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Sugar Ray Robinson
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==Boxing career== ===Early career=== Robinson made his professional debut on October 4, 1940, winning by a second-round stoppage over [[Joe Echevarria]]. Robinson fought five more times in 1940, winning all, four by knockout. In 1941, he defeated world champion [[Sammy Angott]], future champion [[Marty Servo]], and former champion [[Fritzie Zivic]]. The Robinson-Angott fight was held above the lightweight limit, since Angott did not want to risk losing his lightweight title. The Zivic bout, held at the [[Madison Square Garden]], drew a crowd of 20,551—one of the largest in the arena to that date.<ref name="Zivic">Nichols, Joseph C. (November 1, 1941). [https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0813FD3F5E1A7A93C3A9178AD95F458485F9 Harlem Fighter Still Unbeaten], ''[[The New York Times]]''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson won the first five rounds, according to Joseph C. Nichols of ''[[The New York Times]]'', before Zivic came back to land several punches to Robinson's head in the sixth and seventh.<ref name="Zivic"/> Robinson controlled the next two, and had Zivic hurt in the ninth. After a close tenth round, Robinson was announced as the winner on all three scorecards.<ref name="Zivic"/> Robinson knocked out Zivic in the tenth round in a January 1942 rematch, only the second time Zivic had been counted out in more than 150 fights.<ref name="Zivic2"/> Robinson knocked him down in the ninth and tenth rounds before the referee stopped the fight. Zivic and his corner protested the stoppage; James P. Dawson of ''The New York Times'' stated "[t]hey were criticizing a humane act. The battle had been a slaughter, for want of a more delicate word."<ref name="Zivic2">Dawson, James P. (January 17, 1942). [https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0A12F73D5D157B93C5A8178AD85F468485F9 "Robinson Knocks Out Zivic in Tenth Round to Score 27th Victory in Row"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson then won four consecutive bouts by knockout, before defeating Servo in a controversial split decision in their May rematch. After winning three more fights, Robinson faced [[Jake LaMotta]], who would become one of his more prominent rivals, for the first time in October. He defeated LaMotta by a unanimous decision, although he failed to get Jake down. Robinson weighed {{convert|145|lb|abbr=on}} compared to 157.5 for LaMotta, but he was able to control the fight from the outside for the entire bout, and actually landed the harder punches during the fight.<ref>Nichols, Joseph C. (October 3, 1942). [https://www.nytimes.com/1942/10/03/archives/robinson-takes-unanimous-decision-over-la-motta-in-garden-10round.html "Robinson Takes Unanimous Decision Over La Motta in Garden 10-Round Bout"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson then won four more fights, including two against [[Izzy Jannazzo]], from October 19 to December 14. For his performances, Robinson was named "Fighter of the Year". He finished 1942 with a total of 14 wins and no losses. Robinson built a record of 40–0 before losing for the first time to LaMotta in a 10-round re-match.<ref name="Fall">[https://www.nytimes.com/1943/02/06/archives/robinsons-streak-ended-by-lamotta-harlem-fighter-suffers-first-loss.html Robinson's Streak Ended by LaMotta], ''The New York Times'', [[Associated Press]]. February 6, 1943. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> LaMotta, who had a {{convert|16|lb|abbr=on}} weight advantage over Robinson, knocked Robinson out of the ring in the eighth round, and won the fight by decision. The fight took place in Robinson's former home town of Detroit, and attracted a record crowd.<ref name="Fall"/> After being controlled by Robinson in the early rounds LaMotta came back to take control in the later.<ref name="Fall"/> After winning the third LaMotta fight less than three weeks later, Robinson then defeated his childhood idol: former champion [[Henry Armstrong]], whom he only fought because the older man was in need of money. Robinson later stated that he carried the aged former champion. On February 27, 1943, Robinson was inducted into the [[United States Army]], where he was again referred to as Walker Smith.<ref>Robinson and Anderson, p. 110.