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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Muhammad Ali’s old training camp sold to John Madden’s son

A boulder with Jack Dempsey’s name on it sits in the foreground as a church and cabins are seen across Sculps Hill Road at the site of the former Muhammad Ali Training Camp on in Deer Lake, Pennsylvania. Mike Madden, the son of NFL Hall of Fame coach John Madden, is buying Muhammad Ali’s former training camp. (JACQUELINE DORMER / Associated Press)
By Michael Rubinkam Associated Press

DEER LAKE, Pa. – The son of NFL Hall of Fame coach John Madden is buying Muhammad Ali’s former training camp in Pennsylvania.

The camp’s longtime owner, renowned martial arts instructor George Dillman, sold the rustic hilltop camp in Deer Lake to Mike Madden.

The purchase price was not disclosed.

“It’s sinking in. I’ll be heartbroken, but it’s time to move on,” Dillman told The Associated Press on Thursday.

Mike Madden, a real estate developer, has no immediate plans for the property beyond making sure its history is preserved, said Sandy Montag, John Madden’s longtime agent.

“He’s a huge Muhammad Ali fan. Huge,” Montag said. “He will preserve the history that is there and supplement that. Muhammad Ali was the greatest of all time and a place like this should be preserved.”

Ali who died last month, bought the wooded 5-acre tract in 1972 and installed 18 primarily log buildings, including a gym, a dining hall, a mosque, visitors cabins and a horse barn. He trained at Deer Lake until his last fight in 1981, using it to prepare for his major bouts against George Foreman and Joe Frazier.

The camp still looks much as it did in Ali’s day. His desk and typewriter occupy an office near the gym. The dining hall has the original stove and kitchen table. His footprints can be seen on the wood-planked ceilings – Ali walked on them while the camp was under construction.

Ali sold it in 1997 to Dillman, who trained Ali and once operated it as the Butterfly & Bee Bed and Breakfast.

On Thursday, Dillman fondly recalled sparring with Ali and working with him on his foot positioning and hand speed.

“We took a karate back fist and converted it into an overhand right,” he said.

Dillman said his son intends to manage a bed and breakfast and continue to run martial arts camps at the site.

The Reading Eagle first reported the sale.