William Snip (17 May 1932 –
22 June 2009) was a Canadian
professional wrestler, who used the
stage name Billy Red Lyons. He was an
active wrestler between 1956 and 1984, and won numerous
championship throughout his career.
He worked for promotions in both Canada
and the United
States
, particularly in Ontario
, California
, Minneapolis
, Texas
, Georgia
, and Oklahoma. He won numerous tag team
championships throughout his career, including with
Dick Beyer, who was his real-life brother-in-law,
as well as
Fritz Von Erich,
Bill Watts, and
Ray
Gunkel. He also won singles championships, including the
NWA Texas Heavyweight
Championship.
After his
retirement from in-ring competition, he began working for Maple Leaf Wrestling in Toronto
.
Lyons later became an announcer for the
World Wrestling Federation.
Lyons died from
cancer on June 22,
2009.
Career
Snip made his debut in 1956, under the name Billy Lyons, but soon
became known as Billy Red Lyons, due to the colour of his hair.
During ths first years of his career, he wrestle against future
world champions, including
Buddy Rogers
and
Gene Kiniski.
During his career, he held several tag team championships with
Dick Beyer, who was his real-life
brother-in-law, as well as
Fritz Von Erich,
Bill
Watts, and
Ray Gunkel. He won his
first championship in February 1958, when he teamed with Ray Gunkel
to win the
NWA
International Tag Team Championship. Three years later, he won
the
NWA Canadian
Open Tag Team Championship with
Ilio
DiPaolo, by defeating
Stan
Kowalski and
Tiny Mills on January
26, 1961. Lyons and DiPaolo were the last champions, however, as
the championships was abandoned and replaced with the
Toronto
version of the NWA International Tag Team Championship a few
months later. Lyons eventually won this championship with
Whipper Billy Watson on March 28, 1962,
by defeating
Chris and
John Tolos. They lost the championship to
Bulldog Brower and
Sweet Daddy Siki five days later on April
2. On March 27, 1965, Lyons teamed with Beyer, who was using the
ring name The Destroyer, to win the
AWA
World Tag Team Championship from
Dan
Manoukian and
Ray
Stevens. On June 3, 1965, they won the
JWA All Asia Tag Team
Championship in the
Japan Wrestling Association
from
Giant Baba and
Toyonobori. They lost the championship back to
Baba and Tonobori just over a month later on July 15, 1965. While
wrestling in the
American
Wrestling Association in the 1960s, Lyons was billed as the
AWA British
Empire Heavyweight Champion.
In 1967,
Lyons won his first singles championship, by defeating Duke Keomua by forfeit in the finals of a
tournament in San Antonio,
Texas
to win the NWA Texas Heavyweight
Championship on November 8. He held the
championship for nearly six months, eventually losing it to
The Spoiler #1 on March 29, 1968, in
Houston,
Texas
. During this time, he won the NWA American Tag Team
Championship with Fritz von
Erich on January 30, 1968, in Dallas, Texas
by defeating Gary Hart and
Spoiler.
Lyons won the
NWA
United States Tag Team Championship with
Bill Watts in January 1971, by defeating
Buddy Roberts and
Jerry
Brown. They lost the championship to
Karl Von Brauner and
Waldo Von Erich in March, but Lyons won it
back with
Tom Jones by
defeating The Spoilers (The Spoiler #1 and
The Spoiler #2) on May 31. The following year,
Lyons again teamed with Jones to win the
NWA Mississippi Tag Team
Championship in March 1972. Jones later said that Lyons was the
"best partner I ever had", and credited Lyons with teaching him the
psychology of wrestling. Throughout the late '60s and early '70s,
he teamed with
Red Bastien as The Flying
Redheads, and on July 14, 1974, Lyons and Bastien won the
NWA Texas Tag Team
Championship by defeating
Mike York
and
Frank Monte. They held the
championship for three months, but lost it to
Chris Colt and
Bobby
Duncum on October 6, 1972. Bastien later said that he and Lyons
"were perfect for each other" as tag team partners. Fellow
professional wrestler
Blackjack
Mulligan said that Bastien and Lyons "were the greatest team of
all time", and that watching them wrestle was watching "pure tag
team wrestling at its basic".
Following
this, he returned to Toronto
to compete
for Maple Leaf
Wrestling. He began teaming with
Dewey Robertson in 1974, as the Crusaders,
and they won the Toronto version of the NWA International Tag Team
Championship on three occasions. They defeated
Hartford and
Reginald
Love for the championship on June 23, 1974, but
dropped it back to
them on September 8. They defeated them for the championship again
on December 29, 1974.
He also challenged Jack Brisco for the NWA World Heavyweight
Championship in a 1974 Maple Leaf Gardens
main
event. On June 8, 1975, the Crusaders were beaten by the
Kelly Twins (
Pat and
Mike) for the championship, but they won it back
two months later on August 24. They were the final champions,
however, as the championship was retired in September 1977.
After his retirement from active competition in 1984, he settled in
Toronto and began working as an assistant to promoters
Frank and
Jack
Tunney. He later became a television announcer and interviewer
and worked for the
World
Wrestling Federation up until the mid-1990s. He became famous
for his
catchphrase, "Don'tcha dare miss
it!"
Personal life and death
Snip was the real-life brother-in-law of
Dick
Beyer, with whom he won the
JWA All Asia Tag Team
Championship. He was also a talented
ice
hockey player, before he became a professional wrestler. Greg
Oliver, the producer of
Canadian Online Explorer's
wrestling section, described Snip as having a "sly, cheeky sense of
humour", and a man that "never took himself too seriously".
He died on June 22, 2009, aged 77, from
cancer, which had spread to his
spine.
Championships and accomplishments
References
External links