1949–2025

George Forman Now: Boxer Dies at Age 76

Former world champion boxer George foreman died March 21, his family announced in a statement on Foreman’s official Instagram account. He was 76 years old. No cause of death was given.

“A humanitarian, an Olympian, and two time heavyweight champion of the world, He was deeply respected—a force for good, a man of discipline, conviction, and a protector of his legacy, fighting tirelessly to preserve his good name—for his family,” the statement read.

After his boxing career, which included the famous “Rumble in the Jungle” against Muhammad Ali in 1974, Foreman became the face of the George Foreman Lean Mean Fat-Reducing Grilling Machine kitchen product.

Notable figures from sports and politics offered tributes to Foreman following the news. President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social that Foreman had the “heaviest and biggest punch in the history of boxing,” while NBA legend and longtime friend Magic Johnson called Foreman a “knockout artist in the ring” and “an amazing businessman.”

Who Was George Foreman?

Boxer George Foreman won Olympic gold in 1968 and powered through the heavyweight division to become world champion in 1973. He returned to the ring after a 10-year hiatus and amazingly became world champion a second time at age 45, before embarking on a successful post-boxing career as a pitchman and entrepreneur. He is the namesake for his George Foreman Grill products. Foreman died in March 2025 at age 76.

Quick Facts

FULL NAME: George Edward Foreman
BORN: January 10, 1949
DIED: March 21, 2025
BIRTHPLACE: Marshall, Texas
SPOUSES: Adrienne Calhoun (1971–1974), Cynthia Lewis (1977–c. 1979), Sharon Goodson (1981–1982), Andrea Skeete (1982–1985), and Mary Joan Martelly (1985–2025)
CHILDREN: George Jr., George III, George IV, George V, George VI, Michi, Natalia, Leola, Georgetta, Freeda, Isabella, and Courtney
ASTROLOGICAL SIGN: Capricorn

Early Life: Teenaged Olympian

George Edward Foreman was born on January 10, 1949, in Marshall, Texas, and grew up in Houston’s rough Fifth Ward district. A self-proclaimed thug, he dropped out of school in the ninth grade and ran with street gangs until he joined the Job Corps in 1965. The Job Corps provided Foreman with a connection to boxing trainer Doc Broadus, who encouraged him to apply his fighting skills in the ring.

Foreman adapted quickly enough that he was named to the U.S. Olympic boxing team for the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. In October 1968, Foreman won the gold medal in the heavyweight boxing division with a second-round technical knockout of the Soviet Union’s Ionas Chepulis. The 19-year-old went pro shortly afterward.

Rise and Fall of a Champ: Foreman vs. Muhammad Ali

At 6 feet 3½ inches and 218 pounds, Foreman was a fearsome ring presence who brutalized opponents with his raw power. He won his first 37 professional fights before earning a shot at heavyweight champion “Smokin'” Joe Frazier on January 22, 1973, in Kingston, Jamaica. Foreman was an underdog against Frazier, but he shockingly knocked the champ down six times over the course of two rounds to claim the heavyweight crown.

george foreman punching muhammad ali up against the ropes of a boxing ring
Getty Images
Muhammad Ali defends against a punch from George Foreman during their famous “Rumble in the Jungle” boxing match in 1974.

Foreman’s reign ended with a loss to Muhammad Ali in the legendary “Rumble in the Jungle” title bout in Kinshasa, Zaire, on October 30, 1974. Employing his “rope-a-dope” technique, Ali leaned back against the ropes to deflect Foreman’s thunderous punches then turned aggressor and floored the bigger man in the eighth round. It was Foreman’s only defeat by knockout in his professional career.

Foreman’s quest for another title shot was derailed with a loss to nimble-footed Jimmy Young in March 1977. Exhausted and dehydrated after the fight, Foreman claimed to have a religious awakening and retired. He went on to become a non-denominational Christian minister and found the George Foreman Youth and Community Center in Houston.

Comeback King: Oldest Heavyweight Champion in the World

Ten years after his loss to Young, at age 38—and with an extra 50 pounds and a friendlier public persona in tow—Foreman returned to professional boxing.

Foreman failed to impress in his comeback win over Steve Zouski, but he worked himself into better shape as he knocked out a string of improving opponents and was eventually given a title shot against heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield. Although he lost a bout to Holyfield on April 19, 1991, in Atlantic City, Foreman earned praise for going the distance against the younger champion.

george foreman stands among a crowd of people with a robe draped on his shoulder as one fist is raised in the air with the help of another man
Getty Images
In November 1994, George Foreman defeated Michael Moorer to became the oldest heavyweight champion in boxing’s history at age 45.

