Originally posted by Ray Corso
View Post
And it does not matter at all what Robinson's "halfway mark" was. That is a red herring. Everyone knows he fought on at least seven years too long. You need to study up on his career! He was pretty well shot after the early 1958 victory over Basilio, as his record clearly indicates. The likes of Paul Pender, Terry Downes and Denny Moyer could not have shined his shoes earlier, and they were the best of the throng that began beating on him!
After at least 89 amateur fights and 80 professional fights as a welterweight, at twenty-seven years of age, Robinson was already past the peak physical years. His biggest fights may have lain ahead, but he was not at his physical or his boxing peak for them. He had all the learning he needed and was still close to physical peak 1944-1948. After the peak years of course his greatness carried him a long way and on to great things even while he was growing more shot.
As Robinson won the middleweight title from Lamotta he was already leaving both his physical peak and his boxing peak behind. He had a lot of skills, so the deficit did not matter in the win/loss column. After the loss to Maxim in '52, the slope of the slide steepened dramatically.
Now if the man was sliding away steeply by mid '52 and won the title in Feb. of '51, his prime was not in the middleweights.
Comment