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-   -   Ali near death (Ali has died at 74) (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=223499)

Cliff Bowman 06-06-2016 07:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bored5000 (Post 1546913)

The list grows completely cold, though, at 49 of 50 autographs. "Slim" Jim Robinson fought Ali in Ali's fourth pro bout. A Robinson autograph is like chasing a unicorn. No one is even really sure what happened to Robinson.

http://archive.boston.com/news/globe...e_mr_robinson/


http://espn.go.com/espn/eticket/stor.../jimmyrobinson

According to the two articles it was "Sweet Jimmy" Robinson, not "Slim" Jim Robinson. The way they talked in the articles, if it was "Slim Jim" the mystery would have been solved very quickly :).

autograf 06-06-2016 09:15 AM

I graduated from the same high school here in Louisville, KY.....Central High.....as Ali. Although about 25 years later. It was an inner city High School and I was bused there in the early 1980's busing experiment. I met a ton of great people there and have life-long friendships as a result.

Some people think Ali stood behind Islam as a way to get out of service in Vietnam as if he just adopted that religion for that quick reason. Ali held fast to his beliefs on Islam until the day he died, so if he did just hang on to it for that reason, it was a sly 50-60 year ploy...

While I don't necessarily agree with the decision on Vietnam, I can't possibly fathom the strength it would take to make that stand and then lose everything you worked so hard to get and have the case hanging over you for many years before it was decided. I would hope I would have the same convictions to stand on something if I felt so strongly....

Not many minds are gonna be changed about Ali even after his passing. I think those who wanted to change them already have and many, like Leon said, take his whole life into consideration when rationally looking at any person. I know as a Louisvillian, Kentuckian and American, I'm proud of Ali and all he stood for. Our city, state, country and world is ultimately a better place because of it.

If you are ever in Louisville, there's an Ali Museum on Main Street in walking distance from the Louisville Slugger Museum. It's a fantastic place and about a 2 hour diversion, well worth the time.

forazzurri2axz 06-06-2016 09:24 AM

Louisville Ali Museum
 
Been there twice--I second the recommendation, a great place to go

Bored5000 06-06-2016 07:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cliff Bowman (Post 1547300)
According to the two articles it was "Sweet Jimmy" Robinson, not "Slim" Jim Robinson. The way they talked in the articles, if it was "Slim Jim" the mystery would have been solved very quickly :).

Thanks for the correction. :) I remember how interesting I found the articles when I read them several years ago and wanted to share them with the board. I had a brain freeze and confused my Jim Robinsons.

jbsports33 06-06-2016 07:48 PM

May "Ali" rest in peace

Bored5000 06-06-2016 07:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frankbmd (Post 1546903)
It's a bit of a stretch to say I knew Ali, but I knew him when I saw him.

In the early eighties during the "fitness" phase of my life, while jogging on Wilshire Blvd in Los Angeles not far from where Ali lived at the time, a convertible with the top down passed, a man in the back seat stood up and pointed in my direction and shouted "I want you", as if I was a fighter training to fight him. I waved and kept running. The man was definitely Ali.

Even in the best shape of my life, I was never able to float like a butterfly and sting like a bee.:D

If Ali was unable to resist Don King's suitcase full of $50,000, no way would he have been able to turn down a suitcase full of 50,000 Frank bucks. ;)

RichardSimon 06-07-2016 03:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by George (Post 1546879)
If I had to guess, I would think that no one who reponded to my post is a veteran. If you have any interest in the perspective of veterans like me, you may wish to read this..........

https://joebrunoonboxing.wordpress.c...is-not-a-hero/

If not, that's fine.

I am a US Army veteran. And you are dead wrong. He had more guts than guys facing bullets in a horribly unjust civil war that we knew we were losing almost from the get go. And only stubborn politicians forced the unneeded deaths of 50,000 Americans and maybe 1,000,000 Vietnamese.
You can be more of a patriot if you question your government than if you just blindly follow it.
You have to separate your government from your country.


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