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Contents

Intro to Boxing 12
Introduction to boxing training and conventional
wisdom for new boxers. Getting started, finding the
right gym and equipment.

Day 1 - Stance & Footwork 28


Learn how to move around opponents in the ring. The
proper boxing stance and footwork allows you to
punch, defend, and move with ease.

Day 2 - Straight Punches 70


Straight punches are the fastest and safest ways to hit
your opponent. Learn the fundamentals of effective
punching. How to throw the jab, right cross, and the
basic 1-2 combination.

Day 3 - Curved Punches 103


Curved punches come from deadly angles, easily
stunning your opponent. Learn how to throw powerful
hooks and uppercuts, to the head and body.

Day 4 - Basic Defense 122


Basic defensive techniques, like blocking and parrying,
rely on your hands for defense. Learn how to protect
your entire body with blocks and parries.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 4


Image caption Day 5 - Advanced Defense 141
Advanced defensive techniques, like rolling and
slipping, rely on body movement for defense. Learn
how to slip and roll with the punches to free your
hands for countering.

Day 6 - Punch Combinations 170


Learn how to expose and penetrate opponents with
deadly punch combinations. Develop your offense and
defense with mitt drills and over 60 combinations.

Day 7 - Counter Punching 184


Counter punching is the essence of boxing, and boxing
is the ability to hit and not get hit. Discover over 40
ways to counter the jab, cross, hook, and uppercut.

Day 8 - Advanced Skills 215


Advanced boxing skills will maximize your fighting
effectiveness and efficiency. Learn tips and tactics to
progress beyond the fundamental technique.

Day 9 - Boxing Workouts 239


Follow the weekly workout routine to develop your
boxing skills and conditioning. Learn how to train and
hit the bags properly.

Day 10 - Sparring 279


Sparring drills to develop your skills inside the
ring. Learn the classic boxing style and general fight
strategies for different styles of opponents.

Final Words 291


Answers to popular boxing questions and parting words
of advice. CONGRATULATIONS!

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 5


Detailed Contents
Intro to Boxing 12
How to Learn Quickly ...................................................................................................................................14
Boxing Equipment .........................................................................................................................................16
How to Find a Good Boxing Gym ........................................................................................................16
Trainer & Partner ......................................................................................................................................19
Handwraps ..................................................................................................................................................20
Boxing Gloves .............................................................................................................................................21
Mouthguard ................................................................................................................................................22
Heavy Bag ...................................................................................................................................................23
Speed Bag ....................................................................................................................................................24
Double-end Bag .........................................................................................................................................25
Headgear ......................................................................................................................................................26
Boxing Shoes ...............................................................................................................................................26
Jump Rope ...................................................................................................................................................27
Round Timer ...............................................................................................................................................27

Day 1 - Stance & Footwork 28


Boxing Stance ..................................................................................................................................................29
Boxing Stance - lower body ...................................................................................................................30
Boxing Stance - upper body ..................................................................................................................40
Boxing Stance (Checklist) .........................................................................................................51
Boxing Footwork ............................................................................................................................................52
Step-Drag .....................................................................................................................................................53
Pivot ...............................................................................................................................................................57
Bounce Step .................................................................................................................................................60
Shuffle ...........................................................................................................................................................63
5 Boxing Footwork Tips ...........................................................................................................................66
Footwork Drills ...........................................................................................................................................68
Footwork (Checklist) ..............................................................................................................................69

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 6


Day 2 - Straight Punches (Jab & Right Cross) 70
How to Punch ..................................................................................................................................................71
Jab ........................................................................................................................................................................73
Step Jab .........................................................................................................................................................79
Backstep Jab ................................................................................................................................................81
Pivot Jab .......................................................................................................................................................83
Body Jab .......................................................................................................................................................85
Double Jab ...................................................................................................................................................87
Left Cross ......................................................................................................................................................89
Right Cross .......................................................................................................................................................90
Right Cross Variations .............................................................................................................................96
1-2 Combination (Jab & Cross) ................................................................................................................97
Stationary 1-2 .............................................................................................................................................97
Power 1-2 .....................................................................................................................................................98
Moving 1-2 ..................................................................................................................................................99
Backfoot 1-2 .............................................................................................................................................100
Straight Punches (Checklist) ..................................................................................................................102

Day 3 - Curved Punches (Hook & Uppercut) 103


Left Hook ........................................................................................................................................................104
Left Hook to the Body ............................................................................................................................109
Pivot Left Hook ........................................................................................................................................112
Left Hook Tips ..........................................................................................................................................113
Uppercut .........................................................................................................................................................115
Uppercut Tips ...........................................................................................................................................119
Hookercuts ................................................................................................................................................120
Curved Punches (Checklist) ...................................................................................................................121

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 7


Day 4 - Basic Defense (Blocking & Parrying) 122
Blocking Punches ........................................................................................................................................124
Blocking the Jab ......................................................................................................................................124
Blocking Straights to the Head ..........................................................................................................125
Blocking Straights to the Body ...........................................................................................................126
Blocking Hooks to the Head ...............................................................................................................127
Blocking Hooks to the Body ................................................................................................................128
Blocking Uppercuts ................................................................................................................................129
Blocking Tips ............................................................................................................................................131
Parrying Punches ........................................................................................................................................132
Down Parry ..............................................................................................................................................133
Side Parry ..................................................................................................................................................134
Circle Parry ...............................................................................................................................................136
Parrying Tips ............................................................................................................................................138
Basic Defense (Checklist) ........................................................................................................................140

Day 5 - Advanced Defense (Rolling & Slipping) 141


Rolling Away from Punches ....................................................................................................................143
Rolling Right Hands ...............................................................................................................................145
Rolling Left Hooks ...................................................................................................................................147
Rolling Under Punches ..............................................................................................................................149
Secret to Rolling Under Punches .......................................................................................................151
Rolling Under a Left Hook ...................................................................................................................152
Rolling Under a Right Hand ................................................................................................................153
Practicing Shoulder Rolls .....................................................................................................................157
Slipping High Punches (3-point slip) ...................................................................................................158
Slipping the Jab .......................................................................................................................................161
Slipping the Right ....................................................................................................................................161
Slipping the Hook ....................................................................................................................................161
How Not to Slip ............................................................................................................................................162

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 8


Slipping Low Punches (2-point slip) ....................................................................................................164
Slipping Down Left .................................................................................................................................166
Slipping Down Right ..............................................................................................................................166
Advanced Defense (Checklist) ..............................................................................................................169

Day 6 - Punch Combinations 170


Punch Numbering System .......................................................................................................................172
Easy Combinations .....................................................................................................................................173
Basic Straight Combinations ...............................................................................................................173
Full Punch Combinations .....................................................................................................................174
Inside Combinations ..............................................................................................................................174
Tricky Combinations ..............................................................................................................................175
Advanced Combinations ..........................................................................................................................176
Counter Combinations ..........................................................................................................................178
Mayweather Mitts Sequence ...............................................................................................................179
Tips for Mittwork .....................................................................................................................................179
More Focus Mitt Drills ...............................................................................................................................180
Reflex Drills ...............................................................................................................................................180
Movement Drills ......................................................................................................................................182
Combinations (Checklist) ........................................................................................................................183

Day 7 - Counter Punching 184


Countering Straight Punches ..................................................................................................................186
Countering the Jab .................................................................................................................................186
Countering the Right Cross ................................................................................................................189
Countering Curved Punches ...................................................................................................................195
Countering the Wide Right ..................................................................................................................195
Countering the Left Hook .....................................................................................................................198
Countering the Left Hooks to the Body ...........................................................................................202
Countering Rights to the Body ...........................................................................................................204
Countering Uppercuts ...........................................................................................................................206

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 9


Countering Southpaws .............................................................................................................................208
Countering the Southpaw Jab ............................................................................................................208
Countering the Southpaw Left Cross ...............................................................................................210
Countering Southpaw Hooks & Uppercuts ....................................................................................212
Counter Punching Tips ..............................................................................................................................213
Counter Punching (Checklist) ...............................................................................................................214

Day 8 - Advanced Skills 215


Training Tips ..................................................................................................................................................217
Punching Tips ...............................................................................................................................................221
Offensive Rundown (Comparing Strengths of Different Punches) ........................................227
Punching (Checklist) ............................................................................................................................229
Defense Tips ..................................................................................................................................................230
Defensive Rundown (Comparing Strengths of Different Defense Techniques) ..................234
Defensive Skills (Checklist) ................................................................................................................236
Footwork Rundown (Comparing Strengths of Different Footwork Techniques) ................237
Footwork Skills (Checklist) ................................................................................................................238

Day 9 - Boxing Workouts 239


Working Out Properly ...............................................................................................................................240
Shadowboxing .........................................................................................................................................241
Heavy Bag Training ...............................................................................................................................242
Speed Bag Training ................................................................................................................................246
Double-end Bag Training .....................................................................................................................250
Maize Bag Training ................................................................................................................................252
Jump Rope Training ...............................................................................................................................253
Partner Training ......................................................................................................................................256
Most Important Fighting Muscles ........................................................................................................258

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 10


Boxing Workout ...........................................................................................................................................262
Monday (Power Conditioning) ............................................................................................................263
Tuesday/Thursday (Sparring) ..............................................................................................................269
Monday/Wednesday (Speed Conditioning) ...................................................................................270
Friday (Easy Day) ....................................................................................................................................276
Saturday / Sunday (Resting) ...............................................................................................................277

Day 10 - Sparring 278


Sparring Drills ...............................................................................................................................................280
Sparring Tips .................................................................................................................................................283
Hard Sparring ................................................................................................................................................284
Classic Boxing Style ....................................................................................................................................285
Fighting Strategy (Tactics for Different Styles of Opponents) ....................................................287

Final Words 291


Words of Advice ...........................................................................................................................................292
Top 10 Boxing Questions ..........................................................................................................................295
Final (Checklist) ...........................................................................................................................................299

CONGRATULATIONS! ...........................................................................................................................300

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 11


Intro to Boxing

Handwraps
Handwraps protect your hands when you punch, preserving them
for use inside and outside of boxing. Your hands are made up of
tiny bones that can be easily injured by throwing punches. Proper
handwraps (and handwrapping technique) will help prevent
injuries. Handwraps aren’t there to cushion the impact or protect
your knuckles, its purpose is to tighten the hand into a solid unit
when you punch so that the small bones don’t move independently
during impact.

