Laila Ali

Boxer

Birthday December 30, 1977

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Miami Beach, Florida, U.S.

Age 46 years old

Nationality United States

Height 5 ft

Weight Super middleweight Light heavyweight

#6813 Most Popular

1977

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.

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."

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.

1996

As WomenBoxing.com explains: "The near-alignment of the two events focused more attention on female professional boxing than there had been since Christy Martin's 1996 pay-per-view fight with Deirdre Gogarty."

Ali knocked out Fowler – described by WomenBoxing.com as an "out-of-shape novice" – in the first round.

Ali also won her second match by a TKO with only 3 seconds left on the clock.

In that match her opponent was 5'4" Shadina Pennybaker, from Pittsburgh, who was making a pro debut after earning a 2–1 record as an amateur. They fought at the Mountaineer Casino, Racetrack and Resort in Chester, West Virginia.

Ali captured nine wins in a row and many boxing fans expressed a desire to see her square off in a boxing ring with George Foreman's daughter, Freeda Foreman, or Joe Frazier's daughter, Jacqui Frazier-Lyde.

1999

In her first match, on October 8, 1999, the 5 ft, 166 lbs, 21-year-old Ali boxed April Fowler of Michigan City, Indiana.

They fought at the Turning Stone Resort & Casino on the Oneida Indian Nation in Verona, New York.

Although this was Ali's first match, many journalists and fans attended, largely because she was Muhammad Ali's daughter.

Attention to Ali's ring debut was further boosted because it occurred on the eve of what was supposed to be the first male-female professional bout ever to be sanctioned by a US state boxing commission – later ruled an exhibition.

2001

On the evening of June 8, 2001, Ali and Frazier finally met.

The fight was nicknamed Ali/Frazier IV in allusion to their fathers' famous fight trilogy.

Ali won by a majority judges' decision in eight rounds (79–73, 77–75, 76–76).

Frazier-Lyde ended the fight with a swollen eye while Ali had a fractured left collarbone and a bloodied nose.

This match by Ali and Frazier was the first main-event pay-per-view match between two women.

2002

After a year's hiatus, on June 7, 2002, Ali beat Shirvelle Williams in a six-round decision.

She won the IBA title with a second-round knockout of Suzette Taylor on August 17, 2002, in Las Vegas.

On November 8, she retained that title and unified the crown by adding the WIBA and IWBF belts with an eight-round TKO win over her division's other world champion, Valerie Mahfood, in Las Vegas.

Ali stopped a bloodied Mahfood in eight rounds.

2003

On June 21, 2003, Mahfood and Ali fought a rematch, this time in Los Angeles.

Once again bloodied by Ali, Mahfood lost by TKO in six rounds while trying to recover her world title.

Nevertheless, Ali suffered a bad cut on her right eyelid for the first time in her career, inflicted by Mahfood.

Ali also suffered a bloodied nose for the second time in her career during this fight, the first being in Ali's fight with Frazier-Lyde two years previously.

On August 23, 2003, Ali fought her original inspiration, Christy Martin, beating Martin by a knockout in four rounds.

2004

On July 17, 2004, Ali retained her world title, knocking out Nikki Eplion in four rounds.

On July 30, 2004, she stopped Monica Nunez in nine rounds, in her father's native city of Louisville, Kentucky.