'He used to build these phenomenal
records for local white guys, all of whom would eventually get
beat when they went on the road. Sam used to bring envelopes to
the newspaper guys when boxing was still popular enough for the
newspaper guys to take the envelopes.'
Shortly before Ali's first fight with
Sonny Liston in February 1964, Marley wrote to the future
heavyweight champion at his training facility in
Miami Beach
. 'It was so long ago,' jokes Marley, 'they didn't even have zip codes
back then.' Although The Grea
test
didn't answer the letter, it would play a big part later on when Ali
developed an avuncular relationship with Marley.
'I was sitting in the second balcony of
the
Boston
Garden
watching the first Ali-Liston fight,' said Marley. 'But for the
rematch, I got even luckier.'
The rematch was originally slated for
Boston
, and Ali was staying locally at the Statler Hilton hotel. One day
Marley called him there, told him he was the one who wrote to him,
and asked if he would sign the cover of his 'I am The Grea
test
' record album.
'Ali asked me if I was a white boy or
if I was colored,' said Marley. "After I told him the truth, I asked
if I could go to the
press
conference but he said I couldn't. I asked him why and he said because
Liston eats little kids.'
Undeterred, Marley waited for Ali at
the hotel and finally met the man he worshipped. Ali took a liking
to the cheeky youngster, and immediately took him under his wing.
'In and of itself, that was amazing,'
marvels Marley. 'But at the time Ali was always in the company of
Malcolm X and Minister Louis Farrakhan. When Ali said I could work
in his camp, I was around these people all the time.”
Among the others in the camp were the
aging black actor Stepin Fetchit, heavyweight contender and chief
sparring partner
Jim
my
Ellis, and Rahman Ali, Muhummad's boxing brother who Marley says
'couldn't fight a lick.' The awestruck Marley was more of a gofer
than anything else, and he would most often fetch water or tea for
Ali after a workout.
The
Boston
rematch wound up being cancelled because Ali suffered an attack of
appendicitis. When Marley visited Ali at the hospital, the champion
was surrounded by a squad of bodyguards from the Nation of Islam. He
was too young to realize he was in the midst of such strong social
history.
'The champ told them to let me in, and
I visited him every day for three weeks,' said Marley. 'Later, at a
press
conference he called me to the podium and told everyone I was his
biggest fan. A reporter asked me why I admired him.
'I said, ‘Number one: his fighting
ability; number two: his personality; and number three: his
humility.' With that, Ali grabbed his face in [feigned] surprise.
The photo went over the wire with me in it. It said: Clay fan
would rather fight than switch.'
When the Liston rematch was rescheduled
for
Lewiston
,
Maine
in May 1965, Ali's trainer, Angelo Dundee, forbade Marley from
attending. He was afraid of the violence that might occur because of
the immense anti-Muslim sentiment.
Marley was left crying in a
Boston
hotel lobby when 'Diamond'
Jim
Reilly, a local pimp and casual acquaintance of Ali, whose motto was
All I do is rest and dress, read the funnies, and count my moneys,
happened along.
He took pity on the young Marley, told
him to hop into the back seat of his Cadillac and, accompanied by
three busty members of his vast stable, headed north to
Lewiston
with Marley in tow.
As soon as they encountered a furious
Dundee
, the always calm and cool Diamond
Jim
placated the trainer by utilizing his best Barry White. 'Don't say
anything Angelo, he's my guest.'
Dundee
never uttered another word about Marley being there.
Somehow, Diamond
Jim
forgot about Marley after the fight, and the youngster found himself
stranded far from home, short on cash, but never short on guile or
the good fortune that always seemed to come his way.
He wound up hitching a ride with
heavyweight contender George Chuvalo and a fellow named Teddy
McWhorter, who were heading back to Beantown to catch a flight home
to
Canada
.
En route they stopped at a Holiday Inn
where Chuvalo told Marley he wanted him to meet someone in the
lobby. Minutes later, he was being introduced to the enormously
popular former heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano.
'I was amazed at how muscular but small
he was,' said Marley. 'But it was a thrilling moment. Hours earlier
I had seen my one idol knock out Liston, and now I was meeting
Marciano. For a kid from
New England
, meeting Marciano was like meeting God.'
Years later Marley attended the
University
of
Nevada
at Reno, where he competed on the school's boxing team. Although he
had about 12 bouts with mixed success, it was one bout he didn't
have that stands out the most.
'We were going to fight a team from the
12th Naval District, which was based out of
Vallejo
,
California
,' said Marley. 'I was ruled ineligible to box because I was only a
freshman and they were a very experienced team. Its a good thing,
because my opponent would have been [current top-flight trainer]
Jesse Reid, who was knocking everyone out. He later won a lot of
fights as a pro.'
Reid, who competed professionally as a
super middleweight from 1969-71, actually amassed a record of 5-1-1
(2
KOs
).
After graduation, Marley worked as a
producer for Howard Cosell at ABC television in
New York
and as a longtime boxing reporter for the
New York
Post. In 1990, while employed at the Post, he engaged
in a three-round charity exhibition in
Atlantic City
with Tommy Hearns. All in all, jokes Marley, his boxing career can be
summed up with his own version of an Ali catch phrase: Ali: Float
Like a Butterfly, sting like a moth.
Marley eventually traveled the world as
the head publicity flack for Don King. In many ways he and King are
very similar. Both have unlimited energy, tremendous egos and
chutzpah, and don't know the meaning of the words 'no' or 'cant.'
While in his late forties, Marley
earned a law degree. He also works for Team Palle, the Denmark-based
promotional outfit that handles WBA super middleweight champion
Mikkel Kessler. He and Team Palle recently made what Marley
considers a very generous offer to the camp of IBF champion Jeff
Lacy to engage in a unification bout, either in
Denmark
or in Lacy's home state of
Florida
.
ROBERT MLADINICH/THE SWEET SCIENCE