Remy Ma Seemingly Disses Claressa Shields on Connie Diiamond’s “Head Tap”

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Remy Ma Seemingly Disses Claressa Shields on Connie Diiamond’s “Head Tap”

Remy Ma Takes Shots at Claressa Shields on Connie Diiamond’s “Head Tap”

A Swift Diss in the Verse

A tweet by Glock_Topickz sparked conversation this week after quoting a lyric from the new Connie Diiamond track “Head Tap”:

“Why would I fight you when I got a gun b*tch” — Remy Ma seemingly disses Claressa Shields. X (formerly Twitter)

Fans have increasingly interpreted Remy Ma’s second verse on “Head Tap” as a pointed jab directed toward Olympic boxer Claressa Shields. The song, credited to Connie Diiamond featuring Remy Ma, has become the center of speculation as listeners dig into possible references and hidden barbs according to Vibe Magazine.

The Beef: History in the Background

This isn’t the first time Remy Ma and Claressa Shields have been tangled in public drama. Previously, Remy has accused Shields of getting involved with her husband, Papoose, and has aired private messages and allegations across social media. Those claims added fuel to existing tensions and left fans watching closely for follow-up moves.

With “Head Tap,” it appears Remy may be reintroducing the tension into her music. Listeners point to the line featured in the tweet and other aggressive lyrics as proof she’s not backing down.

Why “Head Tap” Matters

The phrase “if you got a gun” used in that line has resonated as a metaphor for power and dominance — a way of signaling that rematches or physical confrontations aren’t necessary when one already holds an upper hand. Using a track by another artist (Connie Diiamond) to drop what might be a diss adds a layer of strategy: it routes the message through a collaboration while keeping Remy’s signature edge intact.

For Remy fans, the verse is proof she hasn’t softened with time — still sharp, still ready for confrontation. For Shields and her camp, it reignites old tensions and invites public reaction.

What’s Next?

  • Response from Shields? As of now, Claressa Shields hasn’t publicly addressed the verse. Whether she replies via social media, an interview, or a diss track is still to be seen.

  • Media echo will likely amplify the line and interviews dissecting whether it was intended as a diss, or merely edgy rap bravado.

  • Connie Diiamond’s position is intriguing — starting a track that becomes a battleground could shift attention onto her own artistry and motivations.


Bottom line: Remy Ma appears to have used her verse on “Head Tap” to rekindle tension with Claressa Shields — delivering lyrical shots that fans are reading as personal. Whether Shields takes the bait remains to be seen.

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Lisa Mckenzie is a contributor of WorldWide Entertainment TV Network Youtube Channel with social commentary, urban media news updates, and more.

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