</ref> Robinson had a 15-month military career. Robinson served with Joe Louis, and the pair went on tours with the [[Special Services (entertainment)|Special Services]] division where they performed exhibition bouts in front of U.S. Army troops. Robinson got into trouble several times while in the military. He argued with superiors who he felt were discriminatory against him, and refused to fight exhibitions when he was told African American soldiers were not allowed to watch them.<ref name="businessman"/><ref>Robinson and Anderson, pp. 120–129.</ref> In late March 1944 Robinson was stationed at Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn, waiting to ship out to Europe, where he was scheduled to perform more exhibition matches. But on March 29, Robinson disappeared from his barracks. When he woke up on April 5 in Fort Jay Hospital on Governor's Island, he had missed his sailing for Europe and was under suspicion of deserting. He himself reported falling down the stairs in his barracks on the 29th, but said that he had complete amnesia, and he could not remember any events from that moment until the 5th. According to his file, a stranger had found him in the street on April 1 and helped him to a hospital. In his examination report, a doctor at Fort Jay concluded that Robinson's version of events was sincere.<ref>Robinson and Anderson, pp. 126–130.</ref> He was examined by military authorities, who claimed he suffered from a mental deficiency.<ref>[https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221204/http://web.archive.org/web/20050207103215/http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/robinson_r.htm Ray Robinson], ''[[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]]''. Retrieved December 4, 2022.</ref> Robinson was granted an [[honorable discharge]] on June 3, 1944. He later wrote that unfair press coverage of the incident had "branded" him as a "deserter".<ref>Robinson and Anderson, p. 130.</ref> Robinson maintained his close friendship with Louis from their time in military service, and the two went into business together after the war. They planned to start a liquor distribution business in New York City, but were denied a license due to their race.<ref>Boyd and Robinson II. pp. 94</ref> Besides the loss in the LaMotta rematch, the only other mark on Robinson's record during this period was a 10-round draw against José Basora in 1945. ===Welterweight champion=== By 1946, Robinson had fought 75 fights to a 73–1–1 record, and beaten every top contender in the welterweight division. However, he refused to cooperate with the [[American Mafia|Mafia]], which controlled much of boxing at the time, and was denied a chance to fight for the welterweight championship.<ref name="BBC">[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/boxing/1432728.stm "Sugar: Too sweet for Raging Bull"]. ''[[BBC News]]''. July 13, 2001. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson was finally given a chance to win a title against [[Tommy Bell (boxer)|Tommy Bell]] on December 20, 1946. Robinson had already beaten Bell once by decision in 1945. The two fought for the title vacated by Servo, who had himself lost twice to Robinson in non-title bouts. In the fight, Robinson, who only a month before had been involved in a 10-round brawl with [[Artie Levine]], was knocked down by Bell. The fight was called a "war", but Robinson was able to pull out a close 15-round decision, winning the vacant World Welterweight title.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.cyberboxingzone.com/boxing/welter.htm| title=The Lineal Welterweight Champs| website=The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia}}</ref> In 1948 Robinson fought five times, but only one bout was a title defense. Among the fighters he defeated in those non-title bouts was future world champion [[Kid Gavilán]] in a close, controversial 10-round fight. Gavilán hurt Robinson several times in the fight, but Robinson controlled the final rounds with a series of jabs and left hooks.