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| Born Walker Smith Jr. Died as arguably the greatest of all time. |
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Goodnight, Sweet Prince
By Springs Toledo
April 12, 1989. I was a teenager loitering in the lobby of the old Boston Arena on St. Botolph Street watching the ticket takers and looking for an angle. A friend of mine from the neighborhood was scheduled to box that evening. I had promised him that I'd be there. I skipped a class and stood up a date to fulfill that promise, realizing too late that a full heart finds no complement in empty pockets. No ticket. No money to buy a ticket. Out of the corner of my eye I saw a push broom leaning against a wall and a light bulb flicked on in my head. I ducked around the corner, untucked my shirt, grabbed the broom and swept my way past the ticket takers like an ordinary janitor.
In a hot minute, I was sitting alone in the balcony looking down on a fight crowd that fulfilled every stereotype. I could smell the cologne and the cheap cigars. There weren’t enough civilians to count on two hands, swamped as they were by characters right out of the David Goodis novel “Shoot the Piano Player.” Ex-pugs and wiseguys, bent-nosed and pot-bellied, were accompanied by dowdy wives or sleek girlfriends, while cops lingered strategically. South Boston had a contingent there, half-cocked in Celtics shirts. They sat loudly in clusters, all hands on plastic cups spilling foam. Assorted hustlers, pickpockets, hoods draped in gold from Columbus Avenue, middle-aged gamblers, and loan sharks milled and murmured sideways through clenched teeth. If I didn’t know better, I’d have thought toothpicks were handed out in lieu of ticket stubs.
A tuxedoed announcer sporting an unconvincing toupee emerged from the mob and climbed the steps into the ring. Heads turned away from conversations as he reached up for the microphone and then into his breast pocket for an index card. He read an announcement:
"Boxing has just lost its greatest practitionah. Sugah Ray Robinson… died today at the age of 67....... we will join fight fans around the woild for a 10 bell count in homage to the fallen champion."
A stunned silence prevailed at once.
Ray Robinson was gone. The original Sugar, whose saga of blood and elegance lasted twenty-five years and 200 fights, whose record at his pink Cadillac peak was 128-1-2 with 84 knockouts. Ray Robinson: the standard by which all great fighters are measured. The idol of Muhammad Ali. The god of the hardboiled fight crowd. Metal chairs raked the floor as we all stood up. Hats were doffed out of respect –one unsuspecting baseball cap was slapped off by a gnarled hand behind it. A phlegmy cough was muffled.
In a few moments, the lights were turned down, except for one illuminating ring center. I was standing by my pilfered broom hypnotized by the surrealism of the moment. I blinked and saw Robinson himself standing there in the spotlight, bowing to this reverent crowd, turning gracefully on those dancer's legs, flashing that movie star smile. Alone with his glory.
The bell tolled its tribute as cigar smoke wafted up like incense.
As the last clang echoed with the cheers of decades past, Sugar Ray Robinson's smiling ghost spread his arms to embrace a world that bore witness to his greatness …and faded away.
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Anonymous user:
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Hard to say anybody is greater than Sugar Ray Robinson you would think after all these years someone would have been better. I think Roy Jones and Floyed Mayweather where just as talented. But when you think about his record I mean at one point he was 128-1-2 with 84 knockouts we will never see this again. Plus back then the best fought the best now its alot different but I think if floyed stays undeated and beats pac,cotto williams and mosley, then I would put him up there.
Sunday Apr 12, 2009 07:05:25 PM
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Radam G aka Humble PRG:
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Wow! What a piece! Holla!
Sunday Apr 12, 2009 07:21:12 PM
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Robert Curtis:
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The original Sugar fought way beyond his prime with well over a hundred fights. He was no doubt the Greatest of All Time and Ali himself would agree. SRR may have ducked a few low paydays. But he never ducked any big money contender. Roy is too old and played it too safe for too long. Floyd might have a chance to jump back into the game and build a better record than the safe careful one he has now. But neither Roy Jr. or Floyd Jr. are now, nor will they ever be, as complete and brave as SRR was.
Monday Apr 13, 2009 01:34:30 AM
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ali:
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Robert Curtis you say Roy Jones and Floyed Mayweather played it safe your right to a certian degree. But Roy did beat just about every top fighter in his weight class and he did win the heavyweight champion. He does have 2 win over hall of fame fighter and he hardly ever lost a round. Floyed is still undeated and has beat a lot of good fighter and he's was moving up in weight when he did it. That makes its even harder to say undeated and now he has all these great fighters he can fight if he beats them you have to put him up there.
Monday Apr 13, 2009 08:49:51 AM
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andy from newcastle:
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RJJ's moment has passed, he blew it. PBF has a chance if he chooses to take it. He has in front of him a clutch of great fighters that he could take on one after the other, from junior welterweight to middleweight. Within three years he could become the name mentioned as rival to SSR rather than Ali. Of course, any of these great fighters could also beat him, so being the wuss he is, he'll never do it, he'll fight Manny or Hatton (again) and then drift off again proclaiming himself a boxing god, based on ability not fights. Toonoy
Monday Apr 13, 2009 10:02:11 AM
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joe Rein:
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A twinge in my heart reading Gregory Toledo's indelible memory of April 12, '89, and the ring announcer saying, 'Boxing has just lost it's greatest practitionah'
SRR remains that for me today.
Monday Apr 13, 2009 01:10:13 PM
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#1 Pacfan "KO's Hatton in 9":
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Great Article!!! I've got to agree with Robert Curtis and Andy.
Monday Apr 13, 2009 01:31:01 PM
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#1 Pacfan "KO's Hatton in 9":
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I say if Pacman is successful with Hatton, then eek it out a victory against Floyd and finally settles the third score with JMM; i say he belongs in the top FIVE of the "GREATEST OF ALL TIME."
Monday Apr 13, 2009 01:34:50 PM
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Edward Jordan:
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SRR the best Ali said he was the best I take his word for it Nobody today even comes close if they dreamed it they sould wake up and say I'm sorry He is the top of the of the top God bless his soul!
Tuesday Apr 14, 2009 07:51:26 AM
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Big Ste:
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Please. Don't even mention RJJ or Mayweather Jnr in the same breath as SRR. Different league entirely. The protected of today ans tomorrow will never achieve such ring smart. and I'm not some sentimental old fart, I'm 36. But I've been fighting and watching the sweet science all my life. Its clear to see that SRR would have worked out how to beat RJJ or Floyd just by cruising through the first 3 rounds with them. RIP Sugar.x
Tuesday May 5, 2009 05:41:47 PM
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burt bienstock:
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great article about Ray Robinson.I am an oldtimer who saw Ray Robinson in his prime as a welterweight koing jimmy mcdaniels a real toughie in spectacular fashion.Y7ears later i saw a past peak Robinson stop a realtough Randy Turpin at the Polo Grounds as a middleweight.Please do not compareMayweather or any modern fighter with Robinson especially with ALI. Sugar Ray could do everything thatAli could do plus hit twice as hard.Yes twice as hard. and he had 3 times as much fights ...I have no axe to grind.By far the best...
Sunday May 31, 2009 05:27:22 PM
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Angie And Goody...23 Years Later
Twenty three years later after they seconded Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard in Las Vegas, Goody Petronelli and Angelo Dundee crossed paths again. This time, it was at Foxwoods. Photo/friend of TSS "The Iceman" John Scully reports there were only pleasantries exchanged. Goody didn't debate the split decision victory enjoyed by Leonard, which to this day Hagler disputes.
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