Former world heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman claims
his water was drugged before he lost to Muhammad Ali in their 1974
"Rumble in the Jungle" at Zaire in his new book.
Foreman told ESPN on Tuesday that he was certain he was drugged
because his water had a medicine-like taste, as if someone had
spiked it to weaken him before the epic fight, which he lost to Ali
by eighth-round knockout.
"I said, 'This water tastes like it has medicine in it,'"
Foreman said he told trainer Dick Sadler before the fight. Sadler
assured him it was fine, Foreman claimed.
"I know there was medicine in that water. I'll never forget
that.
"There was even worse medicine waiting in that ring - Muhammad
Ali."
Foreman pounded Ali in early rounds but tired and was vulnerable
when Ali counterattacked, the infamous "Rope A Dope" strategy.
Foreman said he has made the drugging claim before but Foreman's
promotion of the book has pushed the topic into the limelight once
more even as he tries to uphold the glory of Ali's victory while
adding to the drama of his own tale.
"It wasn't a fixed fight. I got beat fair and square," Foreman
said.
But Foreman also said it took him years to recover from the
fight and that he was lucky not to have died.
"It was years before I got my health back together after that
fight," said Foreman. "It wasn't doctors who put something in my
water. They didn't have PhDs. I'm lucky I'm still alive."
Foreman returned from retirement to reclaim the heavyweight
throne in 1994, becoming at age 45 the oldest man to hold the
coveted crown.
(China Daily via AFP May 24, 2007)