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Home»Boxing»July 10, 1951: Randy Turpin Handed Sugar Ray Robinson a Rare Defeat
Boxing

July 10, 1951: Randy Turpin Handed Sugar Ray Robinson a Rare Defeat

News RoomBy News RoomJuly 10, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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July 10, 1951: Randy Turpin Handed Sugar Ray Robinson a Rare Defeat

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The victory transformed Turpin into a national hero while handing Robinson just the second defeat of his professional career.

Sugar Ray Robinson (129-1-2) entered the bout having won 91 of his previous 92 fights. He was defending recognition as world middleweight champion from the New York State Athletic Commission (NYSAC), National Boxing Association (NBA), and The Ring. The title defense came at the end of a lengthy European tour that included exhibition bouts and public appearances.

Accompanied by a large entourage and his famous pink Cadillac, Robinson viewed the title defense as a manageable assignment against a little-known British challenger. Turpin saw it differently.

The 23-year-old from Leamington Spa entered the biggest fight of his career with an opportunity to become Britain’s first world middleweight champion since Bob Fitzsimmons won the title in 1895. Although respected in British boxing circles for his strength, durability, and relentless style, Turpin was a significant underdog against a champion whose résumé already ranked among the finest in the sport.

Approximately 18,000 fans packed Earls Court Arena, while millions more followed the contest on radio throughout Britain. The middleweight championship had rarely generated such anticipation on British soil.

From the opening bell, Turpin refused to be intimidated. He repeatedly beat Robinson to the jab, forced the champion backward with his physical strength, and controlled the exchanges during clinches.

Turpin repeatedly disrupted Robinson’s offense by forcing him to fight at close range and refusing to give the champion time to set his combinations. Robinson had moments of success with quick flurries, particularly in the later rounds, but Turpin continued to outwork him over long stretches of the fight. By the final bell, many ringside observers believed the challenger had won comfortably.

When the final bell sounded, the outcome was clear.

Turpin earned a unanimous decision after 15 rounds to become the new undisputed middleweight champion. Many ringside observers believed Robinson had won no more than four or five rounds, making the verdict one of the least controversial major upsets in boxing history.

Robinson accepted defeat without excuses.

“I have no alibis. I was beaten by a better man.”

Turpin became the first British-born world middleweight champion in 56 years, and his victory sparked celebrations across Britain, where the achievement was viewed as one of the country’s greatest sporting moments of the post-war era.

Robinson immediately exercised his right to a rematch, which was scheduled for September 12, 1951, at the Polo Grounds in New York. Before a record middleweight title crowd of 61,370, Robinson fought through a badly cut eye and fierce resistance from Turpin before stopping the British champion in the 10th round to reclaim the title.

Although Turpin’s reign lasted just 64 days, his victory over Sugar Ray remains one of boxing’s defining upsets.

Robinson regained the middleweight title in the rematch and continued one of the most successful careers in boxing history. Turpin never again won a world championship, but his victory over Robinson remains one of the biggest upsets ever recorded in the sport.

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Tom Reynolds is a boxing analyst covering major fights and career turning points, with a focus on performance, trajectory, and long-term implications.

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