Recommended for amateur-level fighters and beginner boxers:

• 120” handwraps (fighters 150lbs & under)


• 180” handwraps (fighters above 150lbs)
• semi-elastic or slightly stretchy cotton (stay away from the hard, thick-weave wraps)
• Mexican style handwraps - TitleBoxing.com (my favorite handwraps)

YOU MUST USE HANDWRAPS!


You might get along without wrapping your hands for a while but you risk serious injury
later when you develop your punching power. You might have seen professional boxers
using extra gauze, padding, tape, etc—you don’t need to worry about that. The pros need
that extra protection because they’re throwing harder punches, potentially nursing old
hand injuries, and fighting longer fights with smaller less padded gloves. For this reason, it
takes them much longer to wrap their hands — at least half an hour everyday to wrap their
hands. For amateur fighters, it’s not really necessary.

Additional Resource:
• How to Wrap Your Hands

NOTE

Stay away from the “gel-wraps”. These are sold nowadays as a


quick and easy way to protect your hands without having to
wrap them. They’re look cool and feel nice but unfortunately
they don’t support your hand correctly. They offer minimal
cushion over the knuckles and fail to tighten your hand when
you make a fist.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 20


Intro to Boxing

Boxing Gloves
Boxing gloves protect your hands when you punch, and
keep your opponent’s facial skin from tearing. Males
typically wear 16oz gloves and females wear 12oz or 14oz
training gloves. Serious boxers will have different size
gloves for training, sparring, and competing. For a 145lb
guy like myself, I use 12oz training gloves for bagwork,
16oz sparring gloves for sparring, and then competition
gloves at whatever the official size is for my weight class. I
do sometimes use 16oz gloves for bag work.

General tips about boxing gloves:

• Laces might fit better around your wrists but make it


hard to put the gloves on by yourself.
• Training gloves are for all-around general boxing use
• Bag gloves are densely-cushioned for long-lasting use on the heavy bag.
• Sparring gloves are softer with more cushion for less damage to your opponent, but they
will go flat quickly if you use them on the heavy bag.
• Competition gloves are designed for use in boxing competitions. They are made to
official regulation size and shape (depending on your weight class), usually lighter and less
padded than regular gloves so they aren’t meant for everyday training.
• Bigger fighters (above 165lbs) may use bigger gloves such 18oz and up for training/
sparring. These sizes aren’t recommended for smaller fighters because they slow you down.
• A good pair of boxing gloves will last forever and protect your hands better. Cheap gloves
make pro-longed punching very uncomfortable and are likely to lead to hand/wrist injuries.
• If you don’t know what a good boxing glove feels like, visit a boxing gym and try some on
before you purchase anything. ALWAYS BUY A RESPECTABLE BRAND!

Good boxing glove brands:

• Ringside, Rival, Grant - excellent quality & comfort


• Fighting/Title/ProMex - inexpensive but good (don’t buy anything cheaper than these)
• Winning - expensive, excellent padding, used by many pro’s
• Cleto Reyes - excellent gloves, their pro gloves have minimal padding (punchers’ gloves)

‘Crappy’ boxing glove brands:

• Century, PRO Boxing Equip, any *CHEAP* Everlast stuff that you see at discount sporting
goods stores.

Additional resource: Boxing Gloves Buyer’s Review

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 21


Intro to Boxing

Heavy Bag
The stereotypical piece of boxing equipment. It’s fun to punch and makes
for a good workout. Most people use it to develop punching power but
it can do more than that if you incorporate different heavy bag workouts.

Heavy bag tips:

• When you hang a heavy bag, use longer rope so that the heavy bag can
swing over a wider distance.
• The punching bag weight can be anywhere from 50-100% of your body
weight. It should be heavy enough not to bounce wildly when you punch,
yet light enough that it swings slowly allowing you to move around with
it as you throw combinations.
• Hang the bag so the center of it is around your head level, yet still low
enough to practice body punches. (Just a general idea.)
• The material of the heavy bag affects how long it lasts and the sound it
makes. If your heavy bag is indoors, the material won’t matter very much.
I generally like leather bags that make a loud smack sound when I hit it
right.
• As you become more skilled, working the double-end bag will develop
your boxing abilities better than the heavy bag.

NOTE

I don’t recommend these boxing stands because it doesn’t allow the bag to swing freely.
You can’t move around it, moreover throwing punches without using footwork isn’t
realistic of actual fighting.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 23


Intro to Boxing

Speed Bag
The speed bag is another fun boxing workout that
develops speed, timing, rhythm, accuracy, and arm
endurance. This is standard at any boxing gym but
here are some tips if you plan on buying one for your
house.

Speed bag purchasing tips:

• If you’re ever buying a speed bag, make sure it’s got


2 support bars. NEVER buy the kind with only one,
because then it will wobble like hell, screw up your
speedbag rhythm and ultimately drive you crazy. The
best speed bag platforms cost at least $200, buy one
if you absolutely fall in love with it (and don’t mind
the noise at home).
• If your speed bag platform shakes too much, try using a smaller speed bag AND/OR
putting a heavy weight on top of the platform.
• You can improve the smoothness (or squeakiness) by upgrading the swivel.
• Small speed bags are typically meant for more experienced boxers but you can quickly get
the hang of smaller ones pretty quickly.
• Having a thick platform gives the whole speed bag unit more stability. Again, make sure
you get a quality speed bag platform. Try to avoid the cheap ones that come with a thin
board.

NOTE

Avoid speed bag platforms with only one support bar. These will eventually wobble and
throw off your rhythm. They are useless junk, you will end up replacing it.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 24


Intro to Boxing

Double-end Bag
This is my favorite bag for developing higher-level boxing skills.
The double-end bag develops your hand speed, accuracy, timing,
and coordination as well as punch endurance. Best of all, it’s
very quiet, cheap, and easy to install. I had one in my room for
years allowing me to work on combinations every time I walked
through my room. It made little noise and never bothered anybody
(compared to the heavy bag and speed bag).

I recommend buying a small double-end bag, 8” diameter, even


if you’re a beginner. The bigger ones are much too slow and too
easy to hit. The small ones will develop your skill faster; make sure
you start off slow. I also recommend going to a hardware store and
getting a higher quality elastic band. Mount the bag to your
ceiling and weigh it down to the floor with a weight.

Mirror
Having a mirror or any reflective surface is a great way to know if your form is correct.
You need to know where your hands are going, and a mirror will tell you that. It’s highly
recommended for beginners to shadowbox in front of mirrors, so they know exactly where
their hands are going at all times and what they look like to an opponent.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 25


Intro to Boxing

Jump Rope
Having your own jump rope is great because you
always have it adjusted to your height. You can take it
with you and have a great workout anywhere anytime.
It’s great for improving your cardio, footwork, speed,
and total body conditioning. At the cost of only $5,
there’s no reason why you shouldn’t have your own.

Jump rope purchasing tips:

• Avoid thick jump ropes, they spin too slowly.


• Get licorice ropes. Avoid the leather ropes, they hurt like hell when you mess-up.
• Small plastic handles are best for speed. Avoid jump ropes that come with thick handles,
you want something lighter for faster revolutions.
• Jump ropes usually come with adjustable lengths. The handles of your jumprope should
come up to your armpits if you step one foot in the middle. A 9’ length can fit someone up
to 6’3” tall.

I recommend buying these: Boxer’s Speed Jump Ropes - BuyJumpRopes.net

They work great for boxing because they’re thin, light, and they spin quickly. The 90-degree
angle keeps the rope from twisting up and wearing out the handles. If you’ve had jump-
rope handles crack before, you’ll know what I’m talking about. This is cheap and by far the
best rope I would recommend for all boxers.

Round Timer
The round timer helps you train at regular boxing intervals
so you get use to performing at the 3-mins (ON) and 1-min
(REST) intervals. This is where being in a gym comes in handy.

If you’re not in a gym, you can buy this handle little interval
timer by Everlast.

Geared up and ready to rock? Let’s get to boxing...

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 27


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

Basic Boxing Stance


The first time I walked into a boxing
gym, I couldn’t wait to get in the
ring and throw punches. I didn’t
know you actually had to learn how
to stand correctly. I thought I stood
just as I’ve seen many fighters do
in the past (feet at shoulder width,
fists at chin level, bouncing a little).

My trainer, Jerry, put me in my place


right away, testing my stance by
slapping my shoulders. It was pretty
humbling as I fell off balance
immediately. Jerry spent the next 15 minutes showing me every detail of the boxing stance.
He showed me how to angle my feet, where to place my hands, where to lean my head,
and so forth. More importantly, he explained the importance of a good boxing stance.

