SI Vault
 
ROBI'SON, YOU WERE A GAS
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
April 24, 1989

Robi'son, You Were A Gas

The author recalls Sugar Ray, who died last week at 67

View CoverRead All Articles View This Issue
Heineken Banner
Print This PRINT E-mail This EMAIL Most Popular MOST POPULAR SHARE SHARE

Mama, I want you to buy me a drumstick. If I miss out on boxing, I can always play the drums.
—WALKER SMITH JR., C. 1933

I work harder at this than boxing. You've no idea how difficult it is. Those diatonic scales! This is my next career. I want to sing at the Met.
—SUGAR RAY ROBINSON , 1960

I must have written 100 stories about people in sport, and Sugar Ray Robinson was the only one who called me up and told me he liked what I wrote. "Gil," he said, "people stop me in the street and they say, 'Robi'son, that story is a gas.' " This was in 1960; people said things like "gas" then.

Those who knew him called him Robinson or Robi'son, not Sugar, Sugar Ray, Ray, not Walker Smith Jr., his real name: Robi'son, as though they didn't know him all that well. Maybe they didn't, because, in a way, he made himself up as he went along. He was a performer; he was who he was when he was on stage, which for most of us was most of the time. He so splendidly defined himself raised above us. As he said, "Whenever there's a crowd, you catch me out there. When nobody's there, nothing happens."

And for so many years, his best fights weren't against Carmen Basilio or Gene Fullmer , but that most implacable opponent, time. His mother said, "The older he gets, the more he wants to prove he isn't."

I don't know if Robinson was the best fighter who ever lived, but he was in the highlight film. And you couldn't measure his worth by his record. You don't get to be the middleweight champ five times unless you lose four times. After Robinson beat Bob Young in 1959, Young went to him for advice. "He wants to be champ," Robinson told me. "I told him you got to learn to lose." Then he said, "Other people lose, they go crazy. I always moved ahead."

When I wrote about Robinson he was moving backward—but rarely by backpedaling. He was going backward forward. He lost the last three fights I covered, two to Paul Pender and Fullmer II. And then even he knew he was old. After the second Pender fight, he said, "Give me a mirror. Let me see how I look." As I wrote at the time, Richard II, another losing king, had asked for a mirror, too. "Was this the face," he said, "that like the sun did make beholders wink?" King Richard also asked for a grave, and got that as well. June Clark, Robinson 's valet, once said, "The only thing that'll stop that man is the grave." Last week it did.

Robinson evoked these regal allusions. In another piece I spoke of Napoleon's son, the King of Rome , at whose birth four doctors, five chambermaids, a nurse and two maids ministered and rooted. It was Robinson , of course, who brought the art of the entourage to its fullest flower.

Winter 1958, training in Greenwood Lake, N.Y., for his second fight with Basilio ( Robinson , W 15). From my notes: "Down from the Cabin in the Sky in a glittering black Imperial he rode, lolling in the back like a king of old France passing through the all�es of Versailles , followed by the whole vaudeville that's always with him, piling down in cars for minutes after. Everyone wore a hat: candy-striped dunce caps, foxy tam o'shanters, berets. Joshing, fiddling, laughing, singing snatches of laments, nine men, four women.

" Robinson smiled in a mirror to see if his hair and the world were right, and went into the ring. The rest hung along the ropes or pulled up chairs to watch him spar.

Continue Story
1 2 3