The best boxer of all time, according to BBN

The sport of boxing is littered with all-time greats but who is the best ever? Find out here!

Who is the best boxer of all-time? This expansive question is often asked, passionately debated, and will always remain ambivalent, meaning the answer can only ever be opinion-led and open-ended. But that’s what’s fun about it!

When boxing fans argue over this impossible dispute, there’s always a regular line-up of usual suspects that appear. Those will mostly include Archie Moore; Ezzard Charles; Bob Fitzsimmons; Willie Pep; Emile Griffith; Tony Canzoneri; Muhammad Ali; Joe Louis; Sugar Ray Leonard; Roberto Duran; Henry Armstrong; Julio Cesar Chavez, to name just a few.

Of more recent times, you’ll find Manny Pacquaio; Floyd Mayweather; Bernard Hopkins; Roy Jones Jr., Pernell Whitaker; Mike Tyson; Evander Holyfield; Lennox Lewis… again, just to list a small number of the many worthy candidates.

But there’s frequently one name that commonly appears atop of this esteemed archive of boxing greats – Sugar Ray Robinson.

The best boxer of all time was born Walker Smith Jr. on May 3, 1921, in Georgia, America, and competed for over a quarter of a century between 1940-1965, and left a behind a legacy that will likely never be bettered.

His amateur record is somewhat lost to history, with reports that he was beaten a couple of times as a teenager, but was officially registered as 85-0 with 69 knockouts, 40 of which came in the first round!

Aged 14, he was too young to enter his first ever boxing tournament, so he used another boxer’s AAU membership card, who had given up boxing, named Ray Robinson.

Not long later, during an amateur bout in his New York hometown, an awestruck lady in the audience remarked that he was “sweet as sugar”, and so his boxing alias was immortalised ever after.

After winning four Golden Gloves tournaments, ‘Sugar’ made his professional debut on October 4, 1940, aged 19, winning by second round stoppage at Madison Square Garden.

After just over two years, the young prospect had reached 40-0. To celebrate his two-year anniversary as a pro, he defeated the ‘Raging Bull’ Jake LaMotta, who would go on to be one of his greatest rivals, but then he began the year of 1943 with his first ever defeat to that very same Bronx bully, who was over 16lbs heavier for their second fight. However, just three weeks later, he got his revenge when he won the trilogy on points.

After winning ‘Fighter of the Year 1942’, the promising prospect then went on an incredible 91-fight winning streak over the next eight years between 1943 to 1951. His impressive run ran for over 100 months or, to be exact, 3,064 days!

In his second decade in the sport, he moved up to middleweight and knocked out Jose Basora in 50-seconds, a record that would stand for the next 38 years.

When Robinson and LaMotta fought for a sixth time in 1951, the match was dubbed ‘The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre’, resulting in Sugar Ray handing LaMotta his first legitimate knockout defeat.



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