http://m.youtube.com/index?desktop_uri=/&gl=GB#/watch?v=Z7ZD-_ubevM Just found this on you tube. Entertaining, competative fight. When you consider Snipes had close fights with Coetzee, Witherpoon, Berbick, Page ....and Frank, was Frank really all that bad? At the time (class of 1982-84) Snipes, Berbick, Page, Coetzee and Witherspoon were all about the same level and outside of Holmes the best of the rest. Now I know Frank did not deserve his shot but he was about that level if the others were surely?
Snipes got dropped 2X by Coetzee n a 10 rd fight so that's 4 points right there, the decision should have been Coetzee but that was a King navigation and control of the judges to get Larry the easier fight against Snipes (almost backfired) Snipes had a style that made for close fights and he was green almost his whole career. Scott Frank was not a bad prospect but was not ready for a title shot but that is why he was chosen
Nah Frank wasn't that bad. He was decent as fringe contenders go and a game opponent. The Duvas apparently liked Scott and thought very highly of him.
Watching his fight with Snipes I expected it to be a robbery but as each round passed I kept waiting for a decisive round I could score for Renaldo. There were not that many. It wasn't even an off night for Snipes. He's throwing bombs, he just could not find enough room to get the dominant foot hold required. Frank roughed him up. Although Snipes looks the better talent with faster hands and better moves, Frank is stronger, as effective and smothers him with pressure. For a 23 year old kid who only had 16 fight and fought no higher than Jersey state championship level Frank might have had the makings of something. He fought nobody before Snipes. In his next two fights Snipes got the better of both Witherspoon and Berbick, though he only got the decision against Berbick. Between the draw with Snipes and losing to Holmes Frank stayed busy beating future journeymen when they had decent records like Mike Jameson, Steve Zowski and Mark Lee when they had a lot more mileage in them than when later prospects beat them. Incidentally, Frank became the first man to knock out Mark Lee (who later went the distance with Tex Cobb, Trevor Berbick and Henry Tillman) so there was talent there than I previously thought.
There were some funny goings on in the heavyweight picture then. I can't decide if there really was an agenda to create newer chalengers because it seemed like when ever a former title challenger went to the cards with a prospect it went the other way. Witherspoon got the nod over Snipes after Snipes lost to Holmes. Snipes got the nod over Coetzee before he challenged Holmes. It's like the guy who had not fought for a belt yet always gets the decision. I just watched David Bey vs Greg Page on you tube and thought Page got robbed. Had he won that fight and got the decision he deserved do you think Page might gave got Holmes? The thing is all these guys were no better than each other. I just thought Frank was a lot worse, and he really wasn't.
He was, IMO. Among the very worst Holmes challengers, although maybe not the worst title challenger of all time. http://www.boxingforum24.com/showthread.php?t=485445
And until I saw the full Snipes vs Frank fight on YouTube I would have agreed with you. I don't know, do you think Rodriguez, Cobb, Jones, marvis and LeDoux could hold their own with a fighter of the level of Snipes who at that time (class if 1982-84) was the equal of Page, Berbick and Witherspoon? Honestly, drawing with a gate keeper contender is not enough but it beats what the others did.
Considering that Snipes fought up and down to his level of competition, I think most of them could, yes. Maybe not LeDoux. He truly was garbage. The rest, though...
In p4p terms I rate him well above Jaime freaking Barboza. (who managed to compete twice for world titles, somehow)
Yes but Rodriguez in 1983 holding his own with a decent curent contender at that time like Thomas? Marvis against a page or Bey type in 84? In 1980 could you imagine Jones holding his own with a Cooney or a Shavers?
Don King didn't have anything to do with the bad scoring in the Snipes-Coetzee fight. The New York Commission did. At the time, the state of New York scored by rounds, not points (like nearly everyone else in the world did). Coetzee dropped Snipes twice, but it only meant that those rounds went in the column under Gerrie's name. At the end of the fight, two judges had it (in rounds) 5-4-1 for Snipes (the other had it for Gerrie). If the fight had been scored by points instead of rounds, Gerrie would've won a unanimous decision across the board. People were so outraged by the scoring that shortly after New York changed to the points system. Also, King didn't have anything against Coetzee. (Black boxing fans in South Africa liked Coetzee. They hated Kallie Knoetze, but they liked Gerrie.) King gave Gerrie a title shot against Dokes. He promoted Coetzee's title fight in South Africa. He tried to convince Bey to go to South Africa to challenge Coetzee for the title, but Bey backed out and Page replaced him. King also worked with HBO to get Holmes and Coetzee to agree to a unification battle, but they could never get together all the money Holmes demanded. The financing kept falling thru. Jesse Jackson and Arthur Ashe pressured black promoters to boycott South Africa and wanted them to pledge not to promote white fighters from South Africa. King said he would go along with the boycott, and then he pissed them off by working with Coetzee and promoting in South Africa anyway.
Greg Page was Larry Holmes' mandatory contender in 1983, and Holmes didn't want to fight Page. That's why Larry vacated the WBC title. Holmes considered Page too tough, and he wanted to break Marciano's record. That's when Larry started fighting guys with 10 fights and 14 fights. The "greener" the boxer the better. So Page fought Spoon for Holmes' vacant title and lost. If Page got the nod over Bey, I don't think Holmes would've changed his mind about fighting Page. Even when they were old men, and Holmes, Weaver, Bonecrusher, Spoon and Page had those "old-timer" bouts, Holmes wouldn't fight Page. He fought two guys he'd already beaten - Weaver and Smith. I just don't think Holmes wanted anything to do with Page. Stylewise, he posed problems.
I just realized, in your book, he never actually challenged for a world title so much as once, let alone twice. Interim; bane of your existence. :!: So we can leave poor old JFB alone. His only sin was being a shitty fighter that got cast by some men in suits in the role of being in a "world title bout" when really, he never came anywhere close to doing so.