In 1986, Reitman's 4-year-old son Asa required emergency brain surgery and was transported by air to the
Mayo Clinic. This event had a profound impact on Reitman and would serve as the driving force behind his subsequent dedication to professional boxing. Reitman made a personal vow to revive his boxing career in order to raise money for children's charities. Asa survived the surgery, and Reitman and another parent from the Mayo clinic, Ed Zbikowski, whose son also underwent brain surgery, organized a charity card in Chicago that matched Reitman against Illinois Judge Mike Bolan in a three-round amateur fight sanctioned by the ABF. Reitman won the fight by knocking out Bolan in the third round. The proceeds from the event were donated to St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. In 1988, Reitman performed knee surgery on boxing manager and promoter Tommy Torino, a former middleweight fighter. Torino agreed to take on Reitman in his bid to become a professional fighter and became his manager and trainer. At that time, the Florida State Athletic Commission only allowed boxers to fight up to the age of 35 and turned Reitman down in his first attempt to acquire a professional boxing license. On appeal, Torino traveled to Tallahassee and convinced the commission that Reitman deserved an exception, and after a thorough health exam the commission granted him a license. In 1988, at the age of 37, Reitman turned professional. Reitman went on to win his first three sanctioned professional fights. As a heavyweight, he won seven of his first nine fights, including six knockouts in the first two rounds. All of Reitman's fight purses were donated to various children's charities. He gained widespread media attention around this time and was often referred to as the "
Boxing Doctor" or
Fighting Surgeon, a name that stuck throughout his career. Early in his career, Reitman trained out of the famed
5th Street Gym in
Miami Beach, Florida. Former lightweight world champion
Beau Jack worked as Reitman's fitness conditioner and boxing mentor. When the gym was demolished in 1993, Reitman moved his training to Gerrits Leprechaun Gym in Miami. On February 15, 1991, with a professional record of 7-1-1, Reitman fought a three-round charity exhibition match against the five-time world champion
Roberto Durán at the Hollywood Diplomat Hotel in Miami Beach. On November 11, 1991, Reitman fought heavyweight Tim Anderson for the NBA Independent Cruiserweight title in a televised fight. Though Reitman scored two 9th round knockdowns, the fight ended in a draw. In March 1992, Reitman was the 12th ranked Heavyweight boxer in the world according to the International Boxing Council. On December 12, 1995, in a scheduled 10 round main event fight, Reitman lost to heavyweight
Peter McNeeley, who had only been defeated twice in his career, with one of those defeats having occurred at the hands of
Mike Tyson several months earlier. In December 2000, Reitman fought Kenny Lunkins in a scheduled 10 round main event at
War Memorial Auditorium in Fort Lauderdale, FL. At the age of 50, Reitman was the state of Florida's oldest active fighter. Reitman retired from boxing in 2002 at the age of 52, with a lifetime record of 13-7-6, with 11 knockouts. ==Professional boxing record==