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Foreman had only
eighteen amateur fights before he
won the Olympic gold medal as a
heavyweight in 1968. He also won
immediate fame by parading around
the ring holding a small U. S. flag
after his victory; the scene was
captured on live television from
Mexico City and the photo appeared
in newspapers across the country...>>>
Book George Foreman for Your Event
He became a
professional in June of 1969 and won
his first 34 fights to gain a shot
at the heavyweight championship
against Joe Frazier. Thirty-one of
those victories came on knockouts,
29 of them before the 6th round.
Frazier was a 3-1
favorite in their January 22, 1973,
fight in Kingston, Jamaica, but
Foreman knocked the champion down
six times in less than two round to
win the titles. After two defenses,
Foreman suffered his first loss, an
8th-round knockout by Muhammad Ali
on October 30, 1974, at Kinshasha,
Zaire.
After a series of
exhibitions in 1975, Foreman won his
next five fights by knockout but he
retired after losing a 12-round
decision to Jimmy Young in 1977. Ten
years later, he came out of
retirement and knocked out thirteen
opponents before meeting Evander
Holyfield for the heavyweight title
in 1991. Holyfield retained the
championship with a 12-round
decision.
Foreman briefly
retired in 1993, but remained very
popular because of several
television commercials in which he
poked fun at himself about his
eating habits while selling a grill
named for him.
He returned to the
ring in 1994, after being away for
nearly a year and half, and became
the oldest champion ever in any
weight division by knocking out
Michael Moorer in the 10th round of
their IBF/WBA heavyweight title
fight on Nov. 5.
However, Foreman
held the joint title only briefly.
Because he refused to fight
top-rated contender Tony Tucker, the
WBA stripped him of that title on
March 4, 1995. When the IBF insisted
that Foreman should give Axel Schulz
a rematch, he relinquished that
title.
Although he hasn't
formally announced retirement,
Foreman hasn't fought since losing a
decision to Shannon Briggs on Nov.
22, 1997. A much-ballyhooed fight
with Larry Holmes, originally
scheduled for Jan. 12, 1999, was
called off after a couple of
postponements.
He has won 75 of
his 80 professional fights, 68 by
knockout.
>>>
Book George Foreman for Your Event
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