Book extract: ‘I am just an athlete, sitting here talking to a great man like you’

Muhammed Ali with Jack Lynch. Behind Ali is the promoter of the Croke Park fight, Butty Sugrue. Picture: Courtesy IrishPhotoArchive/Lensman
- The Big Fight : When Ali Conquered Ireland
- Dave Hannigan
- Merrion Press, €15
At one point in his conversation with Muhammad Ali, the Taoiseach, Mr Jack Lynch, turned to his visitor and told him: “I hope to go to your fight on Wednesday next.”

Using the public recognition gained on the field, and his training as a lawyer off it, Lynch entered politics in 1948 and succeeded Seán Lemass as a leader of Fianna Fáil and Taoiseach eighteen years later.
“I have been to Britain, Germany, and Switzerland but they did not honour me like this,” said Ali. “This is the first time I have been invited to meet a top official like yourself.
“When I was a poor little black boy in Louisville, Kentucky, I looked upon the mayor as being a great man — now here I am today sitting beside the prime minister of this country.”
Proving skilful as ever at saying the right thing to the right audience, Ali told Lynch he wanted to compliment the Irish people “on their proud history of struggle for civil rights and justice”.

According to Ali’s friend Paddy Monaghan’s memory of the event, there was a full agreement in the room on that point, but Harold Conrad’s recall of the political discourse is a tad more cynical.
BOOKS & MORE
Check out our Books Hub where you will find the latest news, reviews, features, opinions and analysis on all things books from the Irish Examiner's team of specialist writers, columnists and contributors.