The three-time world heavyweight champion, who had battled Parkinson’s disease for 32 years, was admitted to hospital with a respiratory condition earlier in the week.
His family’s spokesman Bob Gunnell confirmed Ali’s death in Phoenix, Arizona, on Friday evening local time.
The funeral will take place in Ali's home town of Louisville, Kentucky.
His family "would like to thank everyone for their thoughts, prayers and support" and asked their privacy be respected.
Arguably the most celebrated pugilist in history,h e won the BBC's Sports Personality of the Century, defeating British icons to the title.
Ali was the first man to win the undisputed world heavyweight boxing title three times in a row.
Then known as Cassius Clay, his first win saw him defeat Sonny Liston on 25th February 1964, during which he shouted a phrase at the weigh in that became etched in pop culture.
He said: “I can beat you anytime you chump… I am the greatest. I am king… I float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.”
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Tributes poured in from admirers, rivals and fellow boxers. Mike Tyson tweeted: "God came for his champion."
Floyd Mayweather Junior told Fox News: "The black community all around the world, black people all around the world, needed him. He was the voice for us. He's the voice for me to be where I'm at today."
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George Foreman, whom Ali famously defeated in the Rumble In The Jungle, said "a part of me slipped away... the greatest piece".
A fortnight later, Ali joined the Nation of Islam and changed his name. Muhammad was interpreted as “one who is worthy of praise”, while Ali represented “the fourth rightly guided caliph".
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He converted to Sunni Islam in 1975.
In 1966, Ali refused induction into the military to fight in Vietnam, saying he was a conscientious objector protected by his religious beliefs.
While critics called him a draft dodger, Ali stood his ground, risking prison time and winnings.
“Why should they ask me to put on a uniform and go 10,000 miles from home and drop bombs and bullets on brown people in Vietnam while so-called Negro people in Louisville are treated like dogs and denied simple human rights?” he said. “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong,” he famously declared.
Ali retired from boxing in 1981 and focused on social justice causes, traveling the world on humanitarian missions.
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He waged a long-running fight with Parkinson's disease after being diagnosed in 1984, and his public appearances had diminished in recent years.
Here, at a glance, are just some of the landmark dates in a life that continues to defy any expectation or generalisation:
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17 January 1942: Cassius Marcellus Clay is born in Louisville, Kentucky.
1954: Takes up fighting aged 12 after a white Louisville police officer takes him under his wing after his bicycle is stolen.
1954 - 60: His amateur career brings him a reported 100 wins and five losses.
1960: Wins gold medal at the Rome Olympics, in the Light Heavyweight category.
Ali claims in his later autobiography that he throws his medal in the Olympics, after being refused service in a ‘whites-only’ restaurant.
He returns to Kentucky for his first professional fight.
1960 - 1963: Enters a pugilistic purple patch, with a fighting record of 19 wins, no defeats, including 15 knockouts.
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1963: Makes first visit to England, to fight Henry Cooper. The popular Brit knocks him down, but loses to Clay when the fight is stopped.
1964: Clay wins his first World Heavyweight Championship, beating the strong favourite Sonny Liston. Clay has taunted his opponent in the lead-up to the fight, describing what will become his signature battle-cry: "I will float like a butterfly and sting like a bee."
1964: Clay has agreed to keep the news of his religious conversion quiet until after the fight. Immediately it is over, he confirms that he has joined the Nation of Islam and takes the name Muhammad Ali. A year later, he will convert to Sunni Islam, before later settling on Sufism.
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1964: Marries first wife, cocktail waitress Sonji Roi. The marriage lasts two years.
1965 - 1967: Ali defends his title nine times and becomes universally recognized as world heavyweight champion after outpointing World Boxing Association (WBA) champion Ernie Terrell in fifteen rounds on 6 February 1967. Ali often proclaims his invincibility in verse and boasts: "I am the greatest!"
