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It's the greatest: Ali's training camp opens to the public

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It's the greatest: Ali's training camp opens to the public
Sport

Sport

It's the greatest: Ali's training camp opens to the public

2019-06-08 23:57 Last Updated At:06-09 00:00

The rustic Pennsylvania training camp where Muhammad Ali prepared for some of his most famous fights has undergone an elaborate restoration, opening to the public Saturday as a shrine to the heavyweight icon's life and career.

The famed Deer Lake camp was in disrepair when California real estate investor Mike Madden bought it shortly after Ali died in June 2016 at age 74. Madden, son of retired broadcaster and NFL Hall of Fame coach John Madden, said his aim was to save an important part of Ali's legacy.

"It will always be a monument to the guy who created it," said Madden, 55. "It's about preserving a piece of sports history, American history and probably world history."

FILE - In this Aug. 23, 1973, file photo, boxer Muhammad Ali chops at a tree with an axe at his training camp in Deer Lake, Pa., in preparation for his return match against Ken Norton.  The rustic Pennsylvania training camp where Ali prepared for some of his most famous fights has undergone an elaborate restoration. The camp in Deer Lake opened to the public Saturday, June 1, 2019 as a shrine to his life and career.(AP PhotoRusty Kennedy, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 23, 1973, file photo, boxer Muhammad Ali chops at a tree with an axe at his training camp in Deer Lake, Pa., in preparation for his return match against Ken Norton. The rustic Pennsylvania training camp where Ali prepared for some of his most famous fights has undergone an elaborate restoration. The camp in Deer Lake opened to the public Saturday, June 1, 2019 as a shrine to his life and career.(AP PhotoRusty Kennedy, File)

Ali bought the wooded, out-of-the-way property about 90 miles (145 kilometers) from Philadelphia in 1972 and installed 18 primarily log buildings, including a gym, dining hall, small mosque, visitors' cabins and a horse barn. It was at Deer Lake where Ali prepared for his epic bouts against George Foreman and Joe Frazier, attracting crowds who watched him work. Ali once proclaimed he was "more at home with my log cabins than I am in my house in Cherry Hill," New Jersey.

He trained at the camp until his last fight in 1981.

"Ali loved it up there," said his longtime business manager, Gene Kilroy, an area native who brought Ali to Deer Lake. "He built it the way he wanted to build it, and he credited that camp with helping him win his biggest fights."

FILE - In this June 1, 2019 file photo, Tim Witherspoon, former world heavyweight boxing champion, talks to the crowd during the grand opening of Fighter's Heaven, Muhammad Ali's Training Camp, in Deer Lake, Pa.  Witherspoon was a sparring partner for Ali. Looking on are Sam Matta, camp manager and media relations, left, Mike Madden, owner of Fighter's Heaven, center, and Gene Kilroy, right. Kilroy was Ali's business manager and close friend. The building in background was Ali's kitchen. (Jacqueline DormerRepublican-Herald via AP)

FILE - In this June 1, 2019 file photo, Tim Witherspoon, former world heavyweight boxing champion, talks to the crowd during the grand opening of Fighter's Heaven, Muhammad Ali's Training Camp, in Deer Lake, Pa. Witherspoon was a sparring partner for Ali. Looking on are Sam Matta, camp manager and media relations, left, Mike Madden, owner of Fighter's Heaven, center, and Gene Kilroy, right. Kilroy was Ali's business manager and close friend. The building in background was Ali's kitchen. (Jacqueline DormerRepublican-Herald via AP)

Ty Benner, whose father brought him to see Ali train every time he was at Deer Lake, returned Saturday for the first time in nearly 40 years, donating a T-shirt he got at the camp as a kid.

"My dad was a big Ali fan," said Benner, 48, of Beaver Springs, which is about two hours away. "I pretty much grew up here." He said Madden had done an "amazing" job restoring it.

Visiting from the Philadelphia area, Karen Hauck was also impressed. "I love this," she said as her kids and their friend, 11-year-old Benny Quiles-Rosa, took turns at the heavy bag. Benny, an aspiring boxer, gave it quite a beating.

"I can't wait till I'm allowed to spar," he said. Seeing where Al trained, he said, "is a really big deal for me."

