Terry Downes obituary - 1936 - 2017: Boxer and former middleweight world champion
He was not on the list.
Terry Downes, the “Crashing, Bashing, Dashing, Paddington
Express” became middleweight world champion in 1961 and was well known for his
sharp humor.
He provided one of the best known quotes in boxing after
being defeated by the Nigerian Dick Tiger.
Asked who he would like to fight next, Downes pointed at the
boxing promoter Mickey Duff who had set up the fight and said, “That ******.”
He was also once asked by a female journalist whether he
looked at his opponents’ eyes or gloves. “I always look at their gloves,
darlin’. I ain’t been hit by an eye yet.”
Downes was born in Paddington, to Richard, a mechanic, and
Hilda, who worked at Barker’s department store and claimed to have seen his
first boxing bouts outside pubs on London’s Edgware Road: “The geezers got
stinking drunk and knocked the hell out of each other – and all for free.”
He boxed at the YMCA in Baltimore, before joining the
Marines, where he became a boxing champion and tried out for the US Olympic
team. That fell through when someone realised he was a “limey” so he returned
to the UK.
His professional debut came in 1957 when he knocked out
Peter Longo in 90 seconds.
Huge success followed, as did romance – he met 17-year-old
typist Barbara Clarke and they married in 1958.
She would accompany him to matches but couldn’t watch her
husband in the ring. “Waste of a bloody good ringside seat,” said Downes.
He leaves his wife, children and eight grandchildren
The couple went on to have four children; Terry also had a
daughter from another relationship.
He won the world middleweight title in July 1961 when he
defeated Paul Pender and the following year he also beat Sugar Ray Robinson.
But Robinson was 41 by then, which Downes acknowledged.
“I didn’t beat Sugar Ray, I beat his ghost,” he said.
After retiring from boxing in 1964 he occasionally acted in
films, usually as a villain, appearing in The Fearless Vampire Killers, A Study
In Terror and The Golden Lady.
At the time of his death he was Britain’s oldest surviving
former world champion.
He leaves his wife, children and eight grandchildren.
Boxer Terry Downes: Born may 9, 1936 - died october 6, 2017,
aged 81.
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