Clad in the same red trunks he wore during his bout against Ali, the 45-year-old Foreman knocked out Michael Moorer in the 10th round of their title fight on November 5, 1994, to become the oldest heavyweight champ in history. Although he was stripped of his title belts by the World Boxing Association and the International Boxing Federation for refusing to fight their mandated opponents, he remained one of boxing’s top draws.

On November 22, 1997, Foreman lost a controversial decision to Shannon Briggs in what turned out to be his final fight. At age 48, he finished with a professional record of 76 wins (68 by knockout) and five losses.

Foreman was inducted to the International Boxing Hall of Fame in June 2003. By that time, however, the sport that had made him a champion was practically a footnote to his famously successful career.

George Foreman Grill and More Ventures

Already a familiar commercial pitchman, most famously for the George Foreman Lean Mean Fat-Reducing Grilling Machine which made its debut in 1994, Foreman remained busy after leaving the ring for the second time.

He continued to preach at his church in Houston and joined HBO Sports’ boxing broadcast team. In December 1999, Foreman Grill manufacturer Salton Inc. paid Foreman $137.5 million in cash and stock for rights to his name and image.

george foreman smiling as he stands behind a table of grills
Getty Images
The George Foreman grill was first introduced in 1994.

In October 2017, Foreman finally opened up about the origins of his multimillion-dollar grill idea: He said that right after getting knocked out by Muhammad Ali, he had an hallucination that a talking piece of meat demanded to be grilled.

In addition to the famous grill, other Foreman ventures included a clothing line, several books, and a short-lived 2008 reality show called Family Foreman, featuring Foreman’s fifth wife, Joan, and children, including five boys named George.

Net Worth

According to Celebrity Net Worth, Foreman’s net worth was estimated at $300 million at the time of his death in March 2025. That ranked behind only Floyd Mayweather Jr. among boxers.

A good portion of the late boxer’s earnings came from his endorsement of the George Foreman grill. He told AARP he had made more than $200 million off the product, including as much as $8 million per month.

Wives

Foreman was married five times, most recently to his widow, Mary Joan Martelly.

He and his first wife, Adrienne Calhoun, met on a blind date in 1970, and they married less than two years later. The couple divorced in 1974.

In 1977, Foreman married former Miss Black Teenage America Cynthia Lewis, who was 20 at the time and eight years younger than Foreman. Lewis has since accused Foreman of both physical and mental abuse during their marriage, saying she wasn’t allowed to watch TV or wear short sleeves, pants, or jewelry. The boxer didn’t address the claims in his 1995 autobiography but wrote, “Cynthia had believed that we were the stars of a movie: Guy finds religion, is lost in the clouds, finds girl, and drifts back to Earth better than ever.” They divorced around 1979, though the Greensboro News & Record and SFGate have reported their marriage lasted five years.

Next, Foreman wed Sharon Goodson for less than a year, from 1981 to 1982. He quickly married Andrea Skeete, also in 1982, but they too divorced, three years later.

At last, Foreman found a long-term partner in Mary Joan Martelly, his fifth wife. The couple married in 1985 and remained together for 40 years until the former boxer’s death in 2025. “I didn’t know anything about George’s [boxing] career,” Martelly once shared, given that Foreman was retired when they met. “I’ve never seen him box before. I didn’t even know him as a boxer.” She went on to support his early training efforts when he came out of retirement in the late ’80s.

Children

Foreman had a total of 12 children: five sons and seven daughters.

All of Foreman’s sons are named George, which he said was so they “they would always have something in common.” He had five biological daughters—Michi, Natalia, Leola, Georgetta, and Freeda—and two adopted daughters, Isabella and Courtney.

Freeda had a brief career in professional boxing, going 5-1, but died in March 2019 of an apparent suicide. George III also became a boxer, going 16-0 with 15 wins by knockout. He then became a trainer and co-founded the EverybodyFights boxing and fitness gyms, with locations in five states.

Later Years and Death

Turning to reality TV once more in 2016, Foreman starred in Better Late Than Never, a travel series that took him—along with his fellow castmates William Shatner, Henry Winkler, and Terry Bradshaw—around the world, as they checked off their bucket list and explored foreign cultures.

Foreman’s life and career became the subject of the 2023 biographical drama Big George Foreman. Khris Davis plays the boxer in the movie, which also features Academy Award winner Forrest Whitaker as trainer Doc Broadus.

Foreman died on March 21, 2025, at age 76. His family, who announced the news, said the famed boxer passed peacefully and surrounded by loved ones.

Quotes

  • I loved boxing, but I really loved selling myself more than anything.
  • All my sons are named George Foreman. They all know where they came from.
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