A good boxing stance allows you


to move, punch, and defend.

A good boxing stance allows you to move, punch, and defend at all times. The basic
boxing stance you’ll learn today will help you to move well from a covered stance, while
still allowing you to throw deadly punches from both hands. It’s easy to do and highly
recommended for all beginners.

NOTE

As you get better, your stance may change to give you better reach with some punches while
leaving you more vulnerable to others. For the beginner, it’s best to stay in the most neutral
stance possible!

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 29


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

1. Toe-heel alignment line

Imagine a straight line going from you to your opponent. Now place the heel of your back
foot and the toe of your front foot on the edge of the line. Keep your feet on this
imaginary toe-heel alignment line when you box.

The toe-heel alignment line is a great guide for


beginner boxers to stand with balance, mobility,
and reach. Standing on the line or too far off the
line could make the stance less effective.

NOTE

Taller or stockier fighters may stand with their feet a little wider than the line. Just a few
inches from the line, but no wider than that.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 30


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

Common Mistakes:

• Too sideways

Stepping over the toe-heel alignment line


will result in decreased balance and less
reach on the back hand. You will fall when
your opponent throws a left hook, even if
you block it. In fact, try standing like that
and have your opponent slap your right
shoulder. If you fall over, your stance is too
sideways.

• Too square

Standing square exposes your torso much


more to your opponent. Your jab has a
shorter reach and you have less mobility
going backwards; you also fall backwards
easily if pushed. Again, it’s ok for bigger
guys to stand a few inches wider than the
toe-heel line, but no further than that.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 31


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

2. Feet Distance Width

HIGH & HEAVY - stand as high as you can while still feeling heavy.

I created a method for figuring out the perfect width for your boxing stance, which I call
it the “HIGH & HEAVY” method. It will teach you how to fine-tune your stance to find the
perfect foot distance every time.

The correct distance between your feet gives you balance, mobility, height & reach, and
efficiency of movement. You will be able to throw and defend against harder punches while
still maintaining your ability to move effortlessly.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 32


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

The HIGH & HEAVY Method


Stand with your feet at shoulder width, knees slightly bent.
Then rock side to side, lifting each foot slightly off the ground.

Keeping your body straight, rock side


to side shifting your weight from
one foot to the other. Bring your feet
closer or wider while you rock side to
side. Your feet are too close together
(too high) when your body is rocking
too slowly and you feel easily off-
balanced. Your stance is too wide (too
heavy) when you can barely rock at all.

Find your perfect foot distance


between HIGH & HEAVY!

Standing high gives you mobility and reach! You


stand taller and reach farther. Your feet are closer
together allowing you to extend your legs farther
for shorter steps.

Being heavy gives you balance and power.


Lowering your center of gravity increases your
balance and power to throw or defend punches.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 33


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

Common Mistakes:
• Too high

Standing too high gives you less control over your


balance. You will lack the “weight” to throw or defend
against punches. I call this problem “floating hips”. You
can fix this by getting “heavy”, which is to spread your
feet a little bit. Don’t forget to bend your knees a little.

• Too wide (too heavy)

A wide stance wastes energy and decreases mobility. The


wide stance forces you to shift weight drastically from
one leg to the other when you move, making each leg
work harder. Your legs exert unnecessary horizontal force
against each other (further adding to gravity’s downwards
force). Even just standing still will tire out your legs.

The wide stance gives you less room to spread your feet,
less range to pivot, forcing you to take smaller steps or
jump around.

Standing taller results in the most efficient use of leg


strength. Your legs exert more upwards force (effectively
counter-acting gravity.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 34


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

3. Foot angle
Front foot at 30-degrees, back foot at
45-degrees.

The general rule is to always point your front foot


at your opponent. This gives you good reach with
punches from both hands. Pointing the back foot
45-degrees diagonally gives you pivoting room to
throw both the right cross and left hook.

Common Mistakes:
• Front foot too straight or too sideways

When your front foot is too straight/parallel to the line,


you expose too much of yourself to your opponent. If
your front foot is too sideways, you lose range with both
hands because your left shoulder is turned over too
much, and your right hand can’t reach because your right
hip can’t pivot over (the left foot angle controls your
range of hip motion).

• Back foot too forward or too sideways

Pointing the right foot forward into your opponent makes


your body face forward, making you a bigger target and
taking pivoting power off your right cross. Pointing your
right foot too much sideways might spread your balance
and make you susceptible to falling over your heels.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 35


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

4. Knees bent, back heel lifted

Front foot flat, back heel lifted, knees slightly bent.

Bend your knees slightly. You don’t actually have to BEND your knees, it’s more like “don’t
straighten your legs, don’t lock your knees”. Stand naturally.

Keep the front foot flat for stability. The back heel
is lifted to pivot quicker into a right cross or left
hook. Having the back heel lifted also improves
your balance and mobility since you can pivot it
around, raising and lifting it to manipulate your
balance and body position.

Even though your front foot is flat, you always


focus the weight on the balls of your feet. This way
you move fluidly with more control.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 36


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

Common Mistakes:
• Standing with Straight Legs

Standing with straight legs gives you less balance and less fluidity in your movement. You’ll
punch with less force and fall over easily if you get pushed.

• Dropping the back heel

Dropping the back heel will take you longer to pivot into a right cross. Your left hook might
also have less power (you’ll see why later). You’re also much less mobile when both heels
are planted.

• Standing on the balls of both feet

Lifting both heels will make you feel more agile but I don’t recommend this for
beginners. Most beginners don’t have efficiency of movement and will end up wasting
energy standing on the balls of both feet. Beginners also don’t have a strong sense of
balance yet and so they’ll lose balance during exchanges because they don’t have a
planted foot. Take it slowly and keep that left foot planted in your normal boxing stance.
You can stand on the ball of the front foot but keep the heel down!

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 37


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

5. Even Weight distribution

Distribute your body weight evenly between both feet.

The key to weight distribution is to stay balanced. Having your weight centered between
both legs allows you to move in all directions and punch with both hands. It’s not enough
to be centered between your legs, you must actively be aware of where your center of
gravity is. Just because you look balanced doesn’t mean you are.

Not only will you move and punch more powerfully, you will be able to move faster using
LESS energy. A good tip is to never let your head lean past your knees.

Staying balanced allows you


to move and punch in all directions.

NOTE

Your back leg might feel that it’s taking more weight since you’re standing on the ball of
your back foot. If anything, your weight might be 55%/45% with more on the back foot—
this is OK! An easy way to tell if you’re balance is to lift one foot momentarily and then
the other. If it’s easier to lift one foot than the other, your weight is not evenly distributed.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 38


Day 1 - Stance & Footwork

Common Mistakes:
• Weight too much on front leg

Many boxers end up “sitting” on their left foot because it’s flat against the ground whereas
the right foot is not. You can remedy this by remembering to focus your weight on the
balls of BOTH FEET even as the front foot is flat on the ground.

Putting too much weight on the front leg might increase the strength of your hook but
weakens your back hand. Going forward might be easier but moving backwards will take
up more energy since you have too much weight on the front leg. Leaning too much
weight on the front leg makes you vulnerable to counters when you get tired.

• Weight too much on back leg

Your right cross might feel stronger but your left hook will have less power. Again, you
might move backwards easier but moving forwards will be more difficult (taking more time
and energy when you try to counter). Too much weight on the back leg also makes it easy
for your opponents to push you back off balance.

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6. Angle your upper body

Turn your upper body at an angle.

If you’ve placed your feet in the correct position from previous steps, your torso will
naturally turn diagonally. Face your body forward at a slight angle toward your opponent
without exposing your body square on. In the picture above, I am facing my opponent with
my shoulders diagonal making my body a thin target.

The reason my body is facing him is to keep him inside of my punching range (left hook
and right cross). Keeping your torso diagonal makes you a smaller target while still
allowing you good range with all your punches.

TIP

Try placing your shoulders at 10 & 4 o’clock. Try to keep in mind that you want to reach
your opponent with your right hand without having to twist yourself off balance.

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Common Mistakes:

• Body too square

Facing your opponent square on makes your body


an easier target to hit. Here I’m wide open to body
punches as well as head punches. This can make it
much harder and more confusing to defend myself.
Even if I do manage to block the punches, I can
be easily pushed backwards off balance. Turning
sideways makes me a little more slippery.

• Body too sideways

Some defensive fighters will turn sideways to


completely cover their body. This is terrible because
your right hand will be out of range and your
opponent can move easily to your left (outside your
left hook range) and bombard you with punches.
Turning sideways leaves you vulnerable to left
hooks since you’re turning into them. Even if you
block the hooks, you’ll be pushed off balance.

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7. Head tucked

Keep your head down. (Alternative: tilt head slightly to the side.)

Keep your head and chin down to make it harder to hit and easier to defend. You can be
looking straight on at your opponent and if you like, tilt your head slightly to the side.
Keeping your head down is one of those things you must do or else you get knocked out.
Leaving your head up exposes you to dangerous punches and makes it harder for your
arms to protect both the head & body.

TIP

Tuck your chin towards the back of your neck. (Do it gently, don’t strain your neck.)
Don’t drop your chin into your chest, which takes away your vision and leans your head
forward (exposing to uppercuts). If you do choose to tilt your head to the side, make
sure you don’t lean off balance.

