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Sugar Ray Robinson won the middleweight title in Chicago in 1951

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Image: When Sugar Ray Robinson Claimed the Middleweight Title From Jake LaMotta

His welterweight delay only deepened expectations. He was widely considered the best fighter in the division long before he officially won the title. The war interrupted his career. Boxing politics stopped others. Certain figures behind the curtain decided when opportunities presented themselves and when they did not. Robinson survived this waiting period without giving up his independence, which was scarce in an era when independence was often punished.

The middleweight championship existed in a more complicated ecosystem. Tony Zale, Rocky Graziano and Marcel Cerdan swapped titles in a violent series, and behind them stood the Fresh York International Boxing Club, an organization that operated with peaceful authority and understandable influence. Frankie Carbo, known as “Mr. Gray”, represented this power. Heroes existed in his system, whether they admitted it or not.

Jake LaMotta understood the system as well as anyone. He had grown up in her orbit and had already made compromises to ensure his chance. The price of admission was his loss to Billy Fox in 1947, widely believed to have been staged. He paid for it and eventually became middleweight champion.

LaMotta’s rivalry with Robinson has already resulted in five fights. Robinson won most of them, but LaMotta’s physical strength came at a cost. Robinson’s single professional defeat came at his hands. LaMotta forced Robinson into grueling exchanges that diminished his late-fight brilliance. There was friction in their rivalry that numbers alone could not explain.

Before the sixth meeting in Chicago in 1951, Robinson later claimed that Carbo had contacted him privately. The instructions were basic. Win the title, then lose it. Robinson refused. He didn’t dramatize the refusal. He just left.

The fight itself had the impression that something was ending rather than beginning. LaMotta pushed forward, investing in his body as always. Robinson responded with distance and repetition, and his jabs controlled the geography of the ring. As bullets accumulated, LaMotta’s stubbornness became a problem. His endurance allowed the punishment to continue.

In the championship rounds, LaMotta became a participant in his own defeat. Robinson took his time to finish. He applied the pressure patiently, accelerating only when the resistance began to fade. In the thirteenth round, the referee intervened. LaMotta remained standing, but standing no longer meant competing.

The victory immediately changed Robinson’s stance. He vacated the welterweight title, which launched the division. He won the middleweight championship, which reorganized another division around him. Featherlight heavyweight suddenly became a likely destination. Robinson created a movement simply by showing up.

His greatness was not revealed at that moment. This was confirmed. Robinson did not develop the imagination of boxing. He replaced him.

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Boxing

Roy Jones Jr sums up Tyson Fury’s chances of beating top-ranked Lennox Lewis

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Roy Jones Jr sums up Tyson Fury’s chances of beating a prime Lennox Lewis

Britain has produced some great heavyweights in recent years, ending an almost century-long curse and seeing success in the division ever since. Predicting the outcome of the clash between two of the best fighters in the country, Lennox Lewis and Tyson Fury, Roy Jones Jr said it would be a “great fight”.

Bob Fitzsimmons became the first British world heavyweight champion in 1897, and he and Jones remain the only two fighters in boxing history to have won both middleweight and heavyweight world titles.

However, Great Britain struggled for success in the division after the Fitzsimmons fight, unable to claim heavyweight supremacy until Lennox Lewis became WBC world champion in 1992. Britain has since crowned its title 11th world heavyweight championFabio Wardley, who follows in the footsteps of Fury and Anthony Joshua.

In an interview with Grosvenor CasinoJones said he would give Lewis an advantage over the “Gypsy King” if they met in their prime.

“Tyson Fury vs. Lennox Lewis? That would be a great fight, but my first thought was Lennox Lewis because of his power. But my second thought was also that Tyson Fury was great at making adjustments. I would go with Lennox Lewis.”

At least one heavyweight world title is expected to remain in a Briton’s hands for some time, with Daniel Dubois scheduled to face another Briton, Fabio Wardley, for the WBO belt next month.

In the meantime, we hope 21-year-old Moses Itauma can continue Britain’s success for many years to come, with the youngster considered by many to be the hottest prospect in boxing.

As for Fury, he is focused on the UK-wide megafight with Joshua – their own ‘Battle of Britain’ after Lennox fought Frank Bruno in 1993.

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Jermell Charlo says Derrick James has changed with fame

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Image: Jermell Charlo says Derrick James changed as success grew

“Derrick James, he started getting a little more players and a little more buzz, and I feel like our communication has changed,” Charlo told Brian Custer.

Charlo said that as James built a larger stable, there was less hands-on time spent with him and more trying to control the gym environment. He claimed that James wanted things done his way, including telling players to remove dogs from the gym during training sessions and changing the atmosphere that helped build their success.

Charlo has been out of the ring since his loss to Saul Alvarez in 2023, and James recently split from Errol Spence Jr. A coach once considered one of the safest hands in the sport is suddenly facing public criticism from two of his biggest names.

“He wanted it his way,” Charlo said. “Coach needs us. Don’t overdo it, coach. Serene down, coach. I was your first champion.”

He also pointed to his camp leading up to the Alvarez fight, saying the support around him wasn’t the same when he needed it most.

“You don’t enter into a world title fight like that,” Charlo said.

Charlo still believes he can regain his spot in the junior middleweight division, and talks about a possible fight with Sebastian Fundora are ongoing later this year. His confidence hasn’t changed, but his patience with ancient alliances has noticeably changed. Sometimes a rift begins when success changes the room.

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Prince Naseem Hamed predicts Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua fight: ‘It’s going to sound crazy’

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Prince Naseem Hamed predicts Tyson Fury vs Anthony Joshua: “This is going to sound mad”

Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua look set to face each other later this year in what could be one of the biggest British boxing events of all time.

Another British legend, Naseem Hamed, presented the course of the fight in a surprising way.

Fury had his ring returned within a a decision victory over Arslanbek Makhmudov earlier this monthshaking off ring rust at the age of 37 and allegedly preparing for a showdown with Joshua that the “Gypsy King” was set to take place this summer.

However, ‘AJ’ instead maintained that he would prefer a warm-up fight first, with the Londoner expected to return to action in July, ahead of a long-awaited meeting with his arch-rival in November.

I’m talking to talkSPORT BoxingHamed was looking forward to this match and suggested that a draw could be on the cards.

“Who do I think will win the fight between AJ and Fury? Well, that is the question and everyone wants to know.

“Years ago, Tyson had this awkward style for me where he could make AJ look stupid, that’s true. Now everything has changed. Tyson seemed to have backed off a little bit.

“But with Tyson Fury you never know, maybe one night he’ll show up and box amazingly and do what he did to Wilder. Those first few rounds [against Makhmudov]I was a little disappointed that he didn’t go from the start.

“This is going to sound crazy to you, but would it be unbelievable if I said it could be a draw?”

It is unclear whether Fury will also fight in the summer or whether he will avoid risking a lucrative romance with Joshua and wait patiently on the sidelines.

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