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Lance Armstrong

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Childhood Of Celebrities : Lance Armstrong

Armstrong began his sporting career as a triathlete competing and winning in adult competitions from age 12. In the 1987-1988 Tri-Fed/Texas (”Tri-Fed” was the former name of USA Triathlon), Armstrong was the number one ranked triathlete in the 19 & under age group; second place was Chann McRae, who later became a US Postal Service Cycling teammate and the 2002 USPRO National Champion. Armstrong’s point total for the 1987 season was better than the five professionals ranked that year. At 16 years old, Armstrong became a professional triathlete and became the national sprint-course triathlon champion in 1989 and 1990 at age 18 and 19, respectively
It soon became clear that his greatest talent was as a bicycle racer after competing as a cycling amateur, winning the U.S. amateur championship in 1991 and, with the help of teammates Bob Mionske and Timm Peddie, finishing 14th in the 1992 Summer Olympics.

In 1993, Armstrong finished the year ranked number one by capturing 10 one-day events and stage races, including becoming the youngest rider to win the world road race championship, his first stage win at the Tour de France, and collecting the Thrift Drug “Triple Crown of Cycling”, which included three separate races: the Thrift Drug Classic in Pittsburgh, the K-Mart West Virginia Classic, and the CoreStates USPRO National Championship in Philadelphia. Thrift Drug said it would award $1 million to any rider winning all 3 races, which had never been done. At the CoreStates USPRO Championship race, on the final lap circuit, he sat up on his bicycle, took out a comb, combed his hair and smiled for the cameras.

Credit : Wikipedia

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Michael Schumacher

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Childhood of Celebrities : Michael Schumacher

Schumacher was born January 3, 1969, in Hürth Hermülheim, to Rolf, a bricklayer, and Elisabeth. When Schumacher was four, his father modified the young boy’s pedal kart by adding a small motorcycle engine. After the young Schumacher crashed it into a lamp post in Kerpen, his parents took him to the local karting track at Kerpen-Horrem where he became the youngest member of the karting club. His father soon built him a proper kart from discarded parts and at the age of six Schumacher won his first club championship. To support his son’s racing, Rolf Schumacher took on a second job renting and repairing karts at the circuit, while his wife worked at the track’s cafeteria. Despite the extra income, when Schumacher needed a new engine costing DM800 (400 €) his parents were unable to afford it, but their son was able to continue racing through support offered by several local businessmen. Read more »

Muhammad Ali

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Childhood Of Celebrities : Muhammad Ali

Ali was born in Louisville, Kentucky. He was named after his father, Cassius Marcellus Clay, Sr., who was named for the 19th century abolitionist and politician Cassius Clay. Ali changed his name after joining the Nation of Islam and subsequently converted to Sunni Islam in 1975.

Standing at 6′ 3″ (1.91 m), Ali had a highly unorthodox style for a heavyweight boxer. Rather than the normal boxing style of carrying the hands high to defend the face, he instead relied on his speed and quickness to avoid a punch. He was first directed toward boxing by Louisville police officer Joe E. Martin, who first encountered the 12-year-old Cassius Clay fuming over his bicycle being stolen. Clay then, without Martin knowing, went to another gym as well as going Martin’s gym, in order to train with Fred Stoner. Ali did so because with Martin he made $4 a week on Tomorrow’s Champions, a TV show that Martin did, but Ali also went to Stoner’s gym because Stoner was a much better coach. Stoner coached Ali throughout the remainder of his amateur career. His last amateur loss was to Kent Green of Chicago, who until Ali lost to Joe Frazier in 1971 as a pro, could say he was the last person to defeat the champion. Under Stoner’s guidance, Clay went on to win 6 Kentucky Golden Gloves titles, 2 national Golden Gloves titles, an Amateur Athletic Union National Title, and the Light Heavyweight gold medal in the 1960 Olympics in Rome . Ali’s record was 100 wins, 5 losses when he ended his amateur career.

A popular urban legend (concurring with Ali’s own account of the event in his 1975 autobiography) states that after being refused service at a ‘whites-only’ restaurant, and fighting with a white gang, Clay threw his Olympic gold medal into the Ohio River. Whether this is true is still debated.

He barely graduated from Louisville Central High, a local basketball power, finishing 369th out of 391 graduating seniors in the class of 1960, and often traveling to fight on weekends. A principal named Atwood argued in his favor, stating to his colleagues that the boy should be given a Certificate of Attendance, given that “…one day he’ll be making more money than everyone in this room.”