1965 - 1967: Ali defends his title nine times in all, finally taking on WBA champion Ernie Terrell. This is an ugly fight, following pre-match taunting between the pair. Terrell insists on referring to his opponent as "Clay" and Ali responds by calling Terrell "Uncle Tom". Ali finally defeats Terrell in 15 rounds, becoming the undisputed world heavyweight champion.
Meanwhile, his proactive religious beliefs make him an increasingly polarising figure. He appears at Muslim rallies and his remarks reveal him to be against inter-racial relations in one breath - "No intelligent black man or black woman in his or her right black mind wants white boys and white girls coming to their homes to marry their black sons and daughters" - but also passionately against discrimination of all kinds: "Hating people because of their color is wrong. And it doesn't matter which color does the hating. It's just plain wrong."
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1967: Ali is publicly arrested and castigated for his refusal to be drafted to serve for his country in the Vietnam War, based on his religious beliefs and lack of support for the campaign. In one of the era's most renowned remarks, he states: "I ain't got no quarrel with them Viet Cong... No Viet Cong ever called me n***er."
His remarks serve as torchpaper for anti-war protestors, but authorities take a dimmer view. Ali is stripped of his boxing licence, his world title and prevented from fighting for another four years while his appeal against conviction for felony makes its way to the US Supreme Court.
1967: Ali marries Belinda Boyd. The couple have four children and are married for ten years.
1971: The Supreme Court reverses his conviction. Soon after, he meets Joe Frazier in Madison Square Garden for 'The Fight of the Century'. Both are undefeated fighters with a claim to the world title. After a contest that lives up to the all the hype, Frazier knocks Ali to the floor in the 15th and final round.
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October 1974: Ali participates in a globally-hyped fight with George Foreman in Zaire, billed "The Rumble in the Jungle". Millions of viewers around the world tune in to watch Ali take on the younger, fitter Foreman who is used to beating his rivals quickly, often with a knockout. But Ali tires out his opponent, using his speed to dance around him and wearing him down with "rope-a-dope" tactics, until he finally knocks him out in the eighth round, becoming the world champion in one of history's great sporting upsets.
October 1975: Ali takes on Frazier for the third time, this occasion being billed "The Thriller in Manila" by ambitious promoter Don King. Ali builds up the ante again with pre-fight bravado, including this bon mot: "It will be a killa... and a chilla... and a thrilla... when I get the gorilla in Manila."
Sure enough, his prophecy comes true, but not until the 15th and final round, when Frazier's trainer stops the fight.
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1975: Ali releases his autobiography, humbly titled: "The Greatest: My Own Story"
1977: He marries actress and model Veronica Porsche, and they have two daughters, including Laila, who will go on herself to become a boxer.
1978: Ali defeats Leon Spinks, becoming the first boxer to win the heavyweight championship three times.
1979: He announces his retirement, with only three defeats among 59 victories. He loses two further WBC fights in the next two years, before retiring permanently from the ring.
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1984: It emerges that Ali is suffering from a type of Parkinson's Syndrome, a condition of the nervous system affecting mobility and speech.
1986: Ali marries Yolanda. The couple celebrated their silver wedding anniversary last November, and have one adopted son, Amin.
1991: During the first Gulf War, he travels to Iraq and meets with Saddam Hussein to try to negotiate the freedom of hostages.
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1996: When We Were Kings, all about the Rumble in the Jungle, wins an Oscar for Best Documentary.
1996: Ali lights the flame at the opening ceremony of the Atlanta Olympics. The IOC present him with another gold medal, to replace the one he threw away all those years before.
1999: He is named Sportsman of the Century by Sports Illustrated, and Sports Personality of the Century by the BBC, who invite him to London to accept his prize. It transpires Ali has received more votes than the four other leading contenders combined.
Ali's physical frailty is evident, but he is surrounded and protected by other professional boxers for whom he clearly remains an inspiration.
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2001: Actor Will Smith earns an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of the legend in the film Ali, directed by Michael Mann.
2002: Ali named a UN Messenger Of Peace, and visits Afghanistan.