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Common Mistakes:

• Leaning forward

Some fighters lean their head forward when trying


to lower their chins. This leaves them off balance or
vulnerable to uppercuts (head AND body). Again,
try to tuck your chin towards the back of your neck
instead of into your chest. You don’t have to touch
your chin to chest. You just need to tuck the chin so
that it’s not sticking out like an easy target.

When you punch, keep your chin BEHIND your


shoulder. Avoid letting it hang forward next to
the shoulder. (Notice how my head is improperly
leaning over my knee.)

• Exposing the chin while boxing

It is very helpful to shadowbox with a tennis ball under your chin. It is usually when boxers
move or punch that they lift their chins. (Everyone has a perfect stance when they’re
not doing anything!) The tennis ball drill will help you drill that habit even as you’re not
thinking about dropping your head.

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8. Palms covering chin

PALMS covering the chin but not the eyes.

Your hands cover your chin but not your eyes. You should feel protected but able to see
well over both gloves. It is important to face your palms inwards, shielding your face with
the big side of the gloves. (Focus on covering your face, NOT catching your opponent’s
punch.)

Right glove on right cheekbone.


Left glove extended out 6-12 inches.

Your right glove will be closer and touching


your cheekbone ( just under the eye). I
recommend beginners to always touch
their cheek since this reminds them to
keep that right hand up. Your right hand is
diagonally covering your cheekbone so it
can block jabs AND left hooks.

Your left glove is extended out a little so


your left jab can attack faster. The jab is a very useful defensive weapon and sometimes
more effective than blocking so extend your left hand while still covering your face.

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Common Mistakes:

• Gloves too low

If you can’t see your gloves from your stance, your gloves
are probably too low. Remember to touch your cheek
with the right glove, and then hover your left glove in
front of you. Don’t forget to keep your head down.

• Gloves too high

Some fighters are so afraid of getting hit that they hide


behind their gloves. Putting your gloves too high covers
your vision and exposes your body. You’ll get hit with
plenty of blocked punches, which still hurt because you
didn’t know where to focus your guard. You’ll get hit to
the body which makes you jerk your elbows down and
expose your face anyway.

Holding the gloves high also makes your head harder


to move because the weight of your arms makes your
upper body sway slowly. Don’t raise your gloves to your
forehead, keep them at cheekbone level and raise them only when absolutely needed.

• Palms facing outwards

Fighters with a kickboxing background sometimes do


this. Advanced boxers do this to slap punches away but I
don’t recommend it for beginners (they get faked easily).
Beginners facing their palms outwards are likely to lift
their elbows, exposing their body. The shoulder rotation
caused by facing the palms outwards tires out their
shoulders and easily builds the bad habit of exposing the
body. Keep your palms facing inwards!

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• Left hand too close

Unless you’re under high pressure, don’t put your


left hand too close to your face. Keep your left hand
extended out a bit so your jabs can reach your opponent
faster. Fighting from too tight of a stance makes it easy
for opponents to keep you on the defensive.

• Right hand in front

Many beginners build a bad habit of putting their right glove in front to avoid getting hit
by jabs. This is a huge problem later on when they get exposed to left hooks. Remember to
keep your right glove at a diagonal on your cheekbone and to move it slightly to defend
punches. If anything, it’s better to get hit by a jab than by a left hook. (The jab only stuns
you, the left hook spins your head which more easily causes a knockout!)

• Tight fists

Don’t stand with your fists tightened inside your gloves. Tightening the fists usually ends
up tiring the arms, shoulders, and even the rest of your body...which makes you tired faster
and doesn’t add power to your punch. Relaxed hands save energy and punch faster. Do
NOT make a fist when you’re not punching.

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9. Elbows in

Elbows in tight to the body.

There’s a big difference between “elbows in” and “elbows down”. You want to keep your
elbows in towards your body to protect against body shots and solidify your boxing stance.
It’s not enough to keep your elbows down, your arms should be touching the body. Some
fighters don’t know this adjustment so they get hit with body punches even when they
elbows are down.

SIDE VIEW: the body is STILL open! Trust me, smart opponents can still hit your body.

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Easy way to bring your elbows in...

1. Raise your arms and bring your elbows together.

2. Drop your elbows so that the back of your triceps touch the sides of your chest.

3. Now relax your shoulders just a bit to feel more natural.

You don’t actually have to do this routine every time you raise your hands but it’s a good
way to check your form. Bring the elbows in nice and tight (with a straight upper body),
don’t hunch over. Stand more upright and balanced instead of leaning forward.

Bringing your elbows in should feel like you’re strengthening your core, not bending over
it. Having your elbows in tight actually makes your punches stronger since your upper
body is a more compact and tighter unit. Your straight punches, like the jab and right cross,
will feel like they’re springing off your chest, instead of springing off the air. Your elbows
help connect your arms with your core instead of hovering them unsupported in the air.

As you develop your body style, your elbows may not remain close to the body since you’ll
be extending the front arm out often. Even still, try to touch the inner arm to the side
of your chest. This position should feel relaxed and natural, not tense like you’re always
curling your arms.

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Common Mistakes:

• Flaring elbows

Terrible form, look at the elbows floating at the sides. This


is called the “chicken wing”. Beginners usually fall into
this habit because they forget to face their palms towards
their face. They tend to face their palms to the side,
which naturally brings the elbows up. Unless you like
taking hits to the body, don’t ever let this happen.

• Floating elbows

Again, the elbows APPEAR to be covering the body but


we know they’re not. He’s still vulnerable to hooks to the
body, just throw punches around the elbows and watch
him fall.

• Hunching over

Ok, here’s an example of somebody who took the


“elbows in” advice to the extreme. Some boxers do this to
cover both their head and body. It looks good in theory
but unless you have a really short neck and torso, you’re
probably off balance and vulnerable to getting pushed
over. Having your arms too close also makes it hard for
you to counter quickly. You might get trapped in the shell
you created for yourself. Yes, you’ll block everything but
it’s hard to win a fight without punching back.

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10. Stay Relaxed

FINAL TIP OF THE BOXING STANCE: STAY RELAXED!

Keep your hands and entire body relaxed. Shoulders relaxed, not raised. Knees bent. Leave
your hands open, don’t make a fist. Try to feel your weight in your feet and not in your hips.
Breathe calmly and feel your body as being relaxed and loose, but ready to strike. (You can
test your stance by having a friend slap your shoulders lightly from the side to see if you
fall off balance.)

Additional Resources:

• The Perfect Boxing Stance

• Perfect Boxing Stance Width

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Boxing Stance Checklist


Is everything in place?

LOWER BODY

• Toe-heel alignment

• Stance is high & heavy

• Front foot 30 degrees? back foot 45 degrees?

• Knees slightly bent, back heel lifted?

• Weight is 50-50?

UPPER BODY

• Angle the body

• Drop the head

• Palms covering chin, not the eyes

• Elbows in

• Everything relaxed?

Good job! You’ve mastered the boxing stance! Now you’re ready to move!

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Boxing Footwork

On my first day of boxing, my trainer had me doing footwork for 30 minutes. I wasn’t
allowed to throw a single punch until I could stand and move correctly. I was excited about
punching so it felt embarrassing to move around a heavy bag in front of onlookers without
punching. To my horror, footwork drills became the first thing I did every day for the next 2
weeks. It wasn’t until my first sparring match that I understood the value of footwork.

You can’t hit an opponent


if you can’t move with him.

Footwork is an essential part of boxing. You need footwork to get into punching range, and
then escape out of range before you get countered. Late in the fight, footwork helps you
chase down weakened opponents or run when you don’t want to engage. Boxing footwork
(as with all boxing skills) must be effective and efficient. Your footwork technique must be
relaxed enough so you can keep moving the entire round.

The 4 basic boxing footwork techniques:

• Step-Drag
• Pivot
• Bounce Step
• Shuffle

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Footwork Technique #1 - Basic Step-Drag


The very first footwork every boxer learns is the basic STEP-DRAG. From your boxing stance,
you move in any direction by stepping with the lead foot and dragging the rear foot. The
step-drag is effective because it allows you to move powerfully around the ring without
upsetting your boxing stance. The step-drag keeps your feet along the ground allowing
you to counter or throw punches when needed. The step-drag is a basic move you’ll need
throughout your entire boxing career. Constant practice will improve it in endless ways to
make it faster, more powerful, or more energy-efficient.

The STEP-DRAG allows you


to attack or defend while moving.

There is one rule when it comes to the step-drag:


...ALWAYS STEP WITH THE LEAD FOOT FIRST!

This means you always step with the leg closest to the direction you are going. If you’re
going forward or to your left, the “lead leg” will be your left. If you’re going backwards or
to your right, the “lead leg” will be your right.

Going FORWARD:

• STEP the front foot up.

• DRAG the back foot up.

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Going BACKWARD:

• STEP back with the back foot

• DRAG the front foot back.

Going to the LEFT:

• STEP to your left with the left foot. (The left foot is the lead foot when going left.)

• DRAG the right to recover to your stance.

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Going to the RIGHT:

• STEP to your right with the right foot. (Again, you always step with the “lead leg” first. In
this case, the right leg is closer to your right making it the lead leg.)

• DRAG the left to come in front of it.

Multiple Side Steps (or Circling)

• When taking multiple side-steps, move your body perfectly sideways to move faster. Don’t
recover your boxing stance until the very last step.

• When circling around your opponent, take multiple side-steps while maintaining your
distance around your opponent. Circling to your left is known as circling TOWARDS your
opponent (circling clockwise around him). Circling to your right means circling AWAY from
your opponent (circling counter-clockwise around him away from his power hand).