After his Olympic triumph, he returned to Louisville to begin his professional career. There, on October 29, 1960, Cassius Clay won his first professional fight, a six-round decision over Tunney Hunsaker, who was the police chief of Fayetteville, West Virginia. From 1960 to 1963, the young fighter amassed a record of 19-0, with 15 knockouts. He defeated such boxers as Tony Esperti, Jim Robinson, Donnie Fleeman, Alonzo Johnson, George Logan, Willi Besmanoff, Lamar Clark (who had won his previous 40 bouts by knockout), Doug Jones and Henry Cooper. He built a reputation by correctly predicting the round in which he would finish several opponents, and by boasting before his triumphs. Clay admitted he adopted the latter practice from Freddie Blassie, Blassie a popular west coast champion in the Los Angeles area drew thousands of fans, Blassie often “the man you loved to hate” could incite the crowd with a few heated remarks, Clay learned the same. Among Clay’s victims were Sonny Banks (who knocked him down during the bout), Alejandro Lavorante, and the aged Archie Moore (a boxing legend who had fought over 200 previous fights, and who had been Clay’s trainer prior to Angelo Dundee). Clay had considered using Moore as a trainer, but Moore had insisted the cocky “Louisville Lip” perform training camp chores such as sweeping and dishwashing. He also gave some thought to having his idol Sugar Ray Robinson as a manager. But Clay had first met Dundee when the latter was in Louisville with light heavyweight champ Willie Pastrano. Teenage Gold Glover Clay went downtown to the fighter’s hotel, called Dundee from the house phone, and asked up to their room. Once there, he asked Dundee (who was working with, or had, champions Sugar Ramos and Carmen Basilio) what his fighters ate, how long they slept, how much roadwork (jogging) they did, and how long they sparred.

Clay then won a disputed 11 round decision over Doug Jones. The fight was named “Fight of the Year” for 1963. Clay’s next fight was against Henry Cooper, who knocked Clay down with a left hook near the end of the fourth round. The fight was stopped in the 5th round due to a deep cut on Cooper’s face.

Despite these close calls he became the top contender for Sonny Liston’s title. In spite of Clay’s impressive record, he was not expected to beat the champ. The fight was to be held on February 25, 1964 in Miami, Florida. The fight was nearly canceled when the promoter Bill Faversham learned of rumors that Clay had been seen around Miami and in other cities with the controversial Malcolm X. The Nation of Islam, at the time considered a “hate group” by most media and Americans in 1964, was perceived as a gate-killer to a bout where, given Liston’s overwhelming status as the favorite to win (7-1 odds), had Clay’s colorful persona as its sole appeal. Faversham confronted Clay about his association with Malcolm X (who, at the time, was actually under suspension by the Nation as a result of controversial comments made in early December in the wake of President Kennedy’s assassination, which he called a case of “the chickens coming home to roost”). Clay, while coming short of admitting he was a member of the NOI, protested the cancellation of the fight. Faversham asked the fighter to delay his announcement about his conversion to Islam until after the fight. The incident is described in the 1975 book “The Greatest: My Own Story” by Ali (with Richard Durham).

During the weigh-in on the previous day, the ever-boastful Ali — who frequently taunted Liston during the buildup by dubbing him “the big ugly bear”, among other things — declared that he would “float like a butterfly and sting like a bee,” and, summarizing his strategy for avoiding Liston’s assaults, said, “Your hands can’t hit what your eyes can’t see.”

Credit : Wikipedia

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Cindy Crawford

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Childhood Of Celebrities : Cindy Crawford

Born in DeKalb, Illinois, to Dan Crawford and Jennifer Crawford in 1966, Cindy Crawford’s trademark is a visible mole on her face (although most people refer to it as a “beauty mark”). She is so closely associated with this physical feature that she appeared in an advertising campaign for chocolates featuring commercials wherein she “licked off” her own mole. Ironically, the mole was removed from many of her earlier modeling pictures, including her first Vogue cover. Her brother died at a young age from leukemia, and Crawford has made childhood leukemia a focal point of her charity work, donating proceeds of her calendars to medical research.

She was discovered by chance by a newspaper photographer, who noticed then-16-year-old Cindy at work during her summer job of pollinating corn and took a picture of her. The photo and the positive feedback she received were enough to convince her to take up modeling. She entered the John Casablancas Look of the Year contest and was the runner up.

Crawford graduated from DeKalb High School as valedictorian with a 4.0 GPA. She won an academic scholarship to study chemical engineering at Northwestern University, which she attended for only one quarter. She dropped out in order to pursue a full-time modeling career. After working for photographer Victor Skrebneski in Chicago, Cindy moved to Manhattan in 1986.

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