Ali v Lewis - round by round in Croke Park

The story of the Muhammad Ali versus Al 'Blue' Lewis fight round by round.

The story of the Muhammad Ali versus Al 'Blue' Lewis fight round by round.

ROUND ONE

The pattern of the fight was set as early, as the first minute when, after Lewis had mounted the initial tentative attack, Ali’s rapier-like punching with his left hand, took over. Although only at half-pace in the opening round, the former champion shook Lewis to his heels with two left hooks high up on the head and there was no effective response.

Lewis, pinned back on the defensive, showed some kind of confidence by casually sliding off the ropes as Ali mounted a two-handed attack but he produced little effective action to back it up, and Ali, depending almost exclusively on his left hand, took the first round by a wide margin.

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ROUND TWO

Ali decided on a change of tactics at the start of the second, working industriously to the body and then, in one brief moment of inspiration, rocking Lewis with an overarm right to the head. Lewis deciding that attack was the best form of defence, attempted to move forward, but as he came in so Ali shortened his left hook and drove his opponent halfway across the ring with one perfectly-timed left to the temple.

ROUND THREE

In response to the crowd’s demand for the Ali shuffle, the former champion produced his now famous routine, but Lewis answered him in this steadily escalating psychological war by dropping his hands and calling on Ali to come to him. It was an invitation that did not go unanswered, and Ali, working both hands with lightning speed, produced big red weals around the Detroit man’s midriff.

ROUND FOUR

Even at this stage the sap was beginning to leave Lewis’ aching limbs and the odd tentative left hand was becoming progressively weaker. One round-house right stripped Ali of his confidence momentarily, but within a matter of seconds it was the old familiar picture with Muhammad relentlessly stalking his opponent.

ROUND FIVE

A round that was to end in a blaze of excitement opened tamely enough with Ali prepared to essay nothing more ambitious than the occasional left hook to the head and body. Lewis, his mouth opening progressively wider, threw one solitary right-cross in reply, but still appeared destined to see out the round without any trouble when Ali suddenly unleashed a corking left hook to the chin which lifted Lewis clean off his feet. As the referee tolled the count, Lewis did not seem to have a hope of making it, but the bell sounded almost simultaneously as the count reached 10 and so the Detroit man earned a reprieve.

ROUND SIX

Lewis, helped back to his corner in dire shape at the end of the previous round, presented a sorry figure by the start of the sixth and with Ali going all out for a quick finish, the action was almost all one-sided. Ali, forgetting his earlier indifference, piled in left after left and when he began to bring his right-hand into play it scarcely seemed possible that Lewis could survive the round. But, inexplicably, the former champion decided to ease off at that stage and spent the remaining 30 seconds of the round casually leaning against a rope as Lewis sought in vain to capitalise on his newly discovered reprieve.

ROUND SEVEN

If the bout was one-sided in the early stages, it was positively exhibition stuff at this stage with Lewis offering nothing more substantial in defence than the infrequent, ineffective left-hook to the body. Ali, thriving in the latitude of it all strode after him, firing out left and right hooks to the head and body and by the end of the seventh round the points discrepancy was so pronounced as to be almost farcical.

ROUND EIGHT

Ali’s corner, still impatient for a big decisive punch, pleaded with their man to finish it in the eighth but the former champion, by now reduced to something like second gear, had obviously decided that the time had not yet come for the pay-off. Content to toy with his opponent, he loosed jab after jab but there was no real sting behind them and Lewis, for all his deficiencies, was still erect at the end of the round.

ROUND NINE

This was unquestionably the best and most eventful round of the fight to date. Ali, again switching the tempo, tore into his tormented opponent with pile-driving hooks to the head and body and in one devastating barrage must have hit the hapless loser with at least 30 punches in as many seconds. But Lewis managed to survive and even drew a roar of admiration from the crowd by attempting to slug it out with Ali in the closing 10 seconds of the round.

ROUND 10

Ali sprang from his corner as if this might be the end of the road for Lewis but, surprisingly for all his industry, and he was now earnestly working with both hands, he was unable to set up the sagging Detroit boxer for a decisive punch. Once or twice Lewis wobbled visibly on his feet but he always managed to escape to the centre of the ring before Ali could produce the pay-off shot that by this stage looked only a matter of seconds away.

ROUND 11

The attitude in the Lewis corner betrayed the sad but inescapable fact that their man was fast running out of strength, if not guts, and after a minute 15 seconds of the 11th round they were helping the hapless Lewis back to the corner, while Ali danced his familiar victory jig. A crunching left hook on the jaw set up Lewis for the initial collapse and as the former champion sprang in to drive home his advantage with a fusillade of punches, referee Lew Eskin decided to call it a night.