Alfred Mamba remembers the frenzy that gripped the main soccer stadium in Zaire, now known as , as the fierce heavyweight title bout unfolded through eight rounds between the underdog Muhammad Ali and the seemingly invincible George Foreman.
91ƵIt was a big party,91Ƶ Mamba said as he recalled his father, one of the co-founders of the boxing federation in Congo, taking him to the fight as a 15-year-old.
As Mamba flipped through a pile of photos he said were taken at the fight, he remembered the stadium erupting as Ali and Foreman stepped out for the much-anticipated 91Ƶ 91Ƶ as the contest was famously known.
91ƵWhen Foreman was throwing punches, the audience was screaming,91Ƶ Mamba, now a boxing referee, remembered. 91ƵBut Ali had surprised everyone with his hook technique. And how he was boxing on the ropes. And voila, this is how he won the fight.91Ƶ
The crowd91Ƶs hysteria trailed the series of punches until Ali91Ƶs last blow. It also created a new generation of fighters and fans that became inspired to keep this country on the global boxing stage.
Ahead of the 50th anniversary of the Ali vs. Foreman fight, boxers and fans from across Africa have been in Kinshasa, the Congolese capital, for the just-concluded 21st African Amateur Boxing Championships that saw the Stade des Martyrs stadium and major roads lit up.
Landry Matete Kankonde, who represented Congo in the men91Ƶs heavyweight division, lost to Senegal91Ƶs Karamba Kebe but said he is still dreaming about becoming the next Ali, crediting the 1974 bout with putting Congo on the map.
91ƵThe next superstar will be me,91Ƶ the 24-year-old Kankonde said, a wide grin flashing across his face.
But in this impoverished country of 110 million mostly young people, people like Kankonde are fighting against the odds to get to the highest levels.
While Congo is one of the most decorated African nations in boxing, it still lacks adequate sporting infrastructure such as a gym for its national team, leaving many to train in open spaces, Mamba said.
In its eastern region, where a deadly security crisis has resulted in one of the world91Ƶs biggest , many can only dream of getting out of conflict zones and displacement camps to make it to official contests in the faraway capital.
Even in Kinshasa, amateurs often train by the roadside and on the streets with no gear, ducking and weaving as their hands roll punches.
91ƵCongo is a country where people are motivated by the suffering that we know here,91Ƶ Kankonde said. 91ƵEvery time a Congolese boxer gives his all, seeing all that we endure here, it pushes us.91Ƶ
The 1974 fight was one of boxing91Ƶs most memorable moments.
Mobutu Sese Seko, the Congolese dictator who was seeking to put the central African nation in the spotlight, had partnered with promoters to bring the contest to the country, putting up a $5 million purse for the fight.
Just before dawn on Oct. 30, 1974, with machine gun-carrying soldiers watching the crowd from ringside and a huge portrait of Mobuto towering over the Stade des Martyrs stadium, spectators from across the world watched the bout between the 32-year-old Ali 91Ƶ seeking a comeback after being stripped of the world title for refusing to be drafted for the Vietnam war 91Ƶ and the then-undefeated 25-year-old Foreman.
Many believed Ali didn91Ƶt stand a chance against Foreman, having been out of the ring for years after the sanction.
91ƵPeople were praying before the fight that Ali doesn91Ƶt get killed,91Ƶ Bill Caplan, who was Foreman91Ƶs public relations man in Zaire, has said.
91ƵI think it was one of the top-10 upsets in boxing,91Ƶ Ed Schuyler Jr., the longtime boxing writer for The Associated Press who was in Congo to cover the fight, has said of Ali91Ƶs victory.
The fight ended with Ali putting Foreman on the canvas in the eighth round, but that was only the beginning of a passion for the sport among many Congolese. After that, everyone wanted to learn boxing, said Mamba. He himself was inspired by both the contest and his father, also a referee.
And for fifty years, Congo has continued to rumble, producing boxing greats like Sumbu Kalambay, the Congolese-Italian champion who held the World Boxing Association (WBA) world middleweight title in the 1980s and Junior Ilunga Makabu, who held the WBC cruiserweight title in the early 2020s.
And people are still falling in love with the sport in the country, including Josue Loloje, who was among the spectators at the Kinshasa stadium for the African championship.
91ƵThe Ali vs. Foreman fight is the foundation (for) these talents emerging in Congolese boxing,91Ƶ Loloje said in between the contests. 91ƵIt all started there.91Ƶ