<ref>Boyd and Robinson II. p. 93</ref> In 1949, he boxed 16 times, but again only defended his title once. In that title fight, a rematch with Gavilán, Robinson again won by decision. The first half of the bout was very close, but Robinson took control in the second half. Gavilán would have to wait two more years to begin his own historic reign as welterweight champion. The only boxer to match Robinson that year was [[Henry Brimm]], who fought him to a 10-round draw in [[Buffalo, New York|Buffalo]]. Robinson fought 19 times in 1950. He successfully defended his welterweight title for the last time against [[Charley Fusari]]. Robinson won a lopsided 15-round decision, knocking Fusari down once. Robinson donated all but $1 of his purse for the Fusari fight to cancer research.<ref>Boyd and Robinson II. pp. 105–06</ref> In 1950 Robinson fought [[George Costner]], who had also taken to calling himself "Sugar" and stated in the weeks leading up to the fight that he was the rightful possessor of the name. "We better touch gloves, because this is the only round", Robinson said as the fighters were introduced at the center of the ring. "Your name ain't Sugar, mine is."<ref name="pound for pound">{{cite news |last1=Anderson |first1=Dave |author1-link=Dave Anderson (sportswriter) |title=Sports of the Times; The Original Sugar Ray 'Never Lost' |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE6DE143EF930A25757C0A96F948260 |date=April 13, 1989 |access-date=October 6, 2022 |work=[[The New York Times]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121105213457/https://www.nytimes.com/1989/04/13/sports/sports-of-the-times-the-original-sugar-ray-never-lost.html |archive-date=November 5, 2012 |url-status=unfit}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Robinson then knocked Costner out in 2 minutes and 49 seconds. ====Jimmy Doyle incident==== [[File:Jimmy Doyle 24 June 1947.jpg|thumb|225px|Jimmy Doyle (bottom) being helped up from the canvas by three unidentified men following his match against Sugar Ray Robinson. Doyle died hours later in a Cleveland hospital.]] In June 1947, after four non-title bouts, Robinson was scheduled to defend his title for the first time in a bout against [[Jimmy Doyle (boxer)|Jimmy Doyle]]. Robinson initially backed out of the fight because he had a dream that he was going to kill Doyle. A priest and a minister convinced him to fight. His dream ended up becoming a reality.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.boxing247.com/boxing-news/sugar-ray-robinson-and-his-disturbing-death-dream-the-sad-case-of-jimmy-doyle/125707|title=Sugar Ray Robinson And His Disturbing Death Dream: The Sad Case Of Jimmy Doyle|accessdate=2023-01-25|website=BOXING NEWS 24/7|date=August 21, 2019 }}</ref> On June 25, 1947, Robinson dominated Doyle and scored a decisive knockout in the eighth round that knocked Doyle unconscious and resulted in Doyle's death later that night.<ref name="Answers"/> Robinson said that the impact of Doyle's death was "very trying".<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.sportscasting.com/sugar-ray-robinson-had-a-disturbing-dream-he-killed-someone-in-the-boxing-ring-then-it-came-true/ | title=Sugar Ray Robinson Had a Disturbing Dream He Killed Someone in the Boxing Ring — then It Came True | newspaper=Sportscasting | Pure Sports | date=April 13, 2020 | last1=Thomas | first1=Mike }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.espn.com/sportscentury/features/00016440.html |title="A brooding genius" |work=ESPN |last=Schwartz |first=Larry |access-date=November 4, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://wafflesatnoon.com/sugar-ray-robinson-dream/ | title=Did Sugar Ray Robinson Dream He Would Kill an Opponent? | date=April 6, 2015 }}</ref> After Doyle's death, criminal charges were threatened against Robinson in Cleveland, up to and including murder, though none actually materialized. After learning of Doyle's intentions of using the bout's money to buy his mother a house, Robinson gave Doyle's mother the money from his next four bouts so she could purchase herself a home, fulfilling her son's intention.<ref>Robinson's biographer [[Wil Haygood]] stated during a September 25, 2010, book festival appearance that Doyle was pushing himself to fight to "buy his mother a house" and after Doyle's death in 1947, Robinson gave the earnings of his next four fights to Doyle's mother, so she could buy that house."</ref><ref name=WHB>[[Wil Haygood]], Book TV, September 2010</ref> ===Middleweight champion=== {{Main|Jake LaMotta vs. Sugar Ray Robinson VI}} It is stated in his autobiography that one of the main considerations for his move up to middleweight was the increasing difficulty he was having in making the {{convert|147|lb|abbr=on}} welterweight weight limit.