By the time Madden bought the camp, the exteriors of the log buildings were deteriorating and needed extensive repair.

Inside, the gym sports a new ring and a sleek display of blown-up photos that show Ali living and working at the camp, slugging it out with opponents inside the ring and clowning around with other famous faces like The Beatles. A video retrospective of Ali's career, narrated by Howard Cosell, plays on a flat screen, and some of Ali's famous quotes — "Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee," — adorn the walls.

In an adjoining room, you can see where Ali kept track of his weight while training for a 1978 championship rematch with Leon Spinks. The actual notations are still there on the wall, in pencil.

Madden, a lifelong fight fan like his father, was listening to sports talk radio after Ali's death and said he became supremely irritated by the misinformation he was hearing about his boyhood idol, whom he had met as a teen. It was the same when Madden turned to the internet — some of the stories about Ali's life got the details wrong, he said. He stifled an impulse to comment.

Then Madden read a piece that mentioned Deer Lake, Googled it, and found out the camp was for sale.

"I literally had an 'Animal House' moment. I had an angel and a devil on my shoulders. Are you going to be the bitter guy who blogs anonymously when it comes to Ali? Every room you're in, 'They don't have the story right.' Are you going to be that guy?" Madden recalled thinking.

"Here's an opportunity to have a hand in maybe not writing history, but preserving some," he added. "I looked at it as a calling. This found me."

Madden paid $520,000 for the property and spent at least $650,000 on renovations.

Other buildings open to the public include the mosque, the dining hall and Ali's sleeping quarters, complete with coal stove, hand-operated water pump and a video of Ali giving TV host Dick Cavett a tour of the same cabin 40 years ago.

The hilltop camp, dubbed "Fighter's Heaven," is open to the public on weekends. Admission is free, though visitors may donate to charities designated by the camp. It's also available for corporate retreats.

BERLIN (AP) — The German government has sharply rejected accusations by U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claiming that it has been sidelining patient autonomy, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The statements made by the US Secretary of Health are completely unfounded, factually incorrect, and must be rejected,” German Health Minister Nina Warken said in a statement late Saturday.

Kennedy said in a video post earlier on Saturday that he had sent the German minister a letter based on reports coming out of Germany that the government was “limiting people’s abilities to act on their own convictions when they face medical decisions.”

The American health secretary said that “I've learned that more than a thousand German physicians and thousands of their patients now face prosecution and punishment for issuing exemptions from wearing masks or getting COVID-19 vaccines during the pandemic."

Warken rejected Kennedy’s claims, saying that “during the coronavirus pandemic, there was never any obligation on the medical profession to administer COVID-19 vaccinations. Anyone who did not want to offer vaccinations for medical, ethical, or personal reasons was not liable to prosecution, nor did they have to fear sanctions.”

Kennedy did not give provide specific examples or say which reports he was referring to but added that “in my letter, I explained that Germany is targeting physicians who put their patients first and punishing citizens for making their own medical choices.”

He concluded that "the German government is now violating the sacred patient physician relationship, replacing it is a dangerous system that makes physicians enforcers of state policies.”

Kennedy said that in his letter he made clear that “Germany has the opportunity and the responsibility to correct this trajectory, to restore medical autonomy, to end politically motivated prosecutions.”

Warken pointed out that there were no professional bans or fines for not getting vaccinated.

“Criminal prosecution was only pursued in cases of fraud and document forgery, such as the issuance of false vaccination certificates or fake mask certificates," the minister said.

She also clarified that in general in Germany “patients are also free to decide which therapy they wish to undergo.”

Former German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, who was in charge during the pandemic, also replied, addressing Kennedy directly on X saying that he “should take care of health problems in his own country. Short life expectancy, extreme costs, tens of thousands of drug deaths and murder victims."

“In Germany, doctors are not punished by the government for issuing false medical certificates. In our country, the courts are independent,” Lauterbach wrote.

While a majority of Germans were eager to get vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus during the pandemic, there were also protests by a small minority of vaccine skeptics in Germany which were sometimes supported by far-right movements.

FILE - Robert Kennedy Jr., center, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to lead the Health and Human Services Department, walks between meetings with senators on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

FILE - Robert Kennedy Jr., center, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to lead the Health and Human Services Department, walks between meetings with senators on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

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