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Respecting " Mister " Snipes

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  • Respecting " Mister " Snipes

    Respecting " Mister " Snipes

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    He came within an eyelash of upsetting the great Larry Holmes and winning the heavyweight championship of the world. For the better part of the 1980's he was ranked in the top ten. By the time his career ended he had crossed gloves with no less then eight men who at one time held the moniker, world champion.

    Renaldo " Mister " Snipes was born on August 15, 1956 in Houston,Texas. He fought out of Yonkers, N.Y. as he turned pro in 1978. He won his first twenty two bouts as he progressed quickly up in the rankings. In 1980 he halted Larry Alexander and Dwain Bonds. In 1981 Renaldo made his move. He defeated the powerful Floyd " Jumbo " Cummings. Then he outscored light heavyweight champion Eddie Mustafa Muhammad. Renaldo next met the hard punching Gerrie Coetzee. Snipes was awarded what I felt was a terrible decision over the South African. The win over Coetzee enabled Snipes to get a shot at WBC titleholder Larry Holmes. The fight took place November 6, 1981 in Pittsburgh. Holmes, a heavy favorite dominated most of the first six rounds. In round seven though Snipes lightning struck and down went Holmes. Larry gamely got up but he was in bad shape. Somehow Larry would survive the round much like he did when Earnie Shavers had decked him in an earlier fight. Larry regained control of the bout over the next few rounds. In the eleventh Larry hurt Snipes badly and was all over him forcing the referee to wave the fight off. Although Snipes was in trouble it seemed a bit unfair to Renaldo that the referee halted the contest yet when Snipes had Holmes reeling after a knockdown he allowed Holmes to go on.

    Regardless of the loss to Holmes, Snipes stayed in the mix in 1982 drawing with rugged Scott Frank, losing a decision to " Terrible " Tim Witherspoon and then defeating Trevor Berbick. In 1983 he was defeated by Greg Page and Alfredo Evangelista. In 1984 he was outpointed by future cruiser weight king Rickey Parkey. A 1986 loss to Olympian Tyrell Biggs pretty much pushed Renaldo out of any title fight consideration. In 1988 Renaldo lost to another future cruiser weight champion in Orlin Norris.

    Snipes would make one more attempt to resurrect his career as he put together a ten fight win streak that included a KO win over Johnny DuPlooy. Finally in 1993 Renaldo's career came to an end as he was soundly beaten and stopped by an up and coming Jorge Luis Gonzalez.

    Renaldo finished his highly respectable career with 48 fights. His final ledger was 39-8-1. He scored 22 knockouts while he was only stopped twice, by Holmes and Gonzalez. That says a lot considering the competition he met. The eight champions he met were Holmes, Coetzee, Page, Witherspoon, Berbick, Norris, Parkey and Eddie Mustafa Muhammad. He also met three others that fought for the heavyweight title in Scott Frank, Evangelista and Biggs. Needless to say, Mr. Snipes traveled in some pretty fast company.

  • #2
    Pretty damn good fighter.Personally thought he edged Witherspoon.If he had caught Weaver with that right, he would've been world champ.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by neverlast View Post
      In round seven though Snipes lightning struck and down went Holmes. Larry gamely got up but he was in bad shape. Somehow Larry would survive the round much like he did when Earnie Shavers had decked him in an earlier fight. Larry regained control of the bout over the next few rounds. In the eleventh Larry hurt Snipes badly and was all over him forcing the referee to wave the fight off. Although Snipes was in trouble it seemed a bit unfair to Renaldo that the referee halted the contest yet when Snipes had Holmes reeling after a knockdown he allowed Holmes to go on.
      Snipes (who was a personal favourite of mine in the early 80's) landed a helluva right hand on Holmes at the beginning of the 7th, and of course, Holmes had the infamous turnbuckle smash moment...But he looked much, much better immedaitely after that knockdown when compared to the one he suffered against Shavers, looked to be just about fully recovered a few seconds after the ref called them back together (Holmes landed a few short & crisp right hands soon after the knockdown), did not get hit with anything of consequence in Snipes brief attempt to follow up after the knockdown, and then "would survive the round" by raking Snipes with a number of clean shots and CLEARLY taking the last two-thirds of the round.

      As far as the stoppage goes, maybe the referee could've allowed it to go a bit further, but Snipes appeared quite hurt from those flush right hands from Holmes, and...well, Holmes was throwing a crisp right hand a few seconds after he got knocked down in the 7th, whereas the only attempted punch Snipes threw in the few seconds Holmes was finishing him, was a feeble right hand cuff/slap that was thrown like it was in slow motion or something.

      The stoppage was fair enough, I thought, and the only "unfair" thing I see is your description of the 7th round and comparions made between the that & the 11th.

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