I do believe as of last night they've officially run out of room where the heroes find final peace. You cannot put into words the enormity of the man and his impact, influence and lasting impression on not just a country but the world. I never had the pleasure of seeing him fight live as a kid, the first time I saw him on TV was nowhere near a ring but on an episode of Different Strokes and it stuck with me as Pop and my sister were howling! Wasn't until the mid 80's I truly began to appreciate him in and out of the ring, we'd sit and watch 'Superbouts' on ESPN where they seemed to rebroadcast the second Norton fight, Frazier trilogy and Foreman fight at least once a week . Those were good times. Ali was a man who did what he truly wanted, said what he wanted when he wanted to say it, stood up to government and bucked a societal mindset whos time needed to expire and exceeded every expectation in his chosen profession. Regardless of race and religion Ali was very much the everyman, some of what we'd like to be. We didn't lose one of the greats...we lost the greatest. Listening to the news interviews of at least a dozen fellow boxers today really is a beautiful and telling tribute. A brotherhood rallied. Rest easy and be at final peace champion.