On April 1, 1961, at Miami Beach's Convention Center, Emile Griffith claimed the world welterweight championship from Benny "Kid" Paret in a contest showcasing tactical boxing and sudden violence. The bout, televised nationally on ABC's Fight of the Week, drew 4,618 spectators and featured shifting betting odds that moved from Paret as a 7-to-5 favourite to even money by fight time.
The scorecards reflected the bout's competitive nature. Judge Stuart Winston had it even at 115-115, Bunny Lovett favored Griffith 117-116, while referee Jimmy Peerless saw Paret ahead 117-114. Media scorecards were similarly split, with UPI having Paret up 116-113 and AP scoring Griffith 117-112.
According to contemporary reports, Paret had controlled much of the action before the dramatic conclusion. The end came at 1:11 of round 13 when, after being separated from a clinch near Paret's corner, Griffith unleashed a left hook that caught the champion cleanly on the jaw. A follow-up right hand spun Paret, and another left hook dropped him near Griffith's corner. Paret was counted out while lying prone.
Post-fight, Griffith credited his manager Gil Clancy with literally slapping him awake before the 13th round. "I was looking for a decision," Griffith said, "but when I saw the opening I let go."
The 22-year-old Griffith weighed 145½ pounds, while champion Paret was heavier at 146½.
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