Council of Europe says Fifa must help to protect 2030 tournament
A MIGHTY oak has fallen.
On a certain level it could be argued that George Foreman, who died last week at age 76, spent his entire adult life in boxing and beyond as the man who lost to Muhammad Ali in 1974 in Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo) in the most epic heavyweight contest ever to take place.
Known to the world and to sports history as “The Rumble in the Jungle,” Foreman filled the role of villain relative to Ali’s sheriff in the eyes of a world desperate for something to believe in as the Vietnam war stuttered on in a post-colonial age. Where before Ali had filled the former role over his stance in opposition to Vietnam, by 1974 he’d been reborn as a fighter-philosopher revered the world over.
MAT COWARD writes on Ghost Runner John Tarrant
JOHN WIGHT pays tribute to the day in history when Randolph Turpin dealt the world of boxing an almighty blow
SYLVIA HIKINS recommends a fascinating, revealing, superbly acted evening of theatre


