmes during their 1980 title fight.Larry Holmes believes his career always has been overshadowed by that of Muhammad Ali.
And maybe he’s right. After all, ESPN Films documentary about the boxers’ relationship and legendary fight, airing 8 p.m. Oct. 27, is called “Muhammad and Larry” not “Larry and Muhammad.”
In any case, the Easton Assassin has a sense of humor about how people perceive his accomplishments served up beside Ali’s.
“Ali said he was the greatest and everyone said ‘Yeah,’” Holmes said Friday. “I said I was the greatest and everyone said ‘Yeah, right.’“
Maybe the fact that he whupped The Greatest in their 1980 title fight makes it easy to poke fun at himself when the subject is Ali. That, and his genuine affection for a man who once relied on him as a sparring partner.
“I have a good relationship with him. I could call his house right now,” said Holmes, a 59-year-old Palmer Township resident. “We never had an argument. I was there (in his camp) to earn money and get my rent paid. If he said he was the greatest, I said ‘You are the greatest.’”
The film is part of the “30 for 30″ documentary series ESPN is running to mark its 30th anniversary.
He fixed his eyes in a steely gaze, raised his mighty fists and made a crowd of 10,000 roar.
Okay, so it wasn’t exactly the electric atmosphere he created with the Thrilla in Manila or the Rumble in the Jungle.
But the rapturous reception Muhammad Ali received in a small Irish town yesterday provided a spine-tingling reminder of those glory days.

Boxing legend: Muhammad Ali with his wife Lonnie (left) in Ennis, County Clare, Ireland unveiling the plaque to his ancestors after he was honoured as the first Freeman of his ancestral home

The champion arrives: Ali was greeted with a roar to rival even the Rumble in the Jungle as he took a few frail steps from his car under blue skies
It came as he unveiled a plaque to his little-known Irish ancestors in Ennis, County Clare.
Ali’s great-grandfather, Abe Grady, who hailed from the town, emigrated to the U.S. in the 1860s, and in recognition of his roots Ali was yesterday made the first Honorary Freeman of Ennis.
It was his first visit there and with the confidence that typified his sporting career, he was almost immediately talking of a comeback, despite medical advice against travelling.
As the three times World Heavyweight Champion accepted the honour, his wife Lonnie revealed: ‘Now that we know Muhammad is an Ennis man, we will be back.’
The adoring fans, spanning generations, had packed into the town’s main square for hours before the civic reception was broadcast on a huge screen.
Welcome: Muhammad Ali with his wife Lonnie (right) and daughter Hana (left) are greeted by a huge crowd

Ancestral home: A sign on a shop front in Ennis ahead of Ali’s visit to the town where his great-grandfather Abe Grady was born
Lonnie announced that her husband, who has been battling Parkinson’s Disease for 25 years, was overwhelmed by the experience.
Ali smiled several times during the ceremony and despite his frailty he was also obviously struck by the occasion, fiddling with the strap of his watch and rubbing his eyes as Ennis Mayor Frankie Neylon outlined the legend’s links with Ennis and his many great achievements.
Some onlookers even suggested the magic of the man even brought fine weather, noting that more than three decades after he famously claimed to have ‘even cancelled the rain’ for his Rumble in the Jungle against George Foreman, it appeared he had pulled off the same stroke.
Irish honour: Thousands of fans watch a big screen in Ennis town centre as Ali unveils his family plaque


Shadow boxing: To the delight of crowds in Ennis, Ali treats them to some moves that made him a three-time world heavyweight champion
After weeks of summer downpours, threatening rainclouds cleared almost within minutes of Ali being spotted touching down at Shannon Airport at around midday.
Imelda O’Grady, a distant cousin who embraced the boxing legend as he arrived in Ennis, said: ‘Look, the sun’s come out – it’s shining down on him.’
Miss O’Grady presented Ali with framed photographs of them both, with the inscription: ‘Cead Mile Failte (One Hundred Thousand Welcomes) from Imelda O’Grady and the O’Grady families.’

