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Cassius Clay, later to become known as Muhammad Ali, rose to prominence at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome, where he claimed a boxing gold medal in the light heavyweight division.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Former world heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali has pneumonia
  • The illness was discovered quickly, Ali's spokesman said
  • He is expected to be out of the hospital soon
  • Ali became heavyweight world champion for the first time in 1964
(CNN) -- Famed boxer Muhammad Ali was admitted to an undisclosed hospital Saturday with pneumonia, his spokesman Bob Gunnell said.
Ali's treatment prognosis is good, he said.
"Ali, who suffers from Parkinson's disease, is being treated by his team of doctors and is in stable condition," Gunnell said in a statement.
The illness was caught early, and Ali, 72, is not expected to be in the hospital long.
Muhammad Ali at the Allstate Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on January 2, 2013.
Muhammad Ali at the Allstate Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on January 2, 2013.
"At this time, the Muhammad Ali family respectfully requests privacy," the statement said.
Ali was born Cassius Clay and won an Olympic gold medal as a light-heavyweight at age 18.
In 1964, he became world heavyweight champion in an upset victory against then champion Sonny Liston, according to Ali's official website.
Shortly thereafter changed his name to Muhammad Ali to reflect his conversion to Islam.
The boxer was also known for his protest against the Vietnam War and refusal to be drafted into service out of religious conviction.
He retired from boxing in 1981 and announced his diagnosis with Parkinson's Disease three years later.


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