PHOENIX — Muhammad Ali and his family never seriously thought of donating his brain for research, according to the doctor who treated the boxing great.
"Not really," was Dr. Abe Lieberman's answer when he was asked Monday if submitting the brain for research was considered.
Lieberman said he didn't think boxing contributed to Ali contracting Parkinson's disease but he couldn't be "a hundred percent" certain.
The doctor spoke at a news conference at the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center at the Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix.
Lieberman was among those who diagnosed Ali in 1984 and became a good friend as well as his physician.
Ali, who died in Arizona last Friday, had said he believed he suffered serious damage in his fight with Larry Holmes in 1980.
Ali once said in an interview that if he had known "Holmes was going to whip me and damage my brain, I would not have fought him. But losing to Holmes and being sick are not important in God's world."
But Lieberman said Ali probably already had Parkinson's when he climbed into the ring for the Holmes fight.