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Common Mistakes:

• Stepping with the rear foot

If you step the wrong foot first, your stance will become narrower and you’ll easily lose
balance. Don’t do it.

• Dragging too hard

Some guys put too much weight on the drag foot. Remember to keep your body weight
evenly distributed between both legs. The drag foot should feel like a light slide along the
ground.

• Not maintaining proper foot distance

Make sure the distances of your STEP and DRAG are the same. I noticed that most
beginners either drag in too much (narrowing the foot distance), or don’t drag enough
(widening the foot distance). The point is to make sure your boxing stance and foot
distance is restored once you stop moving.

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Footwork Technique #2 - Pivot


Pivoting is an excellent move for offensive and defensive reasons. Generally it allows you to
move around while staying in range of your opponent. Pivoting around an opponent’s
punch allows you to defend while staying in range to counter immediately. Defensively, you
might use the pivot to swing your body entirely around your opponent to escape.
Offensively, the pivot can be used to give you better punching angles. For example: you
might throw a combination, then pivot around your opponent’s counter and follow up with
another combo from a new angle. Clever use of constant pivots can allow you to outbox
your opponent at close range.

Pivoting allows you


to attack and defend at new angles while staying in range.

The basic step-drag can only pull you out of range and put you back in again. When you’re
in the corner, there’s no room to step-drag your way out, so you’ll have to pivot around
your opponent to escape. There are theories suggesting that real boxers never really go in
and out of range, but instead are forever circling each other simultaneously attacking and
defending.

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Pivot CW off left foot

Keeping your front foot


on the ground, swing your
right foot clockwise behind
you.

• Try to pivot 90 degrees,


then 45 degrees, then even
less than that.

• Focus on balance first,


and then speed.

Pivot CCW off left foot

Keep your front foot


grounded, as you swing
your right foot up
counter-clockwise.

• Try to pivot 90 degrees,


then 45 degrees, then even
less than that.

• Focus on balance first,


and then speed.

• CCW pivots are less often


used because they square
you up against your opponent’s punches, and they’re also harder to do.

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Common Mistakes:

• Floating

“Floating” during the pivot means that you’re lifting your body too high in the air when
you pivot. When you pivot, try to do it quickly and keep your body grounded so you can
quickly counter if needed. Don’t bounce your back foot from one spot to the other. Move it
quickly so you can be ready sooner.

• Lifting the chin

Some guys like to lift their chin especially during wide pivots. They’ll use the pivot
defensively and try to lean their head away as they do it. Keep your head down and cover
your chin, you’ll be ok.

• Over-rotating the upper body

Many boxers over-turn their upper bodies when they pivot clockwise. Their feet only
pivot a few degrees yet their upper body is over-rotated so much their back is facing their
opponent. It’s easy to get countered if you do this. Pivot your body together as one unit
and try to finish your pivots with your body facing your opponent.

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Footwork Technique #3 - Bounce-Step


Ahhh yes, the bounce-step. I’m sure you’ve done this already if you’ve ever tried to mimic
a boxer. It’s simply you bouncing back and forth from one foot to the other. Almost every
beginner did this before their trainers yelled at them to do the step-drag.

The BOUNCE-STEP allows you


to move quickly in and out of range.

When done correctly, the bounce step allows you to move in and out of range to deliver
surprise combinations and disappear before the counters arrive. The problem is that most
beginners have too much bounce or land with too much weight on one foot. This usually
leads to waste of energy and vulnerability to punches. With good technique, the bounce-
step allows you to move quickly for range-fighting purposes.

The main disadvantage of the bounce-step is that you have no power while you’re in the air.
Punches you throw with lifted feet carry little power, and can only shock your opponents
instead of causing real damage. You’re also vulnerable to being punched or pushed off
balance when your feet are not grounded.

Lastly, bounce-steps take a lot of energy and cannot be sustained during a fight. Unless
you have some deadly counters and combinations prepared, it’s not a good idea to use the
bounce-step. During the later rounds of a fight, you won’t have energy to use the
bounce-step so I hope you’ve practiced the step-drag well.

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Bouncing In & Out

Bounce in and out,


landing on the balls of
your feet.

• Go in and out of range


as fast as you can.

• Throw a few punches


before coming back out.

• You can also walk into


range, then bounce back
when your opponent
punches, then bounce
back in again to counter.

Bouncing Sideways

Bounce from left to right,


using the balls of your
feet.

• Go side to side to
confuse your opponent.

• Step out or pivot out to


attack/defend from your
normal boxing stance.

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Common Mistakes:

• Bouncing too much

Many beginners do this to feel explosive or to show that they’re not tired. It’s silly.
Bouncing doesn’t make your punches any more powerful nor effective. If anything, it’s just
wasting energy. I beat guys like these by walking them down with a high guard and letting
them waste all their energy. Beginners are also known to bounce up and down a few
times every time they get hit. It’s a way of “resetting” themselves, but this habit leaves you
vulnerable to punches against more experienced opponents.

• Bouncing too high

Never try to bounce up. The higher your lift your hips, the more energy you waste when
your legs impact the ground. If you’re going to bounce, jump up only high enough to
move your feet across the canvas. Any higher than that will tire you out quickly! (Advanced
fighters can “bounce” without taking their feet off the ground!)

• Punching while bouncing

Your punches are weakest when your feet are floating in the air not grounded to anything.
It might look flashy and feel explosive but it’s not. You punch hardest when your feet are
grounded. Throw your punches when your feet are grounded between those bounces.

• Bouncing too far

Many fighters will try to be slick and evade punches by bouncing across large distances.
It’s a very bad habit that wastes energy because your legs have to explode and counter-
explode when you change directions. When bouncing forward, bounce just enough to
come into range. Fire some punches and get out. When bouncing backward, bounce back
just enough to avoid the punch. Any more than that and you’re wasting energy and giving
up free ground to your opponent. Stay close so you can come back in for a counter again.

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Footwork Technique #4 - Shuffle

SHUFFLING allows you


to move quickly using little energy.

Shuffling is a more efficient way to move quickly. It allows you to cover a lot of ground
using very little energy, but doesn’t allow you to attack or defend. At least with the
bounce-step, you are able to attack when you land.

With the shuffle, you cannot attack or defend without first resetting your feet. The shuffle
is best used when you are out of range and just want to run away from your opponent or
chase him down. Shuffling doesn’t waste energy like bouncing because your feet stay close
to the ground and your hips don’t impact the ground as hard as it does when you bounce.
Shuffling is a swift way to move in one direction, but takes longer to reset your feet for
offense or defense!

Shuffle FORWARDS:

• Swing your back foot towards the front foot.

• Skip forward, swinging your front foot forward as your back foot lands.

• Shuffle several times to cover lots of ground.

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Shuffle BACKWARDS:

• Swing your front foot back towards your back foot.

• Skip backwards, swinging your back foot back as both feet land.

Shuffle SIDEWAYS:

• Swing the left foot towards the right.

• Skip to the right, letting your right foot swing to the side.

• Reverse the instructions to go the other way.

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Common Mistakes:

• Shuffling near opponent

Shuffling brings your feet closer together making it hard for you to attack or defend. If
you’re going to shuffle your feet near your opponent, try to lean away from him or make
smaller shuffles to stay in your boxing stance as much as possible.

• Shuffling too much

Although shuffling is more efficient than bouncing, it can still waste energy if you do
it too much. Remember to stand your ground every now and then instead of moving
unnecessarily all over the ring.

• Shuffling in stance

The shuffle allows you to move fast by breaking your stance. Don’t try so hard to hold
a rigid boxing stance. Let your arms and legs dangle naturally as you shuffle away. It’s a
chance for you to catch your breath and take a quick break.

• Shuffling too slowly

The shuffle is to be used to move quickly. Use your momentum to keep moving across
the floor. It doesn’t work when you do it slowly. Combine multiple shuffle steps in a fluid
motion.

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5 Boxing Footwork Tips


1. Remember Your Boxing Stance
Move around but always remember to end up in your boxing stance! Remember the toe-
heel alignment, foot angle, hand position, etc.! Keep your weight balanced. Always be
ready to defend or punch when you move.

Take smaller steps,


don’t let your feet get too wide or too narrow.

Many beginners let their feet get too close or too far apart when they move. You’ll be
off-balance if you take a punch while your feet are too close. Take many little steps instead
of a few big steps. Big steps leave you vulnerable because you can’t counter when one
leg is in motion. Work hard to maintain the right foot distance when you move around.
(Occasionally your stance will be wider or narrower by a little at times but always try to
return to your ideal position.)

2. How to Move Quickly


Most beginners I see put too much focus on moving quickly. The problem is that they do it
by wasting energy or throwing themselves off balance. The proper way to move quickly is
by taking small relaxed steps, not giant leaps in and out of range.

Instead of trying to move long distances,


focus on moving just inside & outside of range.

Experienced fighters move quickly by staying at the “edge of range”, which means just
outside your reach. They’ll move in a few inches to hit you, and step out a few inches to
avoid your attack. Smaller steps allow you to move quickly in and out of range without
wasting energy or compromising your balance. Try to SLIDE into position instead of
jumping around the ring. Constantly lifting your hips will drain your leg energy.

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3. Effective Fighting Footwork


Fighting footwork is all about precision. Forward movements take you into range without
bringing you any closer to your opponent than you have to be. Likewise, you can use
footwork for defense but don’t run from your opponent. Lifting the body takes tremendous
energy and saps your punching power if you move too much. Stay grounded and only
move when you need to.