2005: Opens the Muhammad Ali Center in his hometown of Louisville, a foundation for social activism, which aims to promote respect, responsibility and personal growth.
2005: Receives the Presidential Citizens Medal from President George Bush.
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Published caption: November 16, 1962--FRIENDLY MEETING--Veteran Archie Moore, left, and youthful Cassius Clay appear friendly as they were weighed in Thursday morning by Clayton Frye, right, of Athletic Commission. Clay later knocked out Moore in the fourth round at the Sports Arena. [Clay later known as Muhammad Ali.] (Photo by Judd Gunderson / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
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American boxer Cassius Clay (later known as Muhammad Ali) points at the camera from an open car door as he takes part in a pre-football game parade, Miami, Florida, December 14, 1963. He was Miami to train for his title fight against Sonny Liston. (Photo by Underwood Archives/Getty Images)
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Muhammad Ali (R) fights Ken Norton at Yankee Stadium in the third fight between the two heavyweights in New York City, New York, U.S., September 28,1976.Mandatory Credit: Action Images / MSI/File Photo EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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Muhammad Ali (L) punches Richard Dunn while fighting for the WBC & WBA Heavyweight Title in Munich, Germany May 24, 1976.Mandatory Credit: Action Images / Sporting Pictures/File Photo EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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Muhammad Ali and his entourage try to wind up Ken Norton ahead of their third fight in New York, New York, U.S. September 23, 1976.Mandatory Credit: Action Images / MSI/File Photo EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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Muhammad Ali is seen cuddling his daughters Laila, (L ) and Hana (R) at a Hotel in London, Britain December 19, 1978.Mandatory Credit: Action Images / MSI/File Photo EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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Pope John Paul II and former U.S. heavyweight boxing champion MuhammadAli (R) sign autographs for each other at the end of their meeting atthe Vatican, June 5, 1982. REUTERS/Vatican PP03090123 POPE LEADERSjm
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Muhammad Ali. Cassius Clay Vs Norton. 1973. (Photo by: Marka/UIG via Getty Images)
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Cassius Clay, heavyweight boxing contender, listens to Elijah Muhammad, the leader of the group Nation of Islam, speaking at a rally prior to Elijah Muhammad giving him the name Muhammand Ali, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 5, 1963. (Photo by Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images)
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CIRCA 1960: Willie Pep and Muhammad Ali pose as they read Willie Peps book ' Friday's Heroes'.(Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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FORT LEE - AUGUST 12: Dick Kirschner, CBS Television Network journalist interviewing Muhammad Ali, member of the 1960 Summer Olympic U.S. Mens Boxing Team. Pictured: (L to R) Dick Kirschner, Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. (alt. Muhammad Ali). Image dated August 12, 1960. (Photo by CBS via Getty Images)
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British Heavyweight champion Henry Cooper (1934 - 2011, left) with American boxer Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) after their non-title fight at Wembley Stadium, London, 18th June 1963. Clay won the match by a technical knockout after Cooper sustained a cut under his left eye. (Photo by Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - APRIL 22: During a visit to the training room of the boxer in Miami, the BEATLES were acting as they were knocked out by the American boxer Muhammad ALI, became recently boxe World Champion. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)
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MIAMI BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 25: Muhammad Ali (aka Cassius Clay) in his corner between rounds at the Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida, February 25, 1964. Cassius Clay won the World Heavyweight Title by RTD in round 6 of 15. (Photo by Stanley Weston/Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MAY 29: The American Boxer Sonny Liston Jabbing His Adversary Cassius Clay During The World Championship In Miami Beach, Florida On February 28, 1964. After This Match, He Becomes Muhammad Ali. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)
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American boxer Cassius Clay (now Muhammad Ali) rests during training for the world heavyweight title fight against fellow American Sonny Liston at Miami Beach, Florida. Ali went on to win the match, making him world heavyweight champion for the first time. Original Publication: People Disc - HW0526 (Photo by Harry Benson/Getty Images)