<ref>Robinson and Anderson, p. 165.</ref> However, the move up would also prove beneficial financially, as the division then contained some of the biggest names in boxing. Vying for the [[Pennsylvania]] state middleweight title in 1950, Robinson defeated [[Robert Villemain]]. Later that year, in defense of that crown, he defeated Jose Basora, with whom he had previously drawn. Robinson's 50-second, first-round knockout of Basora set a record that would stand for 38 years. In October 1950, Robinson knocked out [[Bobo Olson]] a future middleweight title holder. On February 14, 1951, Robinson and LaMotta met for the sixth time. The fight would become known as ''The St. Valentine's Day Massacre''. Robinson won the undisputed World Middleweight title with a 13th round [[knockout|technical knockout]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.cyberboxingzone.com/boxing/middle.htm| title=The Lineal Middleweight Champions| website=The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia}}</ref> Robinson outboxed LaMotta for the first 10 rounds, then unleashed a series of savage combinations on LaMotta for three rounds,<ref name="businessman"/> finally stopping the champion for the first time in their legendary six-bout series—and dealing LaMotta his first legitimate knockout loss in 95 professional bouts.<ref>[http://www.boxrec.com/boxer_display.php?boxer_id=009030 "Jake LaMotta"]. ''BoxRec''. Retrieved June 6, 2007. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060425225736/http://www.boxrec.com/boxer_display.php?boxer_id=009030 |date=April 25, 2006}}</ref> LaMotta had lost by knockout to Billy Fox earlier in his career. However, that fight was later ruled to have been [[match fixing|fixed]] and LaMotta was sanctioned for letting Fox win. That bout, and some of the other bouts in the six-fight Robinson-LaMotta rivalry, was depicted in the [[Martin Scorsese]] film ''[[Raging Bull]]''. "I fought Sugar Ray so often, I almost got diabetes", LaMotta later said.<ref name="Sportscentury"/> Robinson won five of his six bouts with LaMotta. After winning his second world title, he embarked on a European tour which took him all over the Continent. Robinson traveled with his flamingo-pink [[Cadillac]], which caused quite a stir in [[Paris]],<ref>Robinson and Anderson, pp. 187–88.</ref> and an entourage of 13 people, some included "just for laughs".<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1951/07/15/archives/dethroned-in-london.html Dethroned in London], ''The New York Times'', July 15, 1951. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> He was a hero in France due to his recent defeat of LaMotta—the French hated LaMotta for defeating [[Marcel Cerdan]] in 1949 and taking his championship belt (Cerdan died in a plane crash en route to a rematch with LaMotta).<ref name="businessman"/> Robinson met President of France [[Vincent Auriol]] at a ceremony attended by France's social upper crust.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1951/05/17/archives/sugar-ray-gives-mme-auriol-kiss-boxer-as-cancer-fund-envoy-busses.html Sugar Ray Gives Mme. Auriol Kiss; Boxer as Cancer Fund 'Envoy,' Busses French Chief's Wife Twice on Each Cheek], ''The New York Times'', May 17, 1951. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> During his fight in Berlin against [[Gerhard Hecht]], Robinson was disqualified when he knocked his opponent out with a punch to the kidney: a punch legal in the US, but not Europe.<ref name="Answers"/> The fight was later declared a no-contest. In London, Robinson lost the world middleweight title to British boxer [[Randolph Turpin]] in a sensational bout.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20071012184017/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,890187,00.html "Sugar's Lumps"]. ''Time''. July 23, 1951. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Three months later in a rematch in front of 60,000 fans at the [[Polo Grounds]],<ref name="Answers"/> he knocked Turpin out in ten rounds to recover the title. In that bout Robinson was leading on the cards but was cut by Turpin. With the fight in jeopardy, Robinson let loose on Turpin, knocking him down, then getting him to the ropes and unleashing a series of punches that caused the referee to stop the bout.