4. The SLICK Step-drag


When you do the step-drag, REACH with the lead foot as you push off the rear foot. When
you go forward, reach forward with your front foot as you push off the back foot. As your
weight moves forward, lightly drag your back foot forward along the ground. REACHING
with the front foot as you’re PUSHING off the back foot makes the step smoother and
more efficient. Give it a few tries. The back foot should feel like it’s relaxing forward, not
pushing forward because the body starts moving forward when the front leg releases.

To move slick,
reach with the lead foot as you relax with the back foot.

5. Pivoting Tips
Small pivots are effective for slipping punches and returning fast counters. Big pivots are
effective at close range and for avoiding opponents that like to push into you.

There IS such a thing as pivoting off the back foot but I don’t teach that yet because it’s
advanced. Most fighters really only need to pivot off the front foot. Throwing a jab or left
hook while you pivot CW will make your counter much more evasive and even more deadly.

SMALL PIVOTS to attack or defend.


BIG PIVOTS to escape or spin opponents at close range.

Pivot just enough to avoid the punch and then counter immediately. Big pivots are used
only to spin around opponents at close range.

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Basic Footwork Drills


• Move around with a partner or a swinging heavy bag for 3 rounds.

• Forwards, backwards, sideways, and circling.

• Step-drag and pivots for 2 rounds.

• Add bounces & shuffles for 2 rounds.

• Foot-tag: a fun game where you and a partner try to step on each other’s feet.

If you use a partner, try to stay at arm’s reach the whole time. If one moves in, the other
goes back. If one moves sideways, the other has to respond in any way, match or pivot, in
to keep his opponent in front. If you’re using a heavy bag, give it a little push to make it
swing back and forth slowly a few inches to make you move around a bit more.

Anytime you’re not doing anything, work on that step-drag. It’s the most important
footwork technique. The easiest to do, but the hardest to master!

You know your footwork is good when it feels natural and fluid. When you can move
around the ring without wasting energy and always feel ready to throw or block punches.
Be relaxed and swift, instead of flashy and explosive. If you’re getting tired, you’re trying
too hard. Treat boxing footwork like running, good relaxed technique will get you very far
using little energy.

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Footwork Checklist
Can you do the basic steps?
• STEP-DRAG forwards, backwards, sideways, circling

• PIVOT off the front foot: clockwise & counter-clockwise

• BOUNCE in & out, side-to-side

• SHUFFLE forwards, backwards, and side-to-side

Think you’re slick? Try these tricky footwork combinations...


• Step in, pivot CW, step back

• Step back, pivot CW, step back

• Bounce IN, bounce OUT, pivot CW

• Step in or out, pivot CW, right step

• Back step, left step, pivot CW

• Back step, pivot CCW, left step

• Step in, pivot CW, pivot CCW

Can you do all these without getting tired? Try to make up some of your own! These
footwork combinations will be useful later when you’re evading punches at close range.

Having fun? Time to FINALLY learn the punches!

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Day 2 - Straight Punches
Straight punches are the fastest and safest ways to hit your
opponent. Learn the fundamentals of effective punching. How to
throw the jab, right cross, and the basic 1-2 combination.

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Day 2 - Straight Punches

Day 2 - Straight Punches


Welcome to punching...

You’ve learned how to move your feet and make


yourself a live opponent. Now you’ll learn how
to arm yourself, using your hands as weapons.
Effective punches are more than just power
and speed. There’s angle, accuracy, and timing.
Throwing the punch is one skill; making it land
with devastating effect is another!

A straight punch is the fastest, longest, and saf-


est way to strike your opponent. Straight punches
require less technique to throw effectively, making
them essential weapons for beginner fighters.

Let’s begin with the basic steps of punching:

How to Punch
1. Relax
Being relaxed saves energy and allows you to punch harder. Your muscles must be calm
and fluid, allowing the energy to flow throughout your entire body as you throw the punch.
Being tense stops the energy from flowing and prevents you from throwing your best
punch. Find power through relaxation.

2. Aim
Keep your eyes on your opponent. Don’t look past him, don’t look down. When you throw
a punch, make sure you look at the target. You should be careful not to look so intensely
at a target before you throw since this telegraphs the punch. Never look at the body
when you throw down (this also telegraphs), keep your eyes on your opponent’s head and
shoulders.

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3. Exhale on every punch


Always breathe out on every punch. Make a small breath; don’t exhale all of the air in one
punch. As you throw combinations, you will let out spurts of air with each punch. The
shorter and more explosive the exhalation, the better. Compact explosive breathing will
result in compact explosive punches.

4. Timed impact
Hit with the force of your body all at once. When you exhale, your entire body moves and
“hits” simultaneously. From head to toe, everything moves all at once. The foot pivots, the
hips turn, the shoulders rotate, the arms extend, and the fist tightens.

5. Keep your balance


Always be aware of your balance. Don’t push into your opponents; exert power by finding
contact with the ground. Don’t lean your head past your knees. The best way to develop
balance is to practice your punches with shadowboxing, not the heavy bag.

6. Cover with the opposite hand


When you punch with one hand, protect yourself with the other hand. The hand that’s not
punching should always be defending. Defend with the glove covering the chin and the
elbow protecting the body.

7. Recover
Recover the punching arm quickly to cover the vulnerability you created while punching.
Be careful, however, not to retract too quickly or your punching power will suffer. This
mistake is known as “pulling your punches”. Training will help you sense the right time to
retract your fist.

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The Jab
The jab is a boxer’s most important weapon!

The jab is your longest weapon, the


fastest, and most accurate, uses the
least energy, and leaves you the least
exposed. The jab can be thrown in
a dozen different ways for a dozen
different uses. It can serve as an attack
as well as a defense. You can win an
entire fight using only your jab. YES, the
jab is that amazing!

There’s an old saying that goes, “The jab is the can opener, and the right is the spoon.”
Without a good jab, your right hand matters very little, your left hook matters even less,
and your uppercuts will never matter. If he could only have one punch in a fight, every
experienced fighter would choose the jab. Even Muhammad Ali, the proclaimed “greatest”
relied on his jab.

You will be working on this punch for the rest of your entire fighting career. Great fighters
have great jabs; there is no way around this. You can have a weak cross or a lousy hook,
but you must ALWAYS have a good jab! A good jab has speed, accuracy, and timing, not
just power. If anything, power is the least important attribute of the jab!

What Can the Jab Do?


The jab can cause damage, open a cut, set up your bigger punches, and counter your
opponent’s bigger punches. It can be thrown as a power shot, a fast shot, or even a
pushing punch. It can be thrown while moving forwards, backwards, or pivoting. You can
even throw multiple jabs and put an entire combo together using just jabs. It’s incredibly
versatile and useful in any situation.

The jab is the


most important punch in boxing!

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How to Jab
1. Start from your boxing stance
• Stay relaxed.

Start with your body relaxed. Do not load the punch (i.e.
– tensing up just before). Do not load the punch. It helps
to take a few steps, and then stop before you visualize
yourself throwing the jab. A good boxer throws the jab
from a completely relaxed position so you can never tell
when he throws it.

2. Left arm extends


• Left arm extends.

• Chin tucked straight behind shoulder.

• Exhale sharply as you throw the jab (one breath for


every jab).

• KEEP THE REST OF YOUR BODY STILL! (Don’t move


anything other than the arm!)

Exhale sharply as you shoot out the jab. Make sure your
head is facing forward but with the chin tucked BEHIND
your shoulder. DO NOT reach forward with your head,
you simply face it forward to hide the chin. Tucking the
chin allows you to come in behind the jab.

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3. Arm rotates
• Arm rotation and fist snap at end. (No chicken wing
elbows, push the fist straight out.)

• Shoulder rotates up to cover the chin.

• Fist rotates down to strike.

The arm rotates as it extends, serving offensive and


defensive purposes. First off, it extends your arm into
a stiff spear. Visualize the arm rotation acting the
same way a twisted towel would when you snap it on
someone. The arm rotation also rotates your shoulder
upwards to protect your chin, while rotating your fist
downwards to strike in the proper position (more power
and less chance of injury).

4. Punch impact
• Fist lands with palm facing down.

• Land the punch with a tight fist on the 2 big knuckles.

Turn your fist over so that the palm is facing down when
your punch lands. This reduces the chance of injury
and adds power to the jab. You also want to land your
punch on the biggest knuckles of your fist. Aim to land
with your index finger and middle finger (or even just
middle finger is ok). Landing on these two big knuckles
straightens your wrist, adding power and reducing the
chance of injury. Landing with the 2 smaller knuckles of
your hand (ring & pinky), carries less power and hurts
your hands once you learn how to punch harder.

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5. Jab Recovery
• Immediately retract the arm after impact.

• Rotate the fist back to cover your face.

• Pull the elbow down to protect your body.

Pull the arm straight back to protect yourself from


potential counters. Make sure your hand goes back to
your face and your elbows go back to protect your body.
Do NOT over-recover by leaning back.

Common Mistakes:
• Too much power

The jab is not a power punch. The jab’s biggest strengths are its length, speed, and
accuracy. The jab is meant to stun your opponent and set up bigger punches. If you want
to be a power puncher, save your power for the bigger punches and set them up with the
job. The best jab is a snappy jab! A quick little string and that’s it.

• Dropped right hand

Don’t drop your right hand when you jab. That leaves you open to counter jabs or counter
left hooks. This is a huge mistake and is usually committed by beginners, especially when
they’re throwing the 1-2. Remember to keep that right hand tight to your cheekbone.

