AP/ November 5, 2011, 5:58 PM

Former boxing champ Joe Frazier has liver cancer

In this March 8, 1971, file photo, boxer Joe Frazier, left, hits Muhammad Ali during the 15th round of their heavyweight title fight at New York's Madison Square Garden. Former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier is seriously ill with liver cancer. His personal and business manager says Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011, the 67-year-old boxer was diagnosed four or five weeks ago and is under hospice care.

In this March 8, 1971, file photo, boxer Joe Frazier, left, hits Muhammad Ali during the 15th round of their heavyweight title fight at New York's Madison Square Garden. Former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier is seriously ill with liver cancer. His personal and business manager says Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011, the 67-year-old boxer was diagnosed four or five weeks ago and is under hospice care. / AP Photo, File

PHILADELPHIA - Former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier has liver cancer and is under hospice care.

The 67-year-old boxer was diagnosed four or five weeks ago, Frazier's personal and business manager said on Saturday. Leslie Wolff told The Associated Press the doctors have not yet told Frazier how long he has to live.

"We have medical experts looking into all the options that are out there," Wolff said. "There are very few. But that doesn't mean we're going to stop looking."

Wolff, who has been Frazier's manager for seven years, said the boxer had been in and out of the hospital since early October and receiving hospice treatment for the last week.

"We appreciate every prayer we can get," Wolff said. "I've got everybody praying for him. We"ll just keep our fingers crossed and hope for a miracle."

Frazier was the first man to beat Muhammad Ali, knocking him down and taking a decision in the so-called Fight of the Century in 1971. He would go on to lose two more fights to Ali, including the epic "Thrilla in Manila."

Frazier was bitter for many years about the way Ali treated him then. More recently, he said he had forgiven Ali for repeatedly taunting him.

Smokin' Joe was a small yet ferocious fighter who smothered his opponents with punches, including a devastating left hook he used to end many of his fights early. It was the left hook that dropped Ali in the 15th round of their "Fight of the Century" at Madison Square Garden in 1971 to seal a win in a bout where each fighter earned an unheard of $2.5 million.

While that fight is celebrated in boxing lore, Ali and Frazier put on an even better show in their third fight, held in a sweltering arena in Manila as part of Ali's world tour of fights in 1975. Nearly blinded by Ali's punches, Frazier still wanted to go out for the 15th round of the fight but was held back by trainer Eddie Futch in a bout Ali would later say was the closest thing to death he could imagine.

Frazier won the heavyweight title in 1970 by stopping Jimmy Ellis in the fifth round of their fight at Madison Square Garden. He defended it successfully four times before George Foreman knocked him down six times in the first two rounds to take the title from him in 1973.

Frazier would never be heavyweight champion again.

In recent years, Frazier had been doing regular autograph appearances, including one in Las Vegas the weekend of a Floyd Mayweather Jr. fight in September.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
9 Comments Add a Comment
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Overruled1 says:
Frazier as all great boxers will never be forgotten.
His career was spectacular and few can ever come close.
He is in a different fight now with liver cancer.
I don't know if his condition is beatable, but as with all great fighters I'm sure he will give it a run for the money.
Good luck to Mr. Frazier...
My father was a boxer, he never became champion but was a contender and became "someone" as a famous actor once said.
I've even been approached by some for autographs because we look so much alike, but I tell them they want my dad, and he was much older than me....I never fought in a ring...usually on the street.
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credibility2 says:
Such a sad end to a great boxing career. May God bless his life transitions.
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maryderricotte62 says:
Joe Frazier and Muhammed Ali bought class to sports and their respect for each other has been unwavering. I grew up in Louisville and jJoe was a bet on the table to win from many. I know has a good family because he was a family man. So right on Joe. Love Ya
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kevjustice says:
his toughest fight.
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MagnaCartaUK says:
That's bloody awful news, he's a name my age group grew up with in Britain. Though my interest in boxing's lessened over the years, along with Ali himself, Foreman, Norton, Holmes, Spinks and Shavers, Smokin'Joe was one who featured strongly in the golden age of heavyweights. Realy sad, and 67 is no age at all, though it's important to remember miracles do happen - and this man deserves one.
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bajajohn1 says:
Hang in there Joe, for as long as you can.
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smbdds says:
My prayers are with Smokin Joe. Thanks for all the memories. May God bless you in this most difficult time.
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kenodenis says:
The first comment on this site is very poignant. Thank you grahamalcolu for sharing your remembrances. My prayers are also with this giant of a man and his family.
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grahamalcolu says:
Joe Frazier was a dear friend of ours.He came to see us at our house in Alcolu SC.He came to see our cows along with his brother and friend.My husband and Joe played around boxing here and in Charleston SC. We have many pictures we will remember him by.He was a humble person and if someone will come to Alcolu SC you have to be special, and he was.Our prayers are with his family.He called my husband mother is white moma.She loved him also.
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