<ref name="Turpin2">[[Arthur Daley (sportswriter)|Daley, Arthur]] (September 12, 1951). [https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0A1FFA3B55177B93C0A81782D85F458585F9 "Sports of The Times; For the Championship"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Following Robinson's victory, residents of Harlem danced in the streets.<ref>{{cite news |title='Can't Beat That Man' British Scribes Agree |url=https://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031113/1951-09-13/ed-1/seq-11/ |access-date=August 21, 2022 |work=Nassau Daily Review-Star |date=September 13, 1951 |at=p. 11 col 2 |quote=Pedestrian and traffic lanes leading to 125th Street, the heart of Harlem, were jammed with shouting people ... the crowd in front of the hotel swayed, sang and danced to the rhythm of a band. |via=New York State Historic Newspapers}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Harlem Hails Robinson; More Than 10,000 Cheer Verdict, Sing and Dance in Street |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1951/09/13/84865830.html?pageNumber=40 |access-date=August 29, 2022 |work=[[The New York Times]] |url-access=registration |date=September 13, 1951}}</ref> In 1951, Robinson was named ''Ring Magazine's'' "Fighter of the Year" for the second time.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=a0YLAAAAIBAJ&pg=4102,5005037&dq=sugar-ray-robinson+fighter-of-the-year&hl=en| title=Sugar Ray Robinson Named Fighter Of Year| newspaper=[[Tampa Bay Times|St. Petersburg Times]]| last=Rose| first=Murray| agency=Associated Press| date=December 27, 1951| access-date=January 18, 2021}}{{Dead link|date=July 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> In 1952 he fought a rematch with Olson, winning by a decision. He next defeated former champion [[Rocky Graziano]] by a third-round knockout, then challenged World Light heavyweight champion [[Joey Maxim]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.cyberboxingzone.com/boxing/lheavy.htm|title=The Lineal Light Heavyweight Champions| website=The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia}}</ref> In the [[Yankee Stadium (1923)|Yankee Stadium]] bout with Maxim, Robinson built a lead on all three judges' scorecards, but the {{convert|103|°F|adj=on}} temperature in the ring took its toll.<ref name="Sportscentury"/> The referee, [[Ruby Goldstein]], was the first victim of the heat, and had to be replaced by referee Ray Miller. The fast-moving Robinson was the heat's next victim – at the end of round 13, he collapsed and failed to answer the bell for the next round,<ref name="Sportscentury"/> suffering the only knockout of his career. On June 25, 1952, after the Maxim bout, Robinson gave up his title and retired with a record of 131–3–1–1. He began a career in show business, singing and tap dancing. After about three years, the decline of his businesses and the lack of success in his performing career made him decide to return to boxing. He resumed training in 1954. ===Comeback=== In 1955 Robinson returned to the ring. Although he had been inactive for two and a half years, his work as a dancer kept him in peak physical condition: in his autobiography, Robinson states that in the weeks leading up to his debut for a dancing engagement in France, he ran five miles every morning, and then danced for five hours each night. Robinson even stated that the training he did in his attempts to establish a career as a dancer were harder than any he undertook during his boxing career.<ref>Robinson and Anderson. p. 227</ref> He won five fights in 1955, before losing a decision to [[Ralph 'Tiger' Jones]]. He bounced back, however, and defeated [[Rocky Castellani]] by a split decision, then challenged Bobo Olson for the world middleweight title. He won the middleweight championship for the third time with a second-round knockout—his third victory over Olson. After his comeback performance in 1955, Robinson expected to be named fighter of the year. However, the title went to welterweight [[Carmen Basilio]]. Basilio's handlers had lobbied heavily for it on the basis that he had never won the award, and Robinson later described this as the biggest disappointment of his professional career. "I haven't forgotten it to this day, and I never will", Robinson wrote in his autobiography.