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Boxing Leifer: Ali photographer to capture 'Glory in Giza'
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Boxing Leifer: Ali photographer to capture 'Glory in Giza'
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8 hrs ago
8 hrs ago
4 min read
If a picture is worth a thousand words, Neil Leifer has been one of boxing’s most prominent authors in the sport.
At 83 years old, Leifer continues to photograph some of the biggest fights and events. He’ll add to his laundry list when he attends The Ring's "Glory in Giza" card at the Pyramids in Egypt, which is headlined by Oleksandr Usyk versus Rico Verhoeven on Saturday on DAZN PPV.
While he has to be more picky with the events he covers now, he was more than up for a chance to cover this one.
“The opportunity to see this in front of the Pyramids of Giza, it was irresistible,” Leifer told The Ring. “I'm getting a little too old to do these kinds of things, but this, I wouldn't have missed this for anything.”
Leifer’s love for photography began as a kid in the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York. He grew up in a poor neighborhood with settlement houses, which were designed to keep kids out of trouble. There, they had numerous clubs.
Leifer joined the photography club at the Henry Street Settlement and began to work on his craft by taking pictures and learning how to roll film. That led to him becoming the photo editor for his high school newspaper.
He began submitting photos to different magazines, trying to get published. After a lengthy wait, he connected with Sports Illustrated. He has also photographed for Time, Saturday Evening Post, Look, Life and Newsweek.
“You always hope you're going to find a job that you love,” Leifer said. “It turned out that photography offered me the opportunity. The magazine business at that time was so good. It was the golden era of photojournalism and magazines.”
The first major fight Leifer attended was when Ingemar Johansson upset Floyd Patterson by third-round stoppage to become the world heavyweight champion in 1959 at Yankee Stadium in The Bronx. Leifer paid $5 for a ticket in the upper deck and went with his best friend at the time, John Iacona, who also became a photographer for SI.
“I was so far away, it was about the sixth knockdown when I realized it was Patterson going down, not Johansson. I was sure that Patterson was going to win the fight easily.
“That was my first big fight. I went home and processed the film, and I was thrilled with the pictures. My passion book starts up with a photograph from that fight.”
Leifer
Leifer’s work has gone far beyond the squared circle. He has also photographed 16 Olympic Games, 12 Super Bowls, numerous World Series games and four FIFA World Cups, four American presidents and two wars.
While he doesn’t want to pigeonhole his work to just boxing, he admits the one photo that’s become his legacy is Muhammad Ali standing over Sonny Liston after knocking him out in the first round of their rematch in 1965.
As iconic as that photo was, it wasn't the cover of the magazine that came out after the fight. However, in 1999, the photo got the credit it deserved when it graced the cover of SI's issue that featured the greatest photos of the 20th century.
Beyond the nature of the picture, how it portrays Ali is what resonates with Leifer the most.
“I don't deserve the credit for that picture,” Leifer said. “Muhammad deserves the credit for that picture, because it was his legacy. It’s the way people want to remember him. Young, healthy, great-looking athlete, just a charismatic character — all of that is in that picture. The guy was a magnificent athlete, and that picture shows him at his very best.”
Leifer covered 35 of Ali’s fights. Over time, they became close friends.
“He brought photographers and writers all around the world,” Leifer said. “Ali loved people, and he was the easiest guy you can imagine to work with because of his charisma, and he liked the camera. There are some subjects. There are handsome, good-looking men and there are beautiful women who don't photograph well. I like to call it a visual charisma that certain people have. He loved the camera.”
Leifer’s work covering boxing made him the first photographer to be inducted into a professional sports Hall of Fame. Leifer was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2014, and the class included Felix Trinidad, Oscar De La Hoya and Joe Calzaghe, promoter Barry Hearn and referee Richard Steele.
Leifer covered Dmitry Bivol’s majority decision win over Artur Beterbiev in February 2025 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and the Times Square card in New York two months later that was headlined by Rolly Romero’s upset of Ryan Garcia.
The rematch between Bivol and Beterbiev was where he first saw Usyk from the first row. Now, Leifer will get to see the two-time undisputed heavyweight champion in action when he faces Verhoeven, a former Glory Kickboxing heavyweight champion.
“My legacy will certainly be about sports pictures,” Leifer said. “I love boxing. I still do.”
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