First freeman: Ali and his family admire the plaque on Turnpike Road

Hero’s welcome: A young girl carries a doll of the boxing legend as she’s surrounded by crowds who turned out to witness Ali’s historic visit
So too were the thousands more who thronged Turnpike Road, the homeplace of Ali’s great-grandfather Abe Grady, who emigrated to the United States in the 1860s and married a freed African-American slave.
The 67-year-old ex-fighter, renowned as a civil rights champion, astonished his fans when he alighted from a black people carrier to unveil a plaque at his ancestor’s house.
As crowds cheered ‘Muhammad, Muhammad’ and ‘Ali, Ali’, he turned and with an impromptu throw-back to his days in the ring, a shadow boxing cameo once again showed the ageing champion at his greatest.
The family tree of Muhammad Ali

Proud: Ali (centre) displays his Freedom of the City certificate with the Mayor and Councillors of Ennis
‘It was unreal, it was a privilege,’ she said afterwards. ‘When he saw his relations he was delighted. I think he was emotional – by God, I was certainly emotional.’
Family tree: Odessa Grady, the mother of Ali, is the daughter of John Grady, who was the son of Irishman Abe Grady and his African-American wife
In total, among the invited guests at the ceremony were three representatives of three families believed to be directly descended from Ali’s great-grandfather.
After the brief visit to Ennis, fans had to be levered off his people carrier as it made its way through the narrow-lined medieval streets, festooned with flags.
Before leaving for the U.S., Ali stopped off at the nearby baronial Dromoland Castle, for a charity fundraising afternoon tea.
Mark Nolan, manager of the plush hotel, said his latest guest topped the bill of renowned visitors.
‘We’ve had George Bush, Bill Clinton… maybe Nelson Mandela is the only guest who is comparable to Ali,’ he said. ‘I’ve never seen excitement like it here.’
Ali is not the first global figure Ireland has laid claim to.
Of the 44 U.S. Presidents so far, 17 have been found to have links to Ireland, John F Kennedy and Ronald Reagan among them.
Barack Obama’s maternal family tree is also said to trace back to a well-to-do shoemaker from Moneygall, County Offaly, who lived from 1794 to 1861.

