George Foreman passes away at 76

EviLore

Expansive Ellipses
Staff Member
RIP champ.





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"Big" George Foreman, one of the most influential and recognizable boxers of all time, died Friday, his family announced on his social media account.

He was 76.

Foreman, who captured an Olympic gold medal in 1968, was a two-time heavyweight champion and Hall of Fame boxer.

He's perhaps best known for the historic Rumble in the Jungle bout with Muhammad Ali in 1974 in Zaire, a fight Foreman lost in an upset via eighth-round KO. It's arguably the most famous fight of all time, and the "When We Were Kings" film that chronicled the fight won an Oscar for best documentary feature.

Foreman, of course, made history yet again later in his career. He fought five more times after he lost the heavyweight championship to Ali at age 25, including a fifth-round TKO victory over Joe Frazier (whom he stopped in two rounds to first win the title) and a fifth-round KO of Ron Lyle in a classic.

After that fifth fight at 28, Foreman shockingly announced his retirement and began a career as an ordained minister in his native Texas.

Foreman was retired for 10 years. He returned to boxing in 1987 at age 38. And he went on to mount arguably the most impressive sports comeback ever.

At first, Foreman padded his record with easy knockout wins. One of them was a second-round knockout of Gerry Cooney. But then, in 1991, Foreman proved this comeback was for real when he pushed the great Evander Holyfield to the brink in a classic heavyweight title fight at age 42. Though he was unsuccessful in his bid to become a two-time heavyweight champion, Foreman was undeterred.

Five fights later, following a loss to Tommy Morrison, Foreman accomplished the unthinkable.

Down on the scorecards, Foreman landed a two-punch combination that laid Michael Moorer down for the count of 10 in 1994. At 45 years and 299 days old, Foreman was the unified heavyweight champion of the world, the oldest man in history to hold boxing's greatest prize (and also the oldest champion ever, a record that stood for 20 years).

"It happened," Jim Lampley called on the HBO broadcast. "It happened!"

Foreman went on to have a successful career alongside Lampley as an HBO boxing analyst. But his greatest success following his in-ring career was yet to come.

The same year Foreman defeated Moorer, he launched his eponymous grill. He went on to sell more than 100 million grills worldwide.

In 1999, he sold the commercial rights to the George Foreman grill for $138 million.

Foreman's final fight came in November 1997, a majority decision loss to Shannon Briggs.

He held his role with HBO as a ringside analyst for 12 years, ending in 2004.

The Ring named Foreman the ninth-greatest puncher of all time and, in 2002, one of the top 25 best boxers of the past 80 years.

In a statement, Top Rank called Foreman "one of the biggest punchers and personalities the sport has ever seen."

"George was a great friend to not only myself but to my entire family," Top Rank chairman Bob Arum said. "We've lost a family member and are absolutely devastated."
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Gp1

Member
Was he sick or something? Never read anything about it.

One of, if not, the most powerful puncher in the history of the sport. Even thought he was "retired" for the best part of his "prime".

The talk was in his comeback he would clash with Tyson in 1990 just when Tyson got arrested. But way better would be if a 30's Foreman faced the early 20's Tyson in the 83/85.
 
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MagusMajul

Member
He was one of the greatest boxers of all time and was kicking ass well into his 40s I think he could have whooped both mike tyson and tyson fury in his prime
 

Laptop1991

Member
RIP George Foreman, with Ali and Joe Frazier and many other's, they were the golden age of heavyweight boxers for me in the 70's, sad news
 

kevboard

Member
yo, I just had a Mandela effect situation... I could have sworn I heard he died like 10 years ago or so...

I think in his honor, I will make some nice burgers on my George Foreman grill later
3x.webp
 
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winjer

Gold Member
One of the all time greats of boxing.
Not only one of the most powerful punchers of all time, but also highly skilled and intelligent.
 

Sophist

Member
He was crazy strong. His last one-two vs Moorer doesn't look that strong on video but Foreman broke Moorer's mouthgard in two; Moorer had to get 32 stitches inside his mouth.

edit: best quality i could find on youtube, when Moorer tries to stand up, you can see the blood on the ring (38 secs)

 
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MrA

Member
Rip
A tough boxer
I wouldn't have wanted to fight him in his prime.
To be fair I don't think you'd want to fight anyone that was the champ in their prime,
I'm going to miss big George, one of the best boxers of all time and seeming all round great guy
 
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