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Published caption: April 24, 1962--LOGAN ON ATTACK--George Logan bulls Cassius Clay into ropes and lands right during first round action at Sports Arena. This was Logan's only offensive moment as Clay battered his opponent for an easy fourth round knockout Monday night before 7,500 fans. [Clay later known as Muhammad Ali.] (Photo by Art Rogers / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
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MIAMI, FL - FEBRUARY 25,1964: Sonny Liston (L) throws a left hook to Muhammad Ali during the bout the Convention Hall in Miami Beach ,Florida. Muhammad Ali won the World Heavyweight Title. It was the 1964 Fight of the Year - Ring Magazine. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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American WBA Heavyweight boxing championMuhammad Ali on the the throne of his namesake, Mohammed Ali Pasha (1769 - 1849), at Al-Gawhara Palace, Cairo, Egypt, 9th June 1964. Mohammed Ali Pasha is regarded as the founder of modern Egypt. (Photo by Daily Express/Archive Photos/Getty Images)
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(GERMANY OUT) Der Boxer Cassius Clay (später Muhammad Ali) während des Trainings an einem Punching Ball. (Photo by Alert/ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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American WBA Heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, with a statue of the Pharaoh Khufu (Cheops) outside the Cheops Casino, El Giza, Egypt, June 1964. (Photo by Daily Express/Archive Photos/Getty Images)
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American WBA Heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali (in dark jacket, centre) praying at the Al-Hussein Mosque in Cairo, Egypt, June 1964. (Photo by Daily Express/Archive Photos/Getty Images)
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Muhammad Ali (born Cassius Clay, Jr.; January 17, 1942) American former professional boxer, considered among the greatest heavyweights in the sport's history. May 25, 1965, heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali after his rematch with boxer Sonny Liston. Ali knocked out Liston in the first round. (Photo by: Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty images)
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CIRCA - 1960's: Muhammad Ali (R) throws a punch to the head of an opponent (L) during a fight circa mid 1960's. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
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LEWISTON, ME - MAY 25: Muhammad Ali talks with the media after defeating Sonny Liston to retain the WBC Heavyweight tittle on May 25, 1965 at the Central Maine Youth Center in Lewiston, Maine. Ali won the fight by KO. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
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LEWISTON, ME - MAY 25: Muhammad Ali raises his arms in celebrations after putting down Sonny Liston in the canvas as referee Jersey Joe Walcott gives count in the first round of the World Heavyweight Title bout at St. Dominic's Hall on May 25, 1965 in Lewiston, Maine. This was Cassius Clay first fight after changing his name into Muhammad Ali. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
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15th May 1966: World heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali at 34 Tavistock Crescent in Notting Hill, London. On his right is Rhaune Laslett, who was instrumental in organising the Notting Hill Carnival, and whose house this is. On the left, with a camera, is Ali's photographer Howard Bingham. (Photo by R. McPhedran/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MARCH 29: Muhammad ALI training in White City with a partner for his next match against the British boxer Henry COOPER. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)
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World heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, has his hands bandaged by his manager Angelo Dundee (1921 - 2012, right) before the day's training session at the Territorial Army Gymnasium at White City, London, 16th May 1966. On the left is Jack 'George' Achilles, head chef of Isowâs, a restaurant in Brewer Street, Soho, favoured by celebrities including Ali, and his entourage. Ali is in training for his fight against the British champion Henry Cooper at Arsenal's Highbury Stadium, London on May 21st. (Photo by R. McPhedran/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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UNITED KINGDOM - AUGUST 06: The American boxer Muhammad ALI kept his heavyweight world champion title by beating the British boxer Brian LONDON in London, on the third round. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)
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Boxer Muhammad Ali poses with a car, Michigan, 1965. (Photo by Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images)
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American singer James Brown (1933 - 2006) and boxing champ Muhammad Ali (then known as Cassius Clay), smile and greet parade goers while participating in the annual Bud Billiken parade, Chicago, Illinois, August 1966. (Photo by Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images)
