Benny won the Scottish flyweight[?] boxing title on May 16, 1934 with a 15 round decision over Jim Campbell in Glasgow. He then went on to win the British, European and world flyweight titles from Jackie Brown[?] in an historic bout held in Manchester on September 8, 1935. The fight attracted enormous support from Glaswegians who travelled en masse to support "our Benny".
There was dispute, on at least on one side of the Atlantic, as to who was the best flyweight boxer in the world. Benny settled the matter when he out-pointed Filipino Small Montana[?] in London in 1936 to established himself as the undisputed world flyweight boxing champion.
By 1938, Benny's drinking lifestyle meant that he could no longer make the weight for the flyweight division. He lost his world flyweight title to American Jackie Jurich[?], when he weighed in at 118.5lb, a half a pound over the bantamweight[?] limit. This was made sadder by the fact that, despite his weight problems, Lynch stopped Jurich in the 12th round.
Benny Lynch's boxing career was over by the time he was 25 and he battled with alcohol for the rest of his life. He was a pathetic sight in the streets and pubs of Glasgow where people pressed drinks on him when a square meal was what he needed. The man who had so much talent died in 1946 from malnutrition, aged 33, a lonely misfit in the city that loved and broke him.
His record for the seven years of his professional career was:
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