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• Lazy recovery

This mistake is usually a result of too much focus on jab power. For beginners, a lazy
recovery can also result from poor conditioning and poor technique. Never forget that one
of the jab’s biggest strengths is that it doesn’t leave you vulnerable. Retract the arm quickly
or you risk eating a dangerous counter right. Don’t throw all your weight into the jab and
don’t leave it hanging out there!

When you first practice that jab, throw it at the air so your shoulder and back muscles get
used to pulling the fist back. Practicing the jab on a heavy bag doesn’t work these muscles
because the bag is bouncing your hand back at you. You’ll be surprised at how quickly your
arms tire in a fight because your opponent is slipping your punches instead of bouncing
them back at you!

Pull the fist back to your face when you recover. Many fighters, even experienced ones, will
pull the hand back to their chest leaving their face still exposed. You don’t have to pull it
ALL the way back to your face, just towards your face is fine. And don’t forget to pull the
elbow down to cover your body.

• Reaching forward

Many beginners try to lengthen or add power to their jab by reaching forward. Keep your
body still where it is and extend ONLY your jab arm. Do not lean forward; do not pull your
head forward. Doing so brings your head unnecessarily closer to your opponent’s hooks or
uppercuts. Keep your head BEHIND the shoulder, not over it or next to it.

You reach with the jab by stepping in, not by leaning your head or upper body. Don’t lean
your head past your knee.

• Not turning over the punches

You lose power when you don’t rotate. If you’re not sure about whether your hands are
turning over fast enough, just slow down your jabs so you can work the rotation muscles in
your forearms and shoulders.

• Pivoting body or foot

Don’t rotate your body or turn your feet. The only rotation you need is in your left arm. Any
other movement you add will only telegraph the punch or diminish your body’s rotation
power on the next punch. NOTE: pivoting the left foot during the jab makes it a “left cross”.

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• Chicken wing

Jabbing with the elbow sticking out on the side is known as the “chicken wing”, which
weakens the jab and potentially telegraphs it to your opponent. A good way to fix the
“chicken wing” jab problem is to stand along the wall and throw jabs as you move forward
along the wall. This works because the wall traps your elbow from flaring up at the side, it
can only go forward.

When you throw the jab, extend the fist first. Extend the fist as fast as possible. The chicken
wing is a result of fighters extending their elbow first and then whipping the fist out like
a backhand punch (common for long-armed fighters). Keep that elbow tight and shoot it
straight forward behind the jab, not on the side of it.

• Telegraphing

One of the biggest mistakes with the jab is telegraphing the jab. This can be with
something as obvious as cocking the fist back before you punch forward. Or something as
subtle as tensing up your chest before you jab. When you jab, do not make ANY motion
before the punch. Throw it straight from a relaxed position. Don’t think of power, don’t
load the punch, don’t cock the punch, don’t do anything other than extend your fist
straight to your opponent.

If it helps, don’t imagine yourself punching, instead imagine yourself trying to touch your
opponent. Reach out and tag him, don’t try to load power into him.

• Lifting your weight (straightening the legs)

This will be the most common punching mistake. Try to lower your hips during the punch
instead of lifting them. Many beginners will lift their weight by straightening their legs
as they punch which raises their center of gravity resulting in a decrease of balance and
decrease of punching power. Keep your hips down! Straighten your arm but not your legs.

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Step Jab
The step-jab is a combination of throwing a jab while taking a forward step. The step-jab
will become your most commonly used jab. Adding the step allows you to move into range
as well as add a little power to your jabs. Many trainers will actually teach their fighters the
step-jab first, and it makes sense.

The step-jab is a jab with a forward step.

1. Throw your jab as you step forward.

• Step forward as you throw the jab


• Visualize your step adding power to the
jab
• Straighten the arm as it lands
• Exhale

TIP

The trick to maximizing the step-jab’s power is dropping your weight when the jab lands.
The jab must land at the moment or slightly after your front foot hits the ground.

2. Recover your front arm and back


foot.

• Recover your arm as you slide your back


foot up.
• Your back foot slides up quickly to
recover into your normal boxing stance.
• Use the step-jab to get closer to your
opponent.

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Common Mistakes:
• Stepping too widely

Stepping too widely slows down your punch or the power behind the punch. You’re also
vulnerable to left hooks while your front foot is extended far out. You’ll still fall off balance
even if you block the hook. Take a smaller step to be more in sync with a faster jab. All you
need a few inches with each step. Don’t leap across the floor. When I step jab, I think to
step forward but under myself, not to reach forward with the step.

• Stepping too slowly

Stepping too slowly shares the same problems as stepping too wide. Your foot takes longer
to hit the ground, thus taking power off your jab and leaving you vulnerable to being
countered or pushed off balance as your foot is still in the air.

• Lifting your hips

Many boxers will jump or explode off the ground during the jab in hopes of adding power
or range. This motion lifts the hips, which lifts their center of gravity, decreasing power and
balance from the jab. Don’t jump or straighten your legs when you step-jab. Instead relax
your hips as you jab. (Learn to do this on every punch you throw). I may repeat this many
times, but it’s because it’s that important!

You can test your balance by throwing a step-jab and leaving your arm extended. Then
have a friend slap your shoulders to see if you’re falling over. If you find yourself falling off
balance, try to relax your hips and visualize dropping your weight the next time you jab.

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Backstep Jab
A great defensive move to create some space as you retreat from your opponent. Simply
throw a jab as you step away from your opponent.

1. Extend the jab as you step back

• Extend the jab as you step back with your


BACK FOOT.

• Don’t lean back, keep your chin down.

• You can also step more diagonally to your


right, you don’t have to step straight back.

2. Recover your front arm and front foot

• Retract your jab arm as you slide your


front foot back.

• This jab might feel weird or powerless


but it’s a great defensive weapon to use
when you retreat. You can follow it up with
a right hand to stop an overly aggressive
opponent in his tracks.

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Common Mistakes:

• Running while jabbing

Although the back step is used in retreat, it’s important not to run from your opponent.
You need to keep your feet on the floor or else that jab will have no power. Be calm, stand
your ground, and let your opponent run into your jab. Impale him with his own aggression.

• Leaning back

When you back step jab, don’t lean away from it. Keep your balance and keep your chin
down! Move back, but attack FORWARD.

• Lifting the chin

Many fighters will lift the chin when they throw the backstep jab. If anything, try to pull
your chin down as you backstep jab. Build this habit so that you always pull your chin down
as you retreat.

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Pivot Jab
The pivot jab is when you throw a jab while pivoting CW off the front foot. The pivot jab is
another popular jab and very useful for creating angles. Offensively, you can use it to come
in and strike your opponent with a jab from the side. The added momentum of the pivot
can make the pivot jab more powerful. Defensively, the pivot jab is useful because you are
swinging your body out of the way as you land a counter jab. Many fighters use the pivot
jab to counter right hands, but it also counters left hooks very well. Throw multiple pivot
jabs to evade as you spin around your opponent while piercing his defense.

1. Stand in front of the opponent

• Prepare for the pivot jab from your boxing stance.

• You can preemptively attack your opponent or wait


for him to strike first.

2. Pivot CW as you jab

• Pivot your body out of the way as you counter your


opponent with a jab.

• Keep that chin down! (Don’t forget to raise your left


shoulder.)

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Common Mistakes:

• Pivoting too much

The pivot is simply to put you at a new angle or to avoid a punch. As long as your head has
pivoted over a few inches, you are fine. Great fighters only make small pivots to make their
pivot jabs faster and more slippery. You also want to make small pivots to give yourself
more room to keep pivoting. The only time you might make a big pivot is when you have
an overly aggressive opponent. In that case, you can use a big pivot and also push his head
after you jab to really keep him away.

NOTE: pivoting too much places your right hand further back making it harder for you to
reach with a follow-up right cross.

• Leaning back

Again, it’s all too common for fighters to lean away when they use the pivot jab defensively.
Leaning away takes power off the jab, puts you off-balance, and exposes your chin!

• Lifting the right foot

Many fighters like to ride the pivot by raising their right foot as they pivot on the front leg.
You need the right foot close to the ground so you can put it down and throw a right cross
if needed. Don’t pivot too slowly and don’t spend too much time on one leg. Keep the
right foot sliding along the ground when you pivot.

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Body Jab
Whoever said the jab wasn’t strong enough to hurt the body never felt a good one. Not
only is the jab strong enough to hurt the body, it’s strong enough to push opponents off
balance. Clever boxers use the body jab to set up the right hand upstairs!

Unlike a jab to the head, the body jab is harder to slip and counter. Most opponents will
pull their elbows down to block the jab instead of countering. Unless you’re being reckless
and predictable, the body jab is a safe way to prod your opponent’s defense.

1. Punch while dropping your center


of gravity

• Step your front foot forward as you jab


to the body.

• Relax your hips, letting your body


weight momentarily sink down to your
feet (this is the technique behind Jack
Dempsey’s “falling step” principle).

• Bend at the waist to the SIDE, not forward.

• Keep your eyes on your opponent’s head area; don’t look down at his body.

• You can have your head facing forward (protected somewhat by the high left shoulder), or
you can lean your head down to the side to go under your opponent’s jab.

2. Move, Push, or Punch again

DO SOMETHING after, don’t just stand there at risk to a deadly counter:

• Follow up with another punch, like a jab or a right to the head.

• Use the fist to push your opponent off balance (great move if he’s blocking, or standing
too tall).