Ali visits home of Irish roots
DUBLIN — Muhammad Ali made a sentimental journey Tuesday (September 2nd 2009) to discover his Irish roots, and met distant relatives during celebrations at the local town hall and a nearby castle.
Thousands lined the streets of Ennis, western Ireland, to cheer his motorcade as the three-time heavyweight champion visited the home of his great-grandfather Abe Grady.
Fans adorned streets with red, white and blue bunting and flags, while shop windows competed to display the most impressive posters honoring Ali — including one tongue-in-cheek portrait of him appearing ready to knock out an unpopular Irish politician.
Ali, who is 67 and battling Parkinson’s disease, fought only once in Ireland, knocking out Alvin Lewis at Dublin’s Croke Park on July 19, 1972.
Ali offered a few playful jabs to cameras but made no public comments and steered clear of throngs of autograph-seekers Tuesday, among them hundreds of kids whose schools closed early for the event. Police blocked off roads and kept crowds in line with railings.
Grady settled in Kentucky in the 1860s and married a freed slave. One of their grandchildren, Odessa Lee Grady Clay, gave birth to Ali — then Cassius Clay — in 1942.
Genealogists pinpointed Ali’s Irish links in 2002, but Ali had never visited Ennis.
His visit to Ennis Town Hall was broadcast live on big-screen televisions outside, where locals also took in a live concert by traditional musicians, including best-selling accordionist Sharon Shannon.
Ali’s wife, Yolanda, said her husband’s Irish blood might help explain his legendary ability to bludgeon his opponents with blarney as well as punches. She kept close at Ali’s side during the public events, talking to him and steadying him as they walked arm in arm.
“When you look at Muhammad’s pugilistic skills and his loquacious ways, I am sure if his great-grandfather was alive, he would swear it came from him,” she said. “If he were alive today I bet he would be in every pub talking about it too.”
Mayor Frankie Neylon presented Ali with a scroll and proclaimed him Ennis’ first “freeman,” an honor conveying him special privileges in the County Clare town of 23,000. The mayor said the most valuable privilege would be free parking.
Yolanda Ali said the couple would return to Ireland “now that we know that Muhammad is an Ennisman.”
People traveled hundreds of miles from across Ireland to see Ali, among them veteran Irish boxers who sparred with Ali in New York training decades ago.
Former Irish national champ Jim O’Sullivan recalled sparring with Ali and his trainer Angelo Dundee during a U.S. tour by Irish boxers in 1978 — and wished he’d known then that “The Greatest” was “just a Paddy like us.”
“We’d have dearly loved to have known he was that wee bit Irish. We’d have given him some stick,” O’Sullivan said, using an Irish expression for good-natured ribbing.
Ali was driven through the town to Turnpike Road, where his great-grandfather lived before sailing for America. He met several representatives of the Grady clan, most of them O’Gradys — the O connoting “son of” in the native Irish tongue.
Later, Ali was guest of honor at a fundraising banquet at nearby Dromoland Castle, one of Ireland’s premier luxury hotels. He planned to return to the United States on Wednesday.
Copyright 2009
Muhammad Ali visited Ricky Hatton’s new gym in Manchester, England. The appearance is part of a tour of the UK and Ireland to help promote Ali’s charitable work.
“Ricky has never met Ali before and we have all been very excited about this day for some time,” Ray Hatton, father and manager told Times Online. “It’s a great honor for him to come here.”
Ali plans to reunite with ex-opponent Sir Henry Cooper. They fought five decades ago in Wembley Arena. Ali was knocked down in the fourth round but beat the count and it was Cooper who couldn’t continue after Ali unleashed a barrage of punches in the fifth round.
“Cooper hit me so hard that my Ancestors in Africa felt it,” Ali told the media.
Rumors are that a fight between Ricky Hatton and Juan Diaz might be in the works at 140-pounds. Both Hatton and Diaz are under Golden Boy Promotions so making a deal shouldn’t be hard.
“We’ve wanted to fight Ricky Hatton for a long time. Juan wants this fight because he knows it would be a war. It would be a slugfest with two bulls meeting in the center of the ring. I don’t know about fighting Hatton in the UK though. Juan Lazcano trained in my gym for that fight with Hatton. When he hurt Ricky, the referee called time out. I don’t know about fighting him out there,” Diaz’s trainer/manger Willie Savannah told BoxingScene during an interview. “If we don’t fight Hatton, we would have no problem fighting Paulie in a rematch but our preference would be Ricky. I’ll say one thing; there won’t be a match in New York. Maybe it could happen in Las Vegas but not in New York.”
Self Note: is it me or does it sound like Team Diaz are afraid to fight at any one’s home town. Can you say P-u-s-s-y !! A true fighter will win no matter where he fights.
MILPITAS, CA–(Marketwire – May 27, 2009) – JDSU (NASDAQ: JDSU) (TSX: JDU) today announced that it has been awarded a contract to serve as the supplier of authentication solutions to Muhammad Ali Enterprises LLC (MAE) for merchandise. The contract involves the supply of a unique range of authentication solutions including holographic authentication devices developed specifically for MAE.
The solutions that JDSU has developed for MAE utilize digital and optical authentication technologies that allow for easy identification of authorized products, limit product overruns, reduce unauthorized distribution, and ensure correct royalty payments.
“We surveyed a range of authentication providers and were impressed with the breadth of JDSU’s technologies, its pipeline of innovation and its ability to deliver customized solutions that communicate authenticity while enhancing the Ali brand,” said Kelly Hill, director of Licensing for MAE.
MAE’s licensing program encompasses all product categories that include apparel, publishing, collectibles and sporting goods, as well as signed memorabilia.
“JDSU is honored to launch our licensing business with MAE,” said Adam Scheer, Authentication Solutions marketing director for the Advanced Optical Technologies business segment of JDSU. “Muhammad Ali is recognized as a champion all over the world and JDSU is committed to providing a customized authentication program that protects his legacy.”
For more information about JDSU’s licensing program, please go to: http://www.jdsu.com/products/brand-protection.html.
About JDSU
JDSU (NASDAQ: JDSU) (TSX: JDU) enables broadband and optical innovation in the communications, commercial and consumer markets. JDSU is the leading provider of communications test and measurement solutions and optical products for telecommunications service providers, cable operators, and network equipment manufacturers. JDSU is also a leading provider of innovative optical solutions for medical/environmental instrumentation, semiconductor processing, display, brand authentication, aerospace and defense, and decorative applications. More information is available at www.jdsu.com.
About Muhammad Ali Enterprises LLC
Muhammad Ali Enterprises LLC (“MAE”) is a California limited liability company. MAE is aggressively involved in a worldwide licensing program, merchandising, television, film, video and Internet projects. For more information on MAE, visit www.ali.com.
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MAE is a subsidiary of CKX, Inc., a publicly traded company listed on the NASDAQ national market® under the ticker symbol “CKXE.” Also visit www.ckx.com.
An eclectic group of celebrities was at Joe Louis Arena for Game 7 on Friday night. Boxing great Muhammad Ali caught the game from a suite, while “Twilight” film actor Taylor Lautner had a seat in the lower bowl.
Ali, wearing a Red Wings jersey, rose out of his seat and waved to the standing crowd when he was introduced during a break in the first-period action. The players got into the act, too, looking up and slapping their sticks on the ice and the boards in honor of Ali.
“All My Children” star Thorsten Kaye also was on hand, rooting for the guys in red and white. Asked whether he had ever been to the Joe, the diehard Wings fan was taken aback in mock horror.
“I’ve been here a hundred times. Of course. Jeez. Never for a Game 7 (though),” said the German-born, England-raised Kaye, who attended Wayne State.
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