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Television sports journalist Howard Cosell (1918 - 1995), center, keeps boxers Ernie Terrell, left, and Muhammad Ali (the former Cassius Clay), on right, away from each other as they stand in mock fighting poses during a pre-bout promotional event, probably in Houston, TX, 1967. (Photo by Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images)
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World heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) signs an autograph for two year-old Shelley Obermuller from Acton, during a training session at the Territorial Army Gymnasium at White City, London, 17th May 1966. Clay is in London for his upcoming title defence against British champion Henry Cooper. (Photo by Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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Boxer Muhammad Ali speaks into the microphone while boxing champ Ernie Terrell sits to his left during a press conference held at the Americana Hotel in New York, to promote their upcoming February bout in Houston's Astrodome, January 1967. (Photo by Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MARCH 23: Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) reads the Daily News story about his victory over Zora Folley at the Midtown Motor Inn. (Photo by Jack Smith/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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Boxer Muhammad Ali walks along the sidewalk outside the Americana hotel, where he attended a press conference to promote his upcoming bout against boxer Ernie Terrell, New York, 1967. (Photo by Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images)
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UNSPECIFIED - CIRCA 1970: Photo of Muhammad Ali Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
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UNDATED: Muhammad Ali stares down his opponent in his corner prior to a match. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
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American boxer Muhammad Ali (then known as Cassius Clay) in bed in his hotel room, 15th February 1967. (Photo by Harry Benson/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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DEER LAKE, PENNSYLVANIA - CIRCA 1970: Muhammad Ali poses with fans at his training camp in Deer Lake, Pennsylvania. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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(GERMANY OUT) *17.01.1942-Sportler, Boxen USA(vormals Cassius Clay) schneidet eine Grimasse. Undatiertes Foto. (Photo by Schumann/ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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NEW YORK - MARCH 8: Joe Frazier ducks a Muhammad Ali punch during the World Heavyweight Championship at Madison Square Garden on March 8, 1971 in New York City. (Photo by Robert Riger/Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MARCH 08: Heavyweight champ Joe Frazier on the scale as Commissioner Edwin Dooley (l.) and Garden's John Condon look on after weighing-in ceremony at Felt Forum. Frazier weighed 205 1/2 for his title 15-rounder with Muhammad Ali. (Photo by Paul DeMaria/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MARCH 08: Joe Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali at Madison Square Garden. (Photo by Dan Farrell/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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NEW YORK - DECEMBER 07: Heavyweight boxer Muhammad Ali trains for his fight against Oscar Bonavena on December 7, 1970 in New York, U.S.A. (Photo by Anwar Hussein/Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MARCH 08: Bewildered, dazed, hurt and beaten, Muhammad Ali struggles to get back on his feet in punishing 15th round knockdown by Joe Frazier. (Photo by Frank Hurley/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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UNITED STATES - MARCH 10: Daily News front page March 10, 1971, Headlines: ROCKY WEIGHS WELFARE CURB, Includes Return Ticket Home, 'Well, Shut My Mouth' Feeling cheekbone where Joe Frazier connected to knock him down in 15th round of their heavyweight title fight. , Muhammad Ali looks back in some pain on the morning after his first pro loss. Cheekbone was not fractured: When he did speak up, Ali asked for rematch. (Photo by NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 20, 1972: A general view taken during the Muhammad Ali and Floyd Patterson fight at Madison Square Garden on September 20, 1972 in New York, New York. Muhammad Ali won the NABF heavyweight title. Fight stopped on cuts and swelling around Patterson's eyes. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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LAS VEGAS - JUNE 27,1972: Muhammad Ali (L) throws a punch to Jerry Quarry during the fight at Convention Center on June 27,1972 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Muhammad Ali won the NABF heavyweight title by a TKO 7. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 21, 1972: Muhammad Ali (R) throws a punch to the head of Floyd Patterson (L) during their heavyweight fight on September 21, 1972 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
