Ken Norton, who in the course of 12 hard-fought rounds in 1973 was transformed from an unknown heavyweight into one of the most famous boxers in the world by virtue of a victory over Muhammad Ali, died Wednesday in a Las Vegas care facility. He was 70.
Norton
was a thickly muscled ex-Marine who had little notoriety when he faced
Ali on March 31, 1973, at the San Diego Sports Arena. But Norton broke
Ali's jaw in the second round and went on to earn a split-decision
victory that would define him as one of his era's greats.
The
Seventies were a golden age for heavyweights, with legends such as Ali,
Joe Frazier, George Foreman and Larry Holmes among many others
competing at a high level, and Norton fit right in with that group.
Ali beat him in a hotly contested rematch later in 1973, and after the fight was singing Norton's praises.
"Norton is a better fighter than any other fighter I've fought, except maybe Joe Frazier," Ali said.
.
Former boxer Ken Norton is shown at a Muhammad Ali birthday party in 2012.
Gene
Kilroy, Ali's former business manager, was a good friend of Norton's
and visited him at the Veteran's Administration hospital in Las Vegas
two weeks ago. He said Norton was unable to speak, but loved seeing the
boxers that Kilroy brought to visit.
"He was a good guy and an
outstanding fighter," Kilroy told Yahoo Sports. "I can tell you this:
Ali had tremendous respect for him. He had that awkward style, where
he'd shoot his jab up from the waist, and it was very unusual. Most guys
throw the jab from the shoulder, and that always gave Ali trouble."
Norton
was 42-7-1 with 33 knockouts and briefly held the WBC heavyweight
title. He was awarded the WBC belt in 1978 when then champion Leon
Spinks opted to face Ali in a rematch rather than defend it against
Norton.
In his first defense, he lost the title to Larry Holmes in
one of the greatest heavyweight title fights in history. The bout was
even after 14 rounds and Holmes won a spectacular 15th on two of the
three judges' cards to earn a split decision win and claim the belt.
Norton
was elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1992, even
though he never won a heavyweight title fight. In 1998, Ring Magazine
editors tabbed him as the 22nd greatest heavyweight ever. Norton had
quality wins over Ali, Jimmy Young and Jerry Quarry, among others.
"He
was a truly a nice guy and he was a dedicated, brave, hard-working
fighter," said Top Rank's Bob Arum, who promoted several of Norton's
fights. "He struggled against guys who could really punch: Foreman,
Earnie Shavers, [Gerry] Cooney, even a guy like Duane Bobick. But he was
a tough out for anyone and when he was fighting someone who wasn't a
massive fighter, he was right in the fight all the time."
Norton
was also an actor and starred in the movie, "Mandingo," as well as
several television shows. He is the father of former NFL linebacker Ken
Norton Jr.
Norton, who built his reputation on his win over Ali,
got a rubber match against "The Greatest," at Yankee Stadium in 1976
during a police strike in New York. It was a wild scene, and Ali won
another hotly disputed decision to retain the WBA/WBC belts.
The
fight with Holmes was his last hurrah. After that, he went 2-2-1 in his
final five and retired after being knocked out by Cooney in the first
round of a 1981 bout.
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