This video popped up on YouTube.
The first time I saw it, I laughed out loud.
I’ve seen comedians impersonate Muhammad Ali. Billy Crystal’s perhaps is the most famous. But then I watched this brief snippet, featuring the late Jerry Quarry, a former heavyweight fighter — and a very good one at that.
So help me, I didn’t know Quarry had that kind of wit and charm.
Then my thoughts turned to what happened to Jerry Quarry. He became terribly disabled because of the profession he chose to pursue. Quarry won a lot of fights during his fighting days. He also lost some fights. And in all of them he took a lot of punishment. To the head. The result of that punishment resulted in Quarry’s death.
He suffered complications from something called dementia pugilistica. He was punch drunk. He suffered irreparable brain damage.
Another YouTube video, which is attached to the link shown on this blog, shows Quarry being inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame. He didn’t understand the event where he was being honored. He needed help from his brother to dress, to feed himself, to do anything.
I once was a huge fan of boxing. I once couldn’t get enough of the Friday Night Fights. I cheered for Jerry Quarry and occasionally against him, such as when he fought Muhammad Ali twice — in 1970 and again in 1972.
The price that these men pay saddens me. Yes, I know they choose to do this for a living.
Seeing this video and knowing how it all ended for the man it features offers a serious lesson to anyone who wants to take up this line of work.