On 6/26/76, Muhammad Ali fought Antonio Inoki in a wrestler vs boxer
match in Tokyo, Japan. Antonio Inoki, the top wrestling star in
Japan, was trying to prove that professional wrestling was the
greatest form of martial arts. Prior to this match, he had beaten
Olympic Judo Gold Medalist Willem Ruska. Muhammad Ali was the World
Boxing champion. A year earlier he beat Joe Frazier in “The Thrilla
in Manila.” Antonio Inoki was a pioneer of mixed martial arts and has
faced many opponents from all dominant disciplines of combat from
various parts of the world, such as Akram Pahalwan in Pakistan,
Willie Williams of Kyokushin Karate, Olympic judo gold medalist
Willem Ruska and WBA and WBC World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali. Though many of Inoki's matches were dismissed by the skeptics as worked, there has been little or no proof at all to suggest the
validity of the worked theory and Inoki's mixed martial arts
opponents have never stated that the matches were "fake". Most of the
skepticism arose from the fact that Inoki was a professional
wrestler, which automatically led to an assumption that the matches
might have been worked. This has yet to dent the image of Inoki in
the eyes of the Japanese fans, where he is still viewed as a very
legitimate wrestler.[2]The worked theory also arises from Inoki's
match with Muhammad Ali. Inoki initially promised Ali a worked match
to get him to fight in Japan, but when the deal materialized Ali's
camp feared that Inoki would turn the fight into a shoot, which many
believe was Inoki's intention. Ali visited a professional wrestling
match involving Inoki and witnessed Inoki's grappling ability. This
led Ali's camp to restrict the fight to striking rules only, with
grappling disallowed.In the match, Ali landed a total of six punches
to Inoki and Inoki kept to his back in a defensive position almost
the full duration of the match, hitting Ali with a low kick
repeatedly. The bout ended in a draw, 3-3. Ali left without a press
conference and suffered damage to his legs as a result of Inoki's
repeated leg kicks. Offered here is a scarce on site poster to this
event. The poster has graphic depictions of both fighters and is in
Japanese. The poster is paper measuring 20 1/4 x 28 3/4. It is in excellent
condition with minor edge and corner wear and bold, vivid color.