Nico Ali Walsh on extending the Muhammad Ali legacy while carving his own path

In the world of professional boxing, Nico Ali Walsh carries one of sport’s most legendary surnames while deliberately carving a distinct path of his own. The grandson of Muhammad Ali has emerged not merely as an inheritor of boxing royalty but as a disciplined athlete crafting his legacy through measured dedication and personal conviction.

Nico’s connection to the Ali legacy runs deep yet remains profoundly personal. As the elder son of Rasheda Ali (Muhammad Ali’s third child), he represents one of the few remaining members of the Ali family still competing professionally. His childhood memories revolve around simple family moments rather than global fame. “As a child I mostly remember sitting on my Grandfather’s lap,” Nico reflects. “I didn’t really know who he was at that time. For me, he’s just my grandfather. For everyone else, he’s the greatest boxer ever.”

Since turning professional in August 2021, five years after his grandfather’s passing, Nico has navigated the inevitable comparisons with remarkable poise. His approach combines reverence for his heritage with a clear-eyed focus on his own development. He wears boxing trunks inspired by Ali’s iconic style and has fought under boxing’s brightest lights, including Madison Square Garden, yet maintains a disciplined lifestyle that prioritizes training over celebrity.

“At the level I want to reach, you can’t have much of a normal social life,” Nico states. His regimen excludes nightlife, drinking, and distractions, centered instead on training, prayer, and recovery. This discipline has yielded a professional record of 12 wins, two losses, and one draw with five knockouts—a steady progression built on substance rather than spectacle.

Interestingly, while acknowledging his grandfather’s influence, Nico identifies contemporary champion Terence Crawford as his primary boxing inspiration. Crawford’s technical brilliance, calm ring intelligence, and disciplined lifestyle resonate with Nico’s own approach. “What separates us is just time and experience,” Nico notes. “Crawford is ideal for me to emulate because he doesn’t drink, doesn’t smoke, doesn’t party. He’s with his family. I’m the same way.”

Nico’s perspective on modern boxing reflects both tradition and pragmatism. He believes boxing is currently thriving, dismissing concerns about competition from MMA. Regarding YouTube-era boxers like Jake Paul, he maintains a measured view: “Fights like him vs. Mike Tyson are disrespectful to boxing. And he knows it. I’d rather he fight regular guys.”

As a Muslim athlete, fighting in the Middle East holds special significance for Nico. Following his dominant six-round victory over Dubai-based Ugandan boxer Jeremiah Sserwadda, he expressed particular interest in competing throughout the region: “I love fighting in Muslim countries. I’d like to fight all over the region—Dubai, Qatar, Riyadh, everywhere.”

Observers might occasionally glimpse echoes of Muhammad Ali’s style in Nico’s footwork or combinations, but his journey represents evolution rather than imitation. He acknowledges the weight of expectation while focusing on his own goals: “I’m creating my own legacy while extending his, and I want to make him proud someday.” Through discipline, faith, and quiet determination, Nico Ali Walsh is writing his own chapter in boxing history—one measured round at a time.