âItâs Not Worth Itâ: Terence Crawford Opens Up on Fear of Ending Up Like His Idol Muhammad Ali
Doesnât every boxer dream of achieving the success Muhammad Ali enjoyed? Heavyweight champion, sporting icon, and so much more. They certainly do! However, former three-division undisputed champion Terence Crawford fears exactly that. But why?Â
âBudâ retired from the sport earlier this year with an undefeated record after defeating one of the greatest boxers of the current generation, Canelo Alvarez. While he had plenty of options to further his legacy, he chose to end thingsâbecause of what happened to Ali in later years.Â
Terence Crawford wants to be able to take care of himself
âWe all look up to Ali as the most iconic boxer ever, and to see him deteriorate [as] he did, we don’t want to be like that,â Crawford told Ryan Clark and Channing Crowder on the Pivot Podcast. Famously, Muhammad Ali suffered from Parkinson’s disease, diagnosed in 1984 at age 42, just three years after retiring from boxing.
To say he was a shell of his former self would be an understatement. Many attributed the disease to the punishment he took inside the ring, fighting till the age of 39. The disease progressively limited Aliâs physical abilities and speech, transforming the once incredibly fast and talkative individual into a quieter figure who moved slowly and deliberately.Â
He lived with it for over 30 years until he died in 2016. And Terence Crawford doesnât even want to imagine living like that. âYou’re the greatest fighter of all time, but you can’t even take care of yourself. You can’t even wash your own aâ,â Crawford continued. âDo I want to go through that? Is it worth it? No, it’s not! It’s not worth it.â

âBudâ highlighted that boxers often ignore the damage they take in their prime. And warned that the punishment today will come back to bite them in the future. âThat’s going to show up 5 years later,â Crawford told Clark and Crowder during the podcast. He claimed that fighters arenât âunbreakable,â they are just good at enduring it because of âour family.â
This philosophy is also reflected in his fighting style, as he took far less damage throughout his boxing career, thanks to the skills he developed. And Crawfordâs fears arenât far-fetched. The sport is filled with former champions who deteriorated in the later years of their lives. Not to mention the in-ring deaths in boxing.Â
Regardless, what did Ali himself feel about his condition?Â
Muhammad Ali claimed he was a prisoner in his own body
Before his death, Aliâs longtime manager, Gene Kilroy, revealed living with Parkinsonâs disease made Ali feel like âa prisoner in his own body.â Despite the severe physical limitations caused by the illness, Kilroy stressed that Aliâs mind remained unaffected. âMind is good,â Kilroy said.Â
âItâs hard seeing him as he is today. He can just about walk, and his speech is slurred. It takes huge effort for him to make the simplest communication now, but when he does, every word is worthwhile,â Kilroy added. Ali reflected on his condition with honesty and faith.Â
âMaybe God is punishing me for some of the things I didnât do right,â he told Kilroy, before adding that he believed God would ask not what a person had done, but âwhat you couldâve done.â
Muhammad Aliâs tale is one of pride, yet tragedy accompanied it closely behind, something Terence Crawford wants to avoid. Do you agree with him?Â
The post âItâs Not Worth Itâ: Terence Crawford Opens Up on Fear of Ending Up Like His Idol Muhammad Ali appeared first on EssentiallySports.
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