<ref>Robinson and Anderson. p. 266</ref> Robinson and Olson fought for the last time in 1956, and Robinson closed the four-fight series with a fourth-round knockout. In 1957 Robinson lost his title to [[Gene Fullmer]]. Fullmer used his aggressive, forward moving style to control Robinson, and knocked him down in the fight.<ref>Nichols, Joseph C. (May 1, 1957). [https://www.nytimes.com/1957/05/01/archives/utah-160pounder-to-defend-crown-fullmers-aggressiveness-to-test.html "Utah 160-Pounder to Defend Crown"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson, however, noticed that Fullmer was vulnerable to the left hook. Fullmer headed into their May rematch as a 3–1 [[betting odds|favorite]].<ref name="Fullmer"/> In the first two rounds Robinson followed Fullmer around the ring, however in the third round he changed tactics and made Fullmer come to him.<ref name="Fullmer"/> At the start of the fourth round Robinson came out on the attack and stunned Fullmer, and when Fullmer returned with his own punches, Robinson traded with him, as opposed to clinching as he had done in their earlier fight. The fight was fairly even after four rounds.<ref name="Fullmer"/> But in the fifth, Robinson was able to win the title back for a fourth time by knocking out Fullmer with a lightning fast, powerful left hook.<ref name="Fullmer">Nichols, Joseph C. (May 2, 1957). [https://www.nytimes.com/1957/05/02/archives/robinson-knocks-out-fullmer-in-fifth-round-to-regain-middleweight.html "Robinson Knocks Out Fullmer in Fifth Round to Regain Middleweight Crown"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Boxing critics have referred to the left-hook which knocked out Fullmer as "the perfect punch".<ref>Fitzgerald and Hudson. p. 40<br />*[http://www.ibhof.com/fullmer.htm Gene Fullmer], ibhof.com. Retrieved June 6, 2007. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081230055557/http://www.ibhof.com/fullmer.htm |date=December 30, 2008 }}</ref> It marked the first time in 44 career fights that Fullmer had been knocked out, and when someone asked Robinson after the fight how far the left hook had travelled, Robinson replied: "I can't say. But he got the message."<ref name="Fullmer"/> Later that year, he lost his title to Basilio in a rugged 15 round fight in front of 38,000 at [[Yankee Stadium (1923)|Yankee Stadium]],<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1957/09/24/archives/basilio-takes-title-by-beating-robinson.html "Basilio Takes Title By Beating Robinson"]. ''The New York Times''. September 24, 1957. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> but regained it for a record fifth time when he beat Basilio in the rematch. Robinson struggled to make weight, and had to go without food for nearly 20 hours leading up to the bout. He badly damaged Basilio's eye early in the fight, and by the seventh round it was swollen shut.<ref name="eye">Nichols, Joseph C. (March 26, 1958). [https://www.nytimes.com/1958/03/26/archives/robinson-outpoints-basilio-and-wins-world-middleweight-title-fifth.html "Robinson Outpoints Basilio and Wins World Middleweight Title Fifth Time"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> The two judges gave the fight to Robinson by wide margins: 72–64 and 71–64. The referee scored the fight for Basilio 69–64, and was booed loudly by the crowd of 19,000 when his decision was announced.<ref name="eye"/> The first fight won the "Fight of the Year" award from ''The Ring'' magazine for 1957 and the second fight won the "Fight of the Year" award for 1958. ===Decline=== [[File:Sugar Ray Robinson 1966.jpg|left|thumb|Robinson, [[Madison Square Garden]], 1966]] Robinson knocked out Bob Young in the second round in [[Boston]] in his only fight in 1959. A year later, he defended his title against [[Paul Pender]]. Robinson entered the fight as a 5–1 favorite, but lost a split decision in front of 10,608 at [[Boston Garden]].<ref name="Pender">Nichols, Joseph C. (January 23, 1960). [https://www.nytimes.com/1960/01/23/archives/51-choice-loses-a-split-decision-robinson-beaten-by-pender-in.html "5–1 Choice Loses A Split Decision"], ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> The day before the fight Pender commented that he planned to start slowly, before coming on late. He did just that and outlasted the aging Robinson, who, despite opening a cut over Pender's eye in the eighth round, was largely ineffective in the later rounds.