Saturday, 17 January 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " LAILA ALI " IS A RETIRED AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BOXER AND THE DAUGHTER OF THE WORLD FAMOUS HEAVY WEIGHT BOXER MUHAMMAD ALI : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

            BLACK     SOCIAL   HISTORY     


















































































































































   BLACK     SOCIAL      HISTORY                                                                                                                       Laila Ali



Laila Ali
Laila Ali at Heart Truth 2011.jpg
Laila Ali modeling in the 2011 Heart Truth fashion show
Statistics
Rated atSuper middleweight, 72.5 kg[1]
Height5'10 (1.81 m)
NationalityAmerican
BornDecember 30, 1977 (age 37)
Miami Beach, Florida, U.S.
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights24
Wins24
Wins by KO21
Losses0
Draws0
No contests0
Laila Amaria Ali (born December 30, 1977) is a retired American professional boxer. She is the daughter of retired heavyweight boxing legend Muhammad Ali and his third wife, Veronica Porsche Ali. Laila is the eighth of her father's nine children and his youngest daughter.[2]

Boxing career

Ali began boxing when she was 18 years old, after having first noticed women's boxing when watching a Christy Martin fight.[3][4] She first publicized her decision to become a professional boxer in a Good Morning America interview with Diane Sawyer.[5] When she first told her father, Muhammad Ali, that she was planning to box professionally, he was unhappy about her entering such a dangerous profession. However, Laila assured him she would be fighting women, not men, and she had his genetics.[6]
In her first match, on October 8, 1999, the 5'10", 166 lbs, 21-year-old Ali boxed April Fowler of Michigan City, Indiana. They fought at the Turning Stone Resort & Casino on the Oneida Indian Nation in Verona, New York. Although this was Ali's first match, many journalists and fans attended, largely because she was Muhammad Ali's daughter. Attention to Ali's ring debut was further boosted because it occurred on the eve of what was supposed to be the first male-female professional bout ever to be sanctioned by a US state boxing commission ... later ruled an exhibition. As Women Boxing.com explains: "The near-alignment of the two events focused more attention on female professional boxing than there had been since Christy Martin's 1996 pay-per-view fight with Deirdre Gogarty." Ali knocked out April Fowler - described by WomenBoxing.com as an "out-of-shape novice" - in the first round.[2]
Ali also won her second match by a TKO with only 3 seconds left on the clock. In that match her opponent was 5'4" Shadina Pennybaker, from Pittsburgh, who was making a pro debut after EARNING a 2-1 record as an amateur. They fought at the Mountaineer Casino, Racetrack and Resort in Chester, West Virginia.[2]
Ali captured eight wins in a row and many boxing fans expressed a desire to see her square off in a boxing ring with George Foreman's daughter, Freeda Foreman or Joe Frazier's daughter, Jackie Frazier-Lyde. On the evening of June 8, 2001, Ali and Frazier finally met. The fight was nicknamedAli/Frazier IV in allusion to their fathers' famous fight trilogy. Ali won by a majority judges' decision in eight rounds. This match by Ali and Frazier was the first main-event pay-per-view match between two women.
After a year's hiatus, on June 7, 2002 Ali beat Shirvelle Williams in a six-round decision.[7]
She won the IBA title with a second-round knockout of Suzette Taylor on August 17, 2002 in Las Vegas.[8]
On November 8, she retained that title and unified the crown by adding the WIBA and IWBF belts with an eight-round TKO win over her division's other world champion, Valerie Mahfood, in Las Vegas. Ali stopped a bloodied Mahfood in eight rounds.[9]
On June 21, 2003, Mahfood and Ali fought a rematch, this time in Los Angeles. Once again bloodied by Ali, Mahfood lost by TKO in six rounds while trying to recover her world title. Nevertheless, for the first time in Ali's boxing career, she suffered a bad cut on her right eyelid and a bloodied nose, inflicted by Mahfood, something no other female boxer has done to Ali to this day.[10]
On August 23, 2003, Ali fought her original inspiration, Christy Martin, beating Martin by a knockout in four rounds.[11]
On July 17, 2004, Ali retained her world title, knocking out Nikki Eplion in four rounds.[12]
On July 30, 2004, she stopped Monica Nunez in nine rounds, in her father's native city of Louisville, Kentucky. This fight was part of the undercard for the fight in which Mike Tyson was surprisingly knocked out by fringe contender Danny Williams.[13]
On September 24, 2004, Ali added the IWBF Light Heavyweight title to her resume by beating Gwendolyn O'Neil (whom she had earlier canceled a fight against) by a knockout in three rounds, at Atlanta, Georgia.[14]
On February 1, 2005 in Atlanta, Ali scored a commanding and decisive eighth-round technical knockout over Cassandra Geigger in a ten-round fight.[15]
On June 11, 2005, on the undercard to the Tyson-Kevin McBride fight, Ali defeated Erin Toughill in round three to remain undefeated and won the World Boxing Council title in addition to defending her WIBA crown.[16] (The Ali-Toughill bout is considered one of the most violent female to female fights in history.[17] ) She was the second woman to win a WBC title (Jackie Nava was the first).[18] Toughill and Ali disliked each other, and prior to the fight Toughill joked about Ali. Ali promised she would punish Toughill, much like her father did with Ernie Terrell back in 1967.[16]
On December 17, 2005, in Berlin, Ali fought and defeated Ã…sa Sandell by TKO in the fifth round. The decision was heavily disputed. The audience booed Ali during her post-fight interview.[19]
While a guest on Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith on June 7, 2006, Ali announced that she would be making a world tour, and said that she was looking forward to fightingAnn Wolfe on October 2006.[4] However, the fight with Wolfe never materialized. Instead, on November 11, 2006, Ali fought and defeated Shelley Burton by TKO in the fourth round.[20] Ali was rescheduled to fight O'Neil in Cape Town, on August 5, 2006, but Ali pulled out amid allegations of fraud.[21] The match eventually took place in South Africa on February 2, 2007.[22] Ali defeated O'Neil in the first-round by technical knockout.[23] It was Ali's last professional fight.

