Laila ali biography wikipedia english

  • Muhammad ali daughter death
  • Laila ali husband
  • Category:Laila Ali

    American television personality and retired professional boxer
    Upload mediaDate of birth30 December 1977
    Miami Beach
    Laila Amaria AliCountry of citizenshipCountry for sportEducated atOccupationSports discipline competed inNative languageFatherMotherSibling
    • Hana Ali (elder sister)
    • Maryum Ali (paternal half-sister, elder sister)
    • Muhammad Ali Jr. (paternal half-brother, elder brother)
    SpouseRelative
    • Rahman Ali (paternal uncle)
    Award received
    • International Women's Boxing Hall of Fame
    official website
      Laila ali biography wikipedia english
  • Laila ali net worth
  • Muhammad Ali

    1942-2016

    Who Was Muhammad Ali?

    Muhammad Ali was a boxer, philanthropist, and social activist who is universally regarded as one of the greatest athletes of the 20th century. Ali became an Olympic gold medalist in 1960 and the world heavyweight boxing champion in 1964. Following his suspension for refusing military service in the Vietnam War, Ali reclaimed the heavyweight title two more times during the 1970s, winning famed bouts against Joe Frazier and George Foreman along the way. Ali retired from boxing in 1981 and devoted much of his time after to philanthropy. He earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005.

    Quick Facts

    FULL NAME: Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr.
    BORN: January 17, 1942
    DIED: June 3, 2016
    BIRTHPLACE: Louisville, Kentucky
    SPOUSES: Sonji Roi (1964-1965), Belinda Boyd (1967-1977), Veronica Porché (1977-1986), and Yolanda Williams (1986-2016)
    CHILDREN: Maryum, Jamillah, Rasheda, Muhammad Jr., Miya, Khaliah, Hana, Laila Ali, and Asaad
    ASTROLOGICAL SIGN: Capricorn

    Early Life

    Muhammad Ali was born on January 17, 1942, in Louisville, Kentucky. His birth name was Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr.

    At an early age, young Clay showed that he wasn’t afraid of any bout—inside or outside of the ring. Growing up in the segregated South, he experienced racial prejudice and discrimination firsthand.

    At the age of 12, Clay discovered his talent for boxing through an odd twist of fate. After his bike was stolen, Clay told police officer Joe Martin that he wanted to beat up the thief. “Well, you better learn how to fight before you start challenging people,” Martin reportedly told him at the time. In addition to being a police officer, Martin also trained young boxers at a local gym.

    Clay started working with Martin to learn how to spar and soon began his boxing career. In his first amateur bout in 1954, he won the fight by split decision. Clay went on to win the 1956 Golden Gloves tournament for novices in the light heavyweight class. Three y

    Laila Ali

    American boxer (born 1977)

    Not to be confused with Laylah Ali.

    Laila Amaria Ali (born December 30, 1977) is an American television personality and retired professional boxer who competed from 1999 to 2007. During her career, from which she retired undefeated, she held the WBC, WIBA, IWBF and IBA female super middleweight titles, and the IWBF light heavyweight title. Ali is widely regarded by many within the sport as one of the greatest female professional boxers of all time. She is the daughter of boxer Muhammad Ali.

    Early life

    Laila Amaria Ali was born December 30, 1977, in Miami Beach, Florida, the daughter of boxer Muhammad Ali and his third wife, Veronica Porché. Her parents divorced when she was nine years old. She was raised as a Muslim, but later left Islam despite her father's initial disapproval. Ali was a manicurist at age 16. Her turbulent childhood of arrests and abuse led to her to living in a group home for girls. She graduated from California's Santa Monica College with a business degree. She owned her own nail salon before she began boxing. According to Ali, her father opposed her decision to become a boxer due to his Muslim faith; in an interview she said, "My father first of all, did not believe that women should be boxing. My father was Muslim, I'm not. He was a little bit of a male chauvinist in a way."

    Boxing career

    Ali began boxing when she was 18 years old, after having first noticed women's boxing when watching a Christy Martin fight. She first publicized her decision to become a professional boxer in a Good Morning America interview with Diane Sawyer. When she first told her father, Muhammad Ali that she was planning to box professionally, he was unhappy about her entering such a dangerous profession.

  • Laila ali daughter
  • American boxerTemplate:SHORTDESC:American boxer

    Not to be confused with Laylah Ali

    Laila Ali

    Born

    (1977-12-30) December 30, 1977 (age 47)

    Birth place

    Miami Beach, Florida, U.S.

    Alma mater

    Santa Monica College

    Parent

    Muhammad Ali, Veronica Porché

    Relatives

    Nico Ali Walsh (nephew)
    Rahaman Ali (uncle)

    Module

    Template:Infobox boxer

    Laila Amaria Ali (born December 30, 1977) is an American television personality and retired professional boxer who competed from 1999 to 2007. During her career, from which she retired undefeated, she held the WBC, WIBA, IWBF and IBA female super middleweight titles, and the IWBF light heavyweight title. Ali is widely regarded by many within the sport as one of the greatest female professional boxers of all time. She is the daughter of boxer Muhammad Ali.

    Early life[]

    Laila Amaria Ali was born December 30, 1977, in Miami Beach, Florida, the daughter of boxer Muhammad Ali and his third wife, Veronica Porché. Her parents divorced when she was nine years old. She was raised as a Muslim, but later left Islam despite her father's initial disapproval. Ali was a manicurist at age 16. Her turbulent childhood of arrests and abuse led to her to living in a group home for girls. She graduated from California's Santa Monica College with a business degree. She owned her own nail salon before she began boxing. According to Ali, her father opposed her decision to become a boxer due to his Muslim faith; in an interview she said "My father first of all, did not believe that women should be boxing. My father was Muslim, I'm not. He was a little bit of a male chauvinist in a way."

    Boxing career[]

    Ali began boxing when she was 18 years old, after having first noticed women's boxing when watching a Christy Martin fight. She fir