In pictures: Legacy of the Rumble in the Jungle

On 30 October 1974, a fight for the world heavyweight championship took place between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali in Kinshasa, Zaire.

The bout between the then undefeated world heavyweight champion, Foreman, and his charismatic challenger, Ali, came to be known as "The Rumble in the Jungle". It is often called one of the greatest sporting events of the 20th Century.

Ali eventually triumphed, knocking Foreman down in the eighth round and reclaiming the title from his significantly younger opponent.

To mark the anniversary of Ali's death last year at the age of 74, photographer Hugh Kinsella Cunningham visited Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire was renamed in 1997) to meet some of the boxers hoping to follow in Ali's footsteps.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Sparring outside the Stade Tata RaphaelHugh Kinsella Cunningham

The fight was held in the Stade Tata Raphael. Although still surrounded by huge floodlights, it is in a state of disrepair, with only a few of the bulbs remaining.

The stadium is home to a boxing club named in Ali's honour and the next generation of Congolese boxers still hold him in high regard.

There are about 120 semi-regular attendees, including more than 40 who hope to box professionally. Sparring often takes place outside the stadium.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Boxers warming up outside the StadeHugh Kinsella Cunningham
News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Jorbelle Malewu photographed in the Stade Tata RaphaelHugh Kinsella Cunningham

Jorbelle Malewu sits outside the Muhammad Ali Memorial Club, where she has been training since 2010.

Mainly inspired by Mike Tyson, she hopes to go on to box full-time as a professional. At present, she is unemployed.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Group training within the walls of the Stade Tata RaphaelHugh Kinsella Cunningham
News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Youth training at the clubHugh Kinsella Cunningham
News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Dina Yamé, a boxer at the memorial clubHugh Kinsella Cunningham

Another boxer at the club, Dina Yame, practises outside. For him, Ali is an icon. He complains that the government provides no money for the upkeep of the Stade facilities.

There is a shortage of equipment, particularly gloves, and there is no boxing ring so sparring takes place freely around the compound.

However, at fights spectators still sit in the same stands where roughly 60,000 people gathered to watch Ali defeat Foreman.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham The spectator stands of the Stade Tata Raphael.Hugh Kinsella Cunningham
News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Two fighters sparHugh Kinsella Cunningham
News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Portrait of Dorcas Lukamba.Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

Dorcas Lukamba has been boxing at the club for only three months, but she is aware of Ali's skill, having seen footage of his fights on DVD.

Her coach, Carlos Kabongo, sits in his office underneath the stadium. Kabongo is a former boxing champion with three gold medals, who modelled his technique on the quick-footed fighting style of "The Greatest".

He agrees with Yame about the lack of funding and dislikes the fact that he must charge youngsters a small fee to train within the stadium's historic premises.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Coach Carlos Kabongo in his office underneath the StadeHugh Kinsella Cunningham
News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham Pierre Celeste Kabala was 27 at the time of the Rumble in the Jungle and covered the event as a radio journalist.Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

Now the director of the state-run television station, RTNC, Pierre Celeste Kabala was a 27-year-old radio journalist at the time of the fight.

He remembers an atmosphere of pure elation in the city in anticipation of the American boxers' arrival.

He too bemoans the lack of support structures and funding for today's Congolese boxers.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham The ruins of Mobutu’s place at NseleHugh Kinsella Cunningham

The abandoned palace of the country's former leader, Mobutu Sese Seko, stands in Nsele, east of Kinshasa. Ali and Foreman spent much of their summer training here, becoming acclimatised to the tropical weather.

The area is now overgrown and a glaring contrast with the nearby villages.

The ruins are guarded by a handful of troops, but there is little of worth left to protect.

News imageHugh Kinsella Cunningham The ruins of Nsele Palace through a windowHugh Kinsella Cunningham

Photographs by Hugh Kinsella Cunningham.