Ferdie Pacheco


Dr. Fernando "Ferdie" Pacheco was the personal physician and cornerman for world heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali as well as numerous other boxing champions.
Known in popular culture as "The Fight Doctor,” Pacheco left Ali's team in the mid-1970s after Ali refused his medical advice to retire. For the next two decades, Pacheco was a noted boxing analyst for several television networks, including NBC and Showtime. He also became an author and self-taught painter, with most of his works focused on his career in boxing and his youth in the Ybor City neighborhood of Tampa, Florida.

Early life

Fernando Pacheco was born in the Cuban-American immigrant community of Ybor City in Tampa, Florida, to J.D., a pharmacist, and Consuela Pacheco, both of Spaniard-Cuban descent. Raised bilingual, Pacheco helped in his father’s drugstore, which sparked his interest in medicine. As a teenager, Pacheco was also a waiter at the Columbia Restaurant.
Though not a boxer himself, Pacheco took an early interest in boxing. Ybor City was a hotbed for the sport, with amateur matches regularly held at the Circulo Cubano de Tampa and other clubs and venues around the neighborhood, and Pacheco attended many bouts. Pacheco also developed an early interest in art, which was inspired by a trip to the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota with his maternal grandfather, Gustavo Jimenez.
Pacheco graduated from Tampa Jefferson High School, earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Florida and completed his medical degree from the Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami.

Career

As a young physician, Pacheco set up a medical practice in the Overtown community of Miami. In the late 1950s, he regularly attended boxing cards arranged by local promoter Chris Dundee. One night after a fight card, Pacheco was introduced to Angelo Dundee, the promoter's brother, a boxing trainer who ran the 5th Street Gym. Angelo Dundee offered the doctor free tickets to matches if he would "help stitch up my fighters", beginning an iconic partnership that would last many years.

Muhammad Ali

Pacheco met Muhammad Ali in 1960, when Cassius Clay came to the 5th Street Gym in Miami, Florida to train with Angelo Dundee. Pacheco became Clay's cornerman and fight physician from 1962–1977. Pacheco described Clay as anatomically the most physically-perfect specimen of a human being he had ever seen. When Clay joined the Nation of Islam and changed his name to Muhammad Ali in 1964, members of the Nation reportedly wanted him to replace Pacheco, Dundee, and the rest of his support staff. Ali refused, preferring to continue working with the team of people who had helped him become heavyweight champion.
By the mid-1970s, Pacheco observed that Ali's reflexes had slowed, and expressed medical concern that the now veteran boxer had sustained some brain and kidney damage due to years of punishment in the ring. After Ali won a decision against the hard-hitting Earnie Shavers in September 1977, Pacheco recommended that he retire from the sport. When Ali refused, Pacheco decided that from a medical perspective, he couldn't ethically continue as Ali's primary physician and left the fighter's camp. Pacheco later explained that "The New York State Athletic Commission gave me a report that showed Ali's kidneys were falling apart. I wrote to Angelo Dundee, Ali's trainer, his wife and Ali himself. I got nothing back in response. That's when I decided enough is enough." Ali fought four more matches after Pacheco left his team before finally retiring in late 1981.
Despite their disagreement, Pacheco and Ali remained friends. The two were reunited in person for a final time in 2002, when Ali, who was by then suffering the acute effects of Parkinson's syndrome, told his former physician, "You was right."

Later life

Pacheco moved on to become a television boxing analyst, working for NBC and Univision. As a Cuban-American, Pacheco spoke Spanish fluently, and was able to conduct interviews and translate corners between rounds in real time for English speaking networks when bouts featured Latino fighters. Pacheco also provided color commentary in Spanish for fight broadcasts, and other sports-related packages televised on Univision.
Pacheco would become Showtime's featured boxing analyst in the early 1980s and continued his association with the network until his retirement from TV in the late 1990s, covering many notable fights along the way.
Pacheco was the author of several books, plays, screenplays, and short stories. Many of them are set in the Ybor City neighborhood where he grew up. Pacheco’s works included a memoir, an autobiography and a cookbook.
Pacheco was also an award-winning self-taught artist, primarily inspired by Norman Rockwell with influences of Diego Rivera's use of bold colors. As with his writing, the subjects of many of his paintings are boxing and his youth in Ybor City.
Pacheco was portrayed by Paul Rodriguez in the cinema film Ali. A biographical film, Ferdie Pacheco: The World of the Fight Doctor, was released in 2004.

Death

Pacheco died in his sleep on 16 November 2017 at his home in Miami, Florida at the age of 89.

Personal life

Pacheco resided in Miami with his wife, Luisita, and had three daughters and one son: Dawn Marie, Tina Louise, Evelyn, and Ferdie James.