Boxing record

24 Wins (21 knockouts, 3 decisions), 0 Losses (0 decisions, 0 retirement), 0 Draws
ResultRecordOpponentTypeRd, TimeDateLocationNotes
Win24-0-0Guyana Gwendolyn O'NeilTKO12007-02-03South Africa Kempton ParkSouth Africa
Win23-0-0United States Shelley BurtonTKO42006-11-11United States New York, New York
Win22-0-0Sweden Ã…sa SandellTKO52005-12-17Germany BerlinGermany
Win21-0-0United States Erin ToughillTKO32005-06-11United States Washington, D.C.
Win20-0-0United States Cassandra GigerTKO82005-02-11United States Atlanta, Georgia
Win19-0-0Guyana Gwendolyn O'NeilKO32004-09-24United States Atlanta, Georgia
Win18-0-0Dominican Republic Monica NunezTKO92004-07-30United States Louisville, Kentucky
Win17-0-0United States Nikki EplionTKO32004-07-17United States Bowie, Maryland
Win16-0-0United States Christy MartinKO42003-08-23United States Biloxi, Mississippi
Win15-0-0United States Valerie MahfoodTKO62003-06-21United States Los Angeles, California
Win14-0-0United States Mary Ann AlmagerTKO42003-02-14United States Louisville, Kentucky
Win13-0-0United States Valerie MahfoodTKO82002-11-08United States Las Vegas, NevadaWIBA, IWBF & IBA title match
Win12-0-0United States Suzette TaylorTKO22002-08-17United States Las Vegas, NevadaIBA title match
Win11-0-0United States Shirvelle WilliamsUD62002-06-07United States Southaven, Mississippi
Win10-0-0United States Jacqui Frazier-LydeMD82001-06-08United States Verona, New YorkFirst Pay Per View boxing card ever to be headlined by women
Win9-0-0United States Christine RobinsonTKO52001-03-02United States Verona, New York
Win8-0-0United States Kendra LenhartUD62000-10-20United States Auburn Hills, MichiganFirst time opponent went the distance
Win7-0-0United States Marjorie JonesTKO12000-06-15United States Universal City, California
Win6-0-0United States Kristina KingTKO42000-04-02China GuangzhouChina
Win5-0-0United States Karen BillTKO32000-04-08United States Detroit, MichiganAli hit the canvas for the first time in her career
Win4-0-0Canada Crystal ArcandKO12000-03-07Canada Windsor, Ontario
Win3-0-0United States Nicolyn ArmstrongTKO(60)1999-12-10United States Detroit, Michigan
Win2-0-0United States Shadina PennybakerTKO41999-10-11United States Chester, West VirginiaPennybaker's pro debut
Win1-0-0United States April FowlerKO(15)1999-12-08United States Verona, New YorkAli's pro debut

Awards

Ali was named Super Middleweight Champion by the International Boxing Association in 2002[9] and Super Middleweight Champion by the International Women's Boxing Federation in 2005.[24]

