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Each: ~/@7P\ ENJOY THE RED GRILLE | wi\|0)) FROM LIGHT SNACKS ip eters a cs adi tin a3 4 New Service: » / Lf 1- to 3-year TERM DEPOSIT CERTIFICATES WITH LIFE INSURA 0 c+} (-] onage) Kootenay Savings Credit Union TRAIL © FRUITVALE ® CASTLEGAR © SALMO ® SOUTH SLOCAN * NAKU! PLAZA ISP © NEW DENVER © WANETA NCE BENEFITS ATNOC (depending Ost * TOYOU. S lure. Assorted colors & sizes, Ul 144 . aut 1.44 | LAS VEGAS, NEV. (AP) — Larry Holmes wasn't sure what to expect when he became a professional fighter in 1973. § 3. “I never thought I was going to do anything,” says the unbeaten World Boxing Council heaveyweight champion. “I got into this game to make money.” To supplement his income in the early years of his career, Holmes worked as a sparring partner. “What gave me inspiration and desire was when I started to work with Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier and other top fighters. I started thinking, ‘I'm young and these guys are on the way out, and ‘if I can dedicate myself, Ican get it all.’ ” ss : : The dedication paid off big. His purse for his defence against Gerry Cooney on June 11 will push his total purse money past $20 million. Holmes is a successful businessman in Easton, Pa., where he lives with his wife, Diane, who is expecting their second child, and their daughter, Kandy Larie. His two other daughters and their mother, as well as his own mother and many of his brothers and sisters also live in Easton, a blue-collar town of 95,000 about 100 kilometres north of Philadelphia, where the family moved in 1956. 5) “I want to be comfortable," Holmes said of his life in Easton. “I want my kids to be comfortable. “I know everybody and everybody knows me. I've got to take it slow. The big city's too fast for me.” GETS HERO'S WELCOME After beating Ken Norton for the title in 1978, Holmes was thrilled. “I got back to Easton and saw 20,000 people lined up on Northampton Street.” : After Holmes won the title, he went on a whirlwind trip abroad. One day, while walking along a street in Tunis, a youngster ran up to him and shouted “Ali, Ali!" On another occasion, Holmes, who had signed to fight Ali, contacted a telephone operator on his ‘auto-phone to get help because his car had broken down. The operator startled him. * “[m trying to get help and she’s telling me Ali is going to knock me out,” he recalls. c But the Ali shadow lifted when Holmes pounded the hree-time ct ion into ission after 10 rounds on Oct. 2, 1980, : Suddenly, however, there-was the shadow of Sugar ’ Ray Leonard, the welterweight chimpion who succeeded" Ali as boxing’s glamor boy. And now there is the unbeaten, power-punching Cooney, who at 25 is seven years Holmes’ junior. On night, after the fight with Cooney had been signed, Holmes was in his nightclub, Round One, when a patron told him: “You're a great fighter, but Cooney is Del ae to knock you out.” Fighting Larry Holmes "You want to get?” Holmes replied. “I want to be bet some money,” countered the patron. : “How much?” “Ten dollars.” 4 “Leave it with the cashier,” said Holmes. “If Cooney, knocks me out, come back and get $20. But if I knock Cooney oft, don’t come back. I don't want your business.” A decisive victory over Cooney could move Holmes out of the shadows for good. —' - : “I am the heavyweight champion of the world, but this fight means more to me than the championship. Of GERRY COONEY «+. [ust a white fighter LARRY HOLMES «-. seeks acceptance course, the championship adds something to it." Holmes says he isn't bothered by the knocks on his ability — despite his 39-0 record and 11 title defences — or by being constantly compared with past fighters and continually being put into the position of having tp prove himself. Once, after Leonard wouldn't pose for a photograph with him, Holmes told the welterweight champion: “You've got to stop this stuff, saying you don't like heavyweights, that you don't like your picture taken with heavyweights.” Es Another time, while discussing negotiations for the .Cooney fight, Holmes said: “I've. given in on everything so far. I've even given them guarantees-and percentages, but I'm not going to give them my dignity.” : Holmes is on the record as saying he thinks Cooney — who has a 26-0 record with 22 knockouts — got his No. 1 ranking and kept it despite fighting. only. once in 13 months, because he is white. Holmes has been a fighting champion, yet critics have questioned the calibre of some of his opponents. They quickly point to his knockdown by Renaldo Snipes last Nov. 6 as evidence that Holmes’ legs are starting to go as age catches up with him, “[ don't like to talk this way, but if I were Snipes, . Larry Holmes wouldn't be champion anymore,” says Cooney. * x “T find him a thoroughly capable champion — a great fighter,” says veteran trainer Ray Arcel, who has worked with: many champions and will work with in Holmes’ corner June 11. “How many of our great champions have been Gerry C Color is not involved LAS VEGAS, NEV. (AP) — Gerry Cooney is a fan of the movie Gentleman Jim, starring Errol Flynn as a heavyweight boxing champion. And, being a fighter himself, Cooney likes to be called Gentleman Gerry. But Cooney's fighting style belies the nickname. “In the ring, Gerry changes,” says trainer Victor Valle. “He is like an animal, a leopard. “He is a completely different guy. I've never seen a guy change so much. I call him Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” Cooney agrees with the Jekyll-and-Hyde image he creates, “I believe I have a split personality, one in the ring and one out of it,” he says. “I pull some of the best gags you can imagine.” But he hasn’t left any opponents laughing. In winning all 25 of his pro fights, the 6-foot-5 25-year-old heavyweight has scored 21 knockouts, eight of them in the first round. In his last fight, on May 11, 1981, he battered Ken Norton senseless in 64 seconds. “I get in the ring and something comes over me,” Cooney says. “I never want to look bad in the gym or anywhere.” RECALLS THE FIGHT About the Norton fight he says: “I was hitting him and he looked unconscious. I was sort of looking for the referee_to do-something, but I didn’t, stop. punching. “Pye been taught you don't stop punching until you're told to stop.” Despite his power, ‘however, reputation for being fragile. Back injuries forced him to pull out of fights against Ernie Shavers, Mike Koranicki and Joe Bugner. And a torn muscle in his left shoulder, suffered while sparring, forced a portponement of his title bid against Cooney has a champ looking for respect knocked down and got up and rallied to win? That is a test of a champion.” Yet in his quest to gain acceptance as a top fighter, an acceptance that should come with the passage of years, Larry Holmes seems a man living with fear. In an interview published in KO Magazine last December, Holmes said: “They say Larry Holmes is declining, and some day I'm going to hurt someone out there. I see it in the cards for me to hurt somebody because I'm not getting any respect, no matter who I fight, no matter how often I fight.” 4 ooney heavyweight champion Larry Holmes, which had been set for March 15. Cooney and Holmes are now set to meet in the ring on June 11. Cooney has become thoroughly tired of talking about - the injury, which Holmes has sugge: because Cooney wanted to fight in June in the first place. Something else annoys Cooney — the label White Hope. Holmes insists that being white helped Cooney obtain his No. 1 ranking and keep it despite not fighting in 18 months. “There is no color involved,” says Cooney. “I'm just a white fighter. For Cooney, the path toward a title fight began with his father, Tony, an ironworker who took an active interest in his four sons and two daughters. When Gerry was 10, his father stuck four poles in the backyard and put a rope around them for a ring. Tony Cooney died of cancer at age 55, an event which crushed Gerry, who then was an amateur with a 55-2 record. He quit boxing and didn't try out for the 1976 U.S. Olympic team. But the lure of the ring was strong and Cooney ‘returned as a pro under the management of Dennis Rappaport and Mike Jones, two Long Island real estate men.