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Boxing great Muhammad Ali shows his fists as he stands in the ring following his daughter Laila's fight in Washington in this June 11, 2005 file photo. REUTERS/Gary Hershorn/File Photo
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Boxing legend Muhammad Ali, left. and actor Denzel Washington pose for photographers at the Boys & Girls Clubs of America annual President's dinner Wednesday, June 9, 2004 in New York. (AP Photo/Tina Fineberg)
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WBC and WIBA super middleweight champion Laila Ali is kissed by her father, boxing great Muhammad Ali, at the MCI Center in Washington in this June 11, 2005 file photo. REUTERS/Jason Reed/File Photo
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PENNSYLVANIA - CIRCA 1974: Muhammad Ali photographed at his training camp in Pennsylvania, circa 1974. (Photo by PL Gould/IMAGES/Getty Images)
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THE DICK CAVETT SHOW - Airdate: January 16, 1974. (Photo by ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images)MUHAMMAD ALI;MICHAEL PARKINSON;DICK CAVETT;JOE FRAZIER
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NEW YORK - JANUARY 17, 1974: Muhammad Ali speaks to the media as he taunts Joe Frazier during a press conference on January 17,1974 for bout II at Pen Restaurant in New York, New York. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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LOS ANGELES - SEPTEMBER 1973: Muhammad Ali trains with the speed bag for his upcoming fight against Ken Norton in Inglewood,California. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 28, 1974: Muhammad Ali (L) backs away from Joe Frazier (R) during a NABF heavyweight title fight January 28, 1974 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
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CELEVLAND - NOVEMBER 1973: Muhammad Ali pose in November 1973 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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NEW YORK - JANUARY 17, 1974: Muhammad Ali taunts Joe Frazier as they promote their second fight on January 17,1974 for bout II at Pen Restaurant in New York, New York. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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KINSHASA, CONGO - OCTOBER 30: A general view of 'The Match of the Century ' between the former world heavyweight boxing champion the American Muhammad Ali (R) and his compatriot and titleholder George Foreman (L). Ali won and got back his title October 30, 1974 in Kinshasa, Congo. (Photo by: AFP/Getty Images)
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TO GO WITH AFP STORIESIn this photo taken on October 19, 1974 shows US boxing heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali (L) (born Cassius Clay) 11 days before the heavy weight world championship in Kinshasa. On October 30, 1974 Muhammad Ali knocked out George Foreman in a clash of titans known as the 'Rumble in the Jungle', watched by 60 000 people in the stadium in Kinshasa and millions elsewhere. AFP PHOTO (Photo credit should read -/AFP/Getty Images)
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DEER LAKE,PA - AUGUST 1974: Muhammad Ali trains for an upcoming fight at his training camp in Deer Lake, Pennsylvania. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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INGLEWOOD,CA - SEPTEMBER 10,1973: Muhammad Ali (L) lands a punch against Ken Norton during the fight at Forum in Inglewood, California. Muhammad Ali won the NABF heavyweight title by a SD 12. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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RICHFIELD, OH - MARCH 24: World heavyweight champion boxer Muhammad Ali looks for an opening in the defense by challenger Chuck Wepner during a heavyweight title fight on March 24, 1975 at the Richfield Coliseum in Richfield, Ohio. Ali retained the title in a 15-round decision. (Photo by Tony Tomsic/Getty Images)
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DEER LAKE, PA - AUGUST 1974: Muhammad Ali relaxes on a rock at Deer Lake training camp in August 1974 at Deer Lake, Pennsylvania. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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Don King, head of Don King Productions and Video Techniques, is flanked by Rev. Jesse Jackson and Muhammad Ali during news conference at United Nations. Ali Takes a Swipe At Farmers' At Actions. Muhammad Ali expressed outrage at American farmers who destroy food to keep prices up while people are starving. 'If I was President I'd call a press conference and say no more food shall be destroyed,' the heavyweight champion said during a visit to the United Nations. 