Criticism

Other top women's boxing champions such as Ann Wolfe (24-1), Vonda Ward (23-1), Leatitia Robinson (15-2),[25] and Natascha Ragosina (22-0) have claimed in interviews that they have challenged Ali many times over the years, but Ali found ways of avoiding them. Boxing writers and fans have repeatedly expressed disappointment in Ali's perceived ducking the top contenders throughout her career.[26][27][28][29] However, Ali has contended that other boxers want unrealistic amounts of money and "play themselves right out of the deal" during negotiations intentionally because their names will have no value after they've fought Ali.[30]

Television

In spring 2002, Ali appeared in a boxing role for the music video "Deny" by Canadian hard rock band Default.[31] The video gained airplay on music channels including MTV2 andMMUSA.
In 2004, Ali appeared on the George Lopez show, where she owned a gym,[32] as well as on Real Husbands of Hollywood.[33]
In mid-2007, Ali was a PARTICIPANT in season four of the American version of the television show Dancing with the Stars;[34] she had no previous dancing experience. She and her professional dancing partner, Maksim Chmerkovskiy, were widely praised by the judges, receiving the first "10" from judge Len Goodman for their rumba. They came in third place in the competition, losing to Apolo Anton Ohno (with Julianne Hough) and Joey Fatone (with Kym Johnson).[35]
Ali hosted the revival of American Gladiators alongside Hulk Hogan. The show premiered in January 2008.[36]
Ali and the cast of American Gladiators appeared on the NBC show Celebrity Family Feud in an episode that aired on July 8, 2008.[37]
Ali joined the CBS team as a contributing correspondent on The Early Show with her first appearance in early January 2008.[38]
She hosted The N's Student Body, a reality show on The N.[39]
Ali also appeared in a 2007 episode of Yo Gabba Gabba, titled "Train", in a brief dance number, and on Love That Girl, episode 3.4, "Fighting Shape".[40]
In 2012, Ali was picked to co-host Everyday Health with Ethan Zohn and Jenna Morasca. The show airs on ABC Saturday mornings and profiles everyday people living with HEALTH issues, who aspire to not let their HEALTH keep them from helping others or doing extraordinary things.[41]
Also in 2012, Ali appeared in a Kohl's commercial with a tag line, "I box to win; I shop to win.".[42]
Ali was a contestant on the NBC celebrity reality competition series called Stars Earn Stripes from August 2012 to September 2012.[43]
On February 4, 2013, Ali appeared on NBC reality series, The Biggest Loser in the episode Lead By Example. In the episode, she boxed alongside Dolvett Quince's team consisting of Jackson Carter, Joe Ostaszewski and Francelina Morillo.
In March 2013, Ali started appearing as a co-host on multiple episodes of E! talk show series Fashion Police filling in for Giuliana Rancic, who was maternity leave. In May 2013, Ali appeared once again on another episode filling in for Rancic, who had other commitments and was unable attend the show.
In April 2013, Ali PARTICIPATED in two episodes of Chopped: All Stars, making it to the final round and duking it out for a favorite charity.[44]
In September 2013, Ali began hosting "All In with Laila Ali", a new show in the CBS Saturday morning lineup "CBS Dream Team". The following year, she began hosting Late Night Chef Fight on the cable network FYI (U.S. TV channel).

Personal life

Ali was a manicurist at age 16. She graduated from California's Santa Monica College with a business degree.[45] She owned her own nail salon before she began boxing.[46][47]In 2002, Ali wrote (with co-author David Ritz) the book Reach! Finding Strength, Spirit, and Personal Power,[48] meant to motivate and inspire young people. In this book, she confides that she felt isolated at times because of her parents' fame. Ali has also spent some time in jail, and describes her arrests and the physical abuse she experienced in jail. Critics say that Ali's book has a good foundation but she does not give the readers advice; rather she just talks about her own experiences.[49]
Ali married Johnny "Yahya" McClain on August 27, 2000. She met McClain through her sister Hana at her father's 57th birthday party. McClain became Ali's manager and helped guide her career. In late 2005, Ali and McClain divorced and McClain quit managing Ali.[50]
On July 23, 2007, Ali married former NFL player Curtis Conway in Los Angeles. They have two children together, son Curtis Muhammad Conway, Jr. (born August 26, 2008) and daughter Sydney Jurldine Conway (born April 4, 2011).[51][52] Ali is the stepmother of Conway's three children: twin sons Cameron and Kelton (born 1995) and daughter Leilani (born 1999).[53]
American Gladiators co-host and wrestling legend Hulk Hogan credits Laila Ali with saving his life by telephoning him when he was DEPRESSED and suicidal.[54]

Bibliography

  • Ali, Laila; Ritz, David (2002). Reach!: Finding Strength, Spirit, and Personal Power. Hyperion. ISBN 0786868554.

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