I was knocked out by Muhammad Ali but another heavyweight hit me so hard I was seeing six of the same woman | The Sun

GEORGE FOREMAN was knocked out by Muhammad Ali in their legendary Rumble in the Jungle – but The Greatest wasn't the hardest-hitting heavyweight he'd ever faced.

The entire world stood still on October 30, 1974 when Ali challenged the previously undefeated Foreman for the WBA, WBC and The Ring heavyweight titles.



Ali introduced the globe to his famous rope-a-dope technique on that famous night in the Congo, absorbing Foreman's bruising body punches before stopping him in the eighth.

The late Ali undoubtedly packed a punch to put Foreman out for the count, although his power paled in comparison to former amateur opponent of 'Big George', Bob Winters.

The 74-year-old told talkSPORT: “I’ve been punched hard so many times.

“But, I was in a Golden Gloves match with a guy by the name of Bob Winters.

READ MORE IN BOXING

AJ’s earnings per punch revealed as he beats Tyson – but who tops pile?

Win an Audi R8 or £92,500 cash from just 89p with our special discount code

“He hit me so hard and knocked me down, I didn’t know boxers had that to happen to them.

“I saw about six women with the same coat on and after the referee counted they started disappearing and then I realised it was only one woman.

“That was being hit hard, I’ll never forget that, not seeing doubles and triples, but more.”

Boxing legend Foreman knew a thing or two about being a heavy hitter – calling time on his career with a whopping 83 per cent knockout ratio.

Most read in Boxing

GREAT BRAWL WITH CHINA

Fury in talks with Zhang over July return fight despite Ruiz rumours

NEEDS MEND-ING

Chad Mendes RETIRES after being left with swollen face in bare-knuckle fight

TOOTH HURTS

Rockhold quits bare-knuckle bout with Perry after having his TEETH knocked out

WHISKY SOUR

Fans say same things as Conor McGregor swigs Proper 12 whiskey from ringside

BETTING SPECIAL – BEST SPORTS BETTING APPS IN THE UK

But he felt "ashamed" by some of his knockouts, telling World Boxing News: “Two things I will never forget about my boxing career: How hard I could hit [not proud of the first part] and how hard they punched me.

"I heard bells and whistles while bodies collapsed.

"The first time around [1967 to 1977], I hit so hard. I’d wake up ashamed of what I had done to [those] good people.

"I felt like they were boxing, and I was slaughtering.

"My gift was recklessness. I didn’t care if I broke my shoulder, arm, or knuckles or if I flew out of the ring. I had to get a KO or fall down myself.”

The Texas titan called time on his Hall-of-Fame career in 1997 following a majority decision defeat to Shannon Briggs.

But just four fights prior to his farewell bout, Foreman made history by becoming the oldest champion in boxing history.

Foreman shocked the world in 1994 by knocking out 26-year-old Michael Moorer at the ripe old age of 45 to become unified heavyweight champion.

Source: Read Full Article