'I'd order planes and boats to take it to all these places.' He was referring to places throughout the world where starvation prevails while United States ranchers destroy crops to protest prices. As for his own political ambitions, the 33-year-old Ali said: 'I want to help people, but I don't want to be a politician or a president. It ain't my philosophy. Ali said he missed breakfast and lunch in order to travel from his training camp in Deer Lake, Pa. to discuss the problems of world hunger with U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim and officials of UNICEF, the U.N. Children's Fund. But he said he would have to go without eating for two days just to begin to realize what hunger is. Ali said Americans are 'intoxicated with grub' and think of eating in terms of 'steaks, cabbage and corn.' In many parts of Africa, he said, 'If they get a flapjack a day they're happy.' Ali spoke at a news conference where promoters announced that part of each ticket price for the closed circuit telecast of Ali's championship bout in Cleveland with Chuck Wepner March 24 would go to drought-stricken African countries. Promoter Don King said 50 cents from each ticket to the closed circuit telecast of the fight would be shared by UNICEF and Africare, a Washington-based private organization. He said the total could reach $500,000. Ali called the effort 'just a grain of sand in the desert in comparison to what has to be done.' (Photo By: Dan Farrell/NY Daily News via Getty Images)
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2nd December 1974: World Heavyweight Champion boxer Muhammad Ali addressing a Nation of Islam meeting at the New Victoria Theatre in London. (Photo by Tim Graham/Evening Standard/Getty Images)
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SEPTEMBER 1974: Ring Magazine Cover - Muhammad Ali and George Foreman on the cover. (Photo by: The Ring Magazine/Getty Images)
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File photo dated 15/01/01 of Lennox Lewis (right) with boxing legend Muhammad Ali, who has died at 74.
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FILE - In this May 25, 1965, file photo, heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali is held back by referee Joe Walcott, left, after Ali knocked out challenger Sonny Liston in the first round of their title fight in Lewiston, Maine. The bout produced one of the strangest finishes in boxing history as well as one of sports most iconic moments. (AP Photo/File)
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File photo dated 12/12/99 former world super middleweight boxing champion, Chris Eubank (left) with BBC Sports Personality of the Century, Muhammad Ali, at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards, at BBC Television studios in London, Ali has died at 74.
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File photo dated 17-02-1999 of Boxing legend Muhammad Ali shakes the hand of a little girl after he laid a wreath at a monument in London as part of a campaign by the Jubilee 2000 Coalition to cancel the Third World debt for the Millennium.
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File photo dated 11/05/66 of police officers walking alongside Muhammad Ali, as he leaves his London hotel for early morning training in preparation for his title fight with Henry Cooper, as Ali has died at the age of 74.
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File photo dated 12/12/99 former Manchester United footballer David Beckham (left), as he play fights with Sports Personality of the Century, Muhammad Ali, at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards, at BBC Television studios in London, Ali has died at 74.
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Retired boxing champion Muhammad Ali, center, receives the Liberty Medal with his wife Lonnie Ali at his left during a ceremony at the National Constitution Center, Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012, in Philadelphia. The honor is given annually to an individual who displays courage and conviction while striving to secure liberty for people worldwide. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
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Muhammad Ali participates in the Opening Ceremony at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Saturday, July 28, 2012 in London. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
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Muhammad Ali, center, and NFL great Tom Jackson, right, shakes hands with officials prior to the coin toss before the Sugar Bowl NCAA college football game Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/POOL, Bill Haber)
Timothy D. Easley/AP
Back Row, from left, John Wooten, Jim Brown, Bill Russell, and Bobby Mitchell stand behind Muhammad Ali before the start of the Ali Humanitarian Awards ceremony Saturday, Sept. 27, 2014 at the Louisville Mariott Downtown in Louisville, Ky. The four were participants of the 'Ali Summit' in 1967, and Brown will be receiving the Ali Humanitarian Lifetime Achievement Award. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)
Sachs Ron/ABACA USA
Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali speaks to the press during a training session for his fight against Jimmy Young in Arlington, VA, USA, on April 20, 1976. Photo by Arnie Sachs/CNP/ABACAPRESS.COM