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OLDSMAR, Fla. -- There's a picture that Angelo Dundee holds sacred in his retirement home in this suburb along Tampa Bay.

He's pictured in black and white, wearing a white collared shirt and skinny tie some 40-plus years ago, grooming a young Muhammad Ali. His arm is draped over the heavyweight's left shoulder, and Ali is posing in a fighter's stance.

Forgive the 87-year-old Dundee for looking to the past; he has a lot of great memories and likes to reminisce. But given one more chance to help a big fighter win a big fight - and lend his own star power to boxing at the same time - he couldn't resist.

Dundee is assisting Nacho Beristain in training Oscar De La Hoya for his Dec. 6 fight with pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas. Dundee will not work the corner on fight night, but he's been reviewing tapes and offering his opinions on strategy and technique to De La Hoya.

Lending help for a major fight for the first time in years - and maybe the last time in his career - has Dundee invigorated.

"It's a thrill. I'm going back to see the people I've seen all my life," Dundee said. "It's not like I'm running into a brick wall. I've done this before. I've been in a lot of corners, you know?"

Just a few.

Dundee was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1994. He trained 15 world champions, including Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard, George Foreman, Carmen Basilio and Jose Napoles. He worked major boxing scenes with his promoter brother Chris Dundee, with stops at the famed Stillman's Gym in New York and Miami Beach's 5th Street Gym.

"He knows everything," said Basilio, the 81-year-old former world welterweight champion. "When Angelo goes, it will be as if the boxing library burns down."

Dundee now wears thick glasses, is stocky and bald. His once pale skin is full of wrinkles and blemishes, so much so the deep scar on the right side of his neck - from surgery to repair a clogged artery about four weeks ago - almost goes unnoticed. He spends much of his time telling stories of his boxing career and signing autographs of that 1962 photo with Ali for fans across the world.

Dundee moved to the Tampa suburb of Oldsmar last year to be closer to his two children after his wife of more than 50 years, Helen, fell ill with lung problems. Her health has been a constant struggle.

Boxing also is fighting for survival.

Dundee has been closely following the sport as it continues to lose its luster with the recent rise of mixed martial arts. He doesn't consider Ultimate Fighting Championship or other forms of MMA a threat to boxing, though, putting the new entertainment form in the same category as wrestling.

"Boxing has highs and lows. You can't help it. All sports have that," Dundee said. "Boxing is going to be fine. We just need good fights. And to have good fights we need good fighters and guys with personality."

The De La Hoya-Pacquiao fight is being billed as the biggest boxing event of the year, though few other than the hardcore fans have much interest.

The 35-year-old De La Hoya is well past his prime. The Golden Boy has seemingly become the Golden Guy. And though the fight will produce a major pay day, it is lacking attention in mainstream sports. By bringing in Dundee, besides his knowledge, the fight adds some name recognition.

"Ever since Angelo has been here, there's a new energy floating in the air, you know?" De La Hoya said from his training camp in Big Bear City, Calif., when Dundee was there for a week earlier this month. "The fact that we have a legend in the sport of boxing here in the gym ... it's like a breath of fresh air having Angelo. The stories that he tells you, the Sugar Ray Leonard days, the Ali days and the little tricks up his sleeves."

Between appearances at book signings, charity events, celebrity galas, baseball games and movie sets, Dundee has been keeping plenty busy.

He taught Will Smith to act like Ali, Russell Crowe to fight like James J. Braddock in "Cinderella Man," and he helped Catherine Zeta-Jones for the upcoming film "The Rebound."

"He's had his hands in every aspect of boxing," said former world heavyweight champion Pinklon Thomas, who also was trained for a time by Dundee.

Dundee still looks at fighters and gives recommendations. He's far removed from the everyday training preparation for fights, but the legends of the sport still look to him for answers.

He's already picked up several tips to pass to De La Hoya. For instance, he said he sees a flaw from Pacquiao that he also noticed to help Leonard upset Marvin Hagler.

"I noticed Hagler, as great a fighter as he was, had to step before he punched," Dundee said. "Now this kid Pacquiao does that same thing. Oscar will tear him to pieces if he does that."

He even offered a prediction: De La Hoya in a decision.

Dundee learned to tape hands and handle cuts as a corner man more than six decades ago, building his knowledge by watching and learning. Word of his expertise spread, and seasoned fighters lined up to have Dundee in their corner.

The aging trainer has long been a source to get over-the-hill fighters back on top. He helped Ali reclaim the heavyweight title in 1974 over Foreman in the "Rumble in the Jungle" fought in Zaire. He later helped Foreman capture the title at age 45 over Michael Moorer.

But how does boxing make a comeback?

"We need more American fighters," Dundee said. "The public needs to know who the guy is that's fighting. What the heck are they going to go to the fight for if it's some Russian guy?"

Dundee is hoping for a boxing upsurge before his own time is up, but he knows that doesn't leave much time.

He's already picked out a final resting place near Tampa. He purchased a mausoleum - an above ground plot - for he and his wife, a point to prove that even after death he isn't going away.

"Even when I'm dead," he said, "they'll never bury me."