<ref name="Pender"/> An attempt to regain the crown for an unheard of sixth time proved beyond Robinson. Despite Robinson's efforts, Pender won by decision in that rematch. On December 3 of that year, Robinson and Fullmer fought a 15-round draw for the [[World Boxing Association|WBA]] middleweight title, which Fullmer retained. In 1961, Robinson and Fullmer fought for a fourth time, with Fullmer retaining the [[World Boxing Association|WBA]] middleweight title by a unanimous decision. The fight would be Robinson's last title bout. Robinson spent the rest of the 1960s fighting 10-round contests. In October 1961 Robinson defeated future world champion [[Denny Moyer]] by a unanimous decision. A 12–5 favorite, the 41-year-old Robinson defeated the 22-year-old Moyer by staying on the outside, rather than engaging him.<ref>Conkilin, William R. (October 22, 1961) [https://www.nytimes.com/1961/10/22/archives/robinson-beats-moyer-in-tenrounder-here-exchampion-takes-unanimous.html "Robinson Beats Moyer in Ten-Rounder Here"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> In their rematch four months later, Moyer defeated Robinson on points, as he pressed the action and made Robinson back up throughout the fight. Moyer won 7–3 on all three judges scorecards.<ref>Teague, Robert L. (February 18, 1962). [https://www.nytimes.com/1962/02/18/archives/denny-moyer-defeats-robinson-oregon-fighter-22-is-too-quick-for.html "Denny Moyer Defeats Robinson"]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson lost twice more in 1962, before winning six consecutive fights against mostly lesser opposition. In February 1963 Robinson lost by a unanimous decision to former world champion and fellow Hall of Famer [[Joey Giardello]]. Giardello knocked Robinson down in the fourth round, and the 43-year-old took until the count of nine to rise to his feet.<ref name="Giardello">[https://www.nytimes.com/1963/06/25/archives/left-hook-floors-sugar-ray-in-4th-robinson-takes-count-of-9.html Left Hook Floors Sugar Ray in 4th], ''The New York Times'', June 25, 1963. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson was also nearly knocked down in the sixth round, but was saved by the bell. He rallied in the seventh and eight rounds, before struggling in the final two.<ref name="Giardello"/> He then embarked on an 18-month boxing tour of Europe. Robinson's second [[no contest (boxing)|no-contest]] bout came in September 1965 in Norfolk, Virginia in a match with an opponent who turned out to be an impostor. Boxer Neil Morrison, at the time a fugitive and accused robber, signed up for the fight as Bill Henderson, a capable [[club fighter]]. The fight was a fiasco, with Morrison being knocked down twice in the first round and once in the second before the disgusted referee, who said "Henderson put up no fight", walked out of the ring. Robinson was initially given a TKO in 1:20 of the second round after the "obviously frightened" Morrison laid himself down on the canvas. Robinson fought for the final time in November 1965. He lost by a unanimous decision to [[Joey Archer]].<ref name="Civic">[https://www.nytimes.com/1965/11/11/archives/robinson-beaten-in-archer-fight-loser-floored-for-9-count-in-bout.html "Robinson Beaten in Archer Fight"]. ''The New York Times''. ''Associated Press''. November 11, 1965. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Famed sports author Pete Hamill mentioned that one of the saddest experiences of his life was watching Robinson lose to Archer. He was even knocked down and Hamill pointed out that Archer had no knockout punch at all; Archer admitted afterward that it was only the second time he had knocked an opponent down in his career. The crowd of 9,023 at the [[Civic Arena (Pittsburgh)|Civic Arena]] in [[Pittsburgh]] gave Robinson several standing ovations, even while he was being thoroughly outperformed by Archer.<ref name="Civic"/> On November 11, 1965, Robinson announced his retirement from boxing, saying: "I hate to go too long campaigning for another chance."<ref name="retire">[https://www.nytimes.com/1965/11/12/archives/robinson-declares-bout-with-archer-was-his-last-fight.html "Robinson Declares Bout With Archer Was His Last Fight"]. ''The New York Times''. ''Associated Press''. November 12, 1965. Retrieved June 6, 2007.</ref> Robinson retired from boxing with a record of 174–19–6 (2 no contests) with 109 knockouts in 201 professional bouts, ranking him among the all-time leaders in knockouts.
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