• Or stand up and move away...he’s might counter.

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Common Mistakes:

• Looking down

It telegraphs the punch making you highly vulnerable to counters. Never take your eyes
off your opponent. The experienced fighters will always block if you look down when you
throw to the body. Be sure you’re not telegraphing the punch either by lowering your body
before the punch.

• Bending forward

If you need to bend over to reach the


body, bend your body to the side. Don’t
bend forward straight into him.

Bending forward makes it easier for him


to hit you with uppercuts or pull your
head down and keep you from exploding
with counters.

• Not dropping your center of gravity

It can be hard to explain for some but you want to release your weight as you throw the
body jab. You quickly relax your hips and let it free fall as you throw the body jab. Combine
that with a quick step forward and you should feel your weight powering the jab. You have
to feel your feet getting heavy. It’s not enough to just bend your knees.

It’s a very powerful punch and you can watch how many of the best fighters do it. Floyd
Mayweather does the body jab beautifully. Taking a SMALL step will also help you to drop
your weight.

Additional Resource: Mayweather’s Jab to the Body - Youtube

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Double Jab
The double jab in actuality is just 2 jabs in a row. However, there are many ways to add
variation to this. Most trainers will teach you to throw 2 hard jabs but as you get better,
you will mix it up. Make the first one light to confuse your opponent’s defense, and then
make the second one hard to punch through it. Or you might punch hard on the first one,
and then soft on the second one to push his head back further for your big right hand. Try
throwing the first one at the body to lower his defenses, and then the second at his face to
set up your right hand. Or you might flick 2 easy jabs to pivot around him, and then throw
something else. The possibilities are endless when you throw multiples of boxing’s most
important punch!

1. Step-Jab (first jab)

2. Recover the front arm and back leg...

3. Step-jab again (second jab)

You usually step-in with double-jabs because you’re most likely going to push your
opponent back. Make sure you recover that hand so that you can pop him again with
another hard jab. It has to be hard enough to sting. Don’t be lazy, aim at something! To
make that double-jab faster and have more snap, take very small steps. By the way, you
don’t have to stop at 2; you can throw triple jabs or even more! Most trainers will tell you
to keep throwing your jab the entire fight.

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Common Mistakes:

• Low speed

It’s too easy to try and load up on every jab. It’s more important to focus on speed rather
than power. You want to snap the jabs out quickly before he has a chance to counter. When
you work the double-jab, focus on pure speed and use just enough power to make it sting.

• Not moving in

The double-jab is for pushing back your opponent. The step also increases its power so use
your legs to generate the power instead of the arm. Moving is also good to maintain range
in case he falls back after your first jab.

• Stepping too far

Take small steps. Big steps usually mean slower jabs. You need this to be fast and sharp.
Pepper him with the small step-jabs.

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Left Cross
The left cross is basically a jab but with a front foot pivot. It’s a deadly power punch to be
used in the middle of a combination. For instance if your trainer calls a 1-2-1-2 on the
mitts, you will throw the first “1” as a jab, but the second jab can be a left cross.

Jab while pivoting the front foot CW

• Pivot the front foot and rotate your body


with the jab.

• Recover arm as you rotate the body and


foot foot.

Common Mistakes:
• Throwing the left cross as a jab

The important thing to remember is not to throw a left cross as a jab. Do not start your
combinations with the left cross. It may be tempting for beginners to try and add power
but that’s the not the purpose of the jab. Throwing left crosses instead of jabs will tire you
out, and leave you vulnerable to counters if the opponent evades your punch.

Throwing left crosses in place of your jab, makes it harder for you to follow up jabs with left
hooks.

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The Right Cross


“Your jab is the can-opener and your right cross is the spoon!”

The right cross is your strongest punch


and the first big punch you will learn
how to throw. Anything the jab sets up
is usually followed by the right hand.
Assuming you’ve learned how to box
correctly and jab correctly, the right hand
can be your perfect power punch.

The hooks and uppercuts are powerful strikes you might use in close, but the jab and right
hand will make up over 80% of your punches if not more. It’s no exaggeration that the
good ol’ 1-2 combo might be all you ever need. In other combat sports, like Judo, it’s
common for Olympic Gold medalists to only use 2-3 trips or throws, but it’s more than
enough to win. The jab-right cross combination can be used in such devastating fashion
that many boxers have built their entire careers on it.

Old school boxing gyms won’t teach you the right hand at least until the 2nd day or even
your 2nd week! They’ll leave you on the jab until you can prove to them your jab is perfect.
And they do so with good reason, too. If your jab isn’t fast, accurate, and powerful enough
to stun your opponent, you will never get the opportunity to land your big right hand.
Actually, you probably won’t land anything else either. So before you read on, please make
sure that you truly understand what a good jab is, even if you can’t throw it perfectly.

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How to Throw the Right Cross


There are numerous ways to throw the right. There’s the right cross, straight right, and
overhand right. There are also several other advanced variations that you will learn on your
own! I will be teaching you how to throw a perfectly straight right hand. It’s all you need
and I am sure you will find new ways to throw the right to fit your needs. As long as you
use the proper technique, it doesn’t matter how you deliver that right hand!

1. Start from the chin

• Always start with your right hand


from the chin (don’t telegraph by
lowering your right hand or pulling
it back).

• Your left hand can be at neutral


position or extended if you just
finished throwing a jab.

2. Rotate entire body

• Exhale as you rotate your entire


body.

• Pivot the back foot (drill your


foot INTO the ground, not off the
ground).

• Front foot stays FLAT.

• Rotate the hip & shoulders.

• Other hand is covering the face.

• Bend slightly into both knees.

• Weight shifted towards front leg.

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3. Rotate arm & fist

• Rotate your arm as it straightens.

• Shoulder rotates up to protect the


chin.

• Fist rotates down (palm facing the


ground).

• Head facing forward, tucking the


chin behind the shoulder (as you
learned for the jab).

• In SOME cases, you can lean your head to the side (especially if you’re both trading right
hands)

• Keep your eyes on your opponent, watch for counters.

4. Recover

• Pull the hand straight back to your


face.

• Rotate the body back to your


stance.

• Recovering the body is easier when


you don’t lean forward off balance.

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Common Mistakes:

• Not pivoting the back foot

The back foot pivot is where the right hand gets most of its rotational power. By pivoting
the back foot, you rotate the hip. The hip rotation in turn loads your body weight into the
punch making it far more powerful. The hip rotation will also aid the shoulder rotation
by fully turning your whole body into the punch. It all starts with the back foot pivot.
Beginners usually forget to pivot the back foot. The ones that do pivot don’t realize that
their foot is barely pivoting. Because the back foot pivot is such a powerful move, even just
moving it a little will make your punch feel powerful. When you’re first starting, make sure
you analyze your form in the mirror; your back foot usually pivots a lot less than you think!

• Pivoting the front foot

Your front foot stays flat on the ground when you throw the right. You use it as a stable
base from which you swing the right side of your body. If you make the mistake of pivoting
your front foot while throwing the right, you will have less stability and can fall over if
you’re pushed or hit with a counter. Keeping the front foot flat allows you to pivot that
back foot harder and make your punch more powerful. The only exception to this rule is
when you’re throwing the right after a left hook, in which case your left foot has to pivot
back to neutral position.

• Telegraphing the right hand

This is a HUGE mistake for beginners and even for some advanced fighters. Don’t make
any motions before throwing the right hand! Don’t pull it back or lower it. Beginners are
notorious for committing this mistake especially when they throw the 1-2 combination
( jab-cross). I would say about 90% of beginners will move their right hand slightly when
they throw the jab. Make sure you drill this habit out. Keep that right hand still so that your
opponents don’t see it coming. Any small movement you make will give it away and get
you countered.

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• Leaning forward

Leaning into the right hand increases


your vulnerability to counters like
the uppercut. Leaning forward puts
you off balance making it harder for
you to recover quickly. Don’t let your
head pass over the front leg. Keep
your head behind the right shoulder,
not next to it or in front of it.

Many beginners commit this mistake


because of poor punching technique and little power. They don’t know how to add power
other than to lean forward. Not only is it dangerous and wasting energy, it still doesn’t
hit harder than using proper technique. When you punch, drop your weight DOWN not
forward.

• Pushing OFF the back foot

This is a critical mistake committed


even by experienced fighters. Some
trainers will even tell you to push off
the back foot, giving me no choice
but to disagree. Here’s why...

To maximize punching power, you


drop your weight into the punch. If
you push OFF the ground with your
back foot, your hip will raise, lifting
your body weight and decreasing
the punching power. Instead, you should be pushing down INTO the ground which
further grounds your body, and transfers more power from the ground into your hips, and
ultimately into your punch. Use the calf and leg muscles to push yourself INTO the ground,
not off the ground. (I’m not saying you can’t ever do this, but know why you do it.)

Drill the back foot INTO the ground,


not off the ground!

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• Not pulling back the left shoulder

This common mistake usually leads to a slower, less powerful, and off-balanced right cross.
During the right cross, be sure to pull your left shoulder back as your right shoulder comes
forward. This keeps your upper body in balance and speeds up the rotation, thus increasing
speed and power. You’ll find that it’s easier to rotate back into neutral position or a left
hook.

• Taking eyes off target

This happens often in actual fighting and even on the heavy bag! Some fighters have a
habit of staring at the floor especially when they throw their hardest punches. Others look
away because they’re afraid of getting countered. The important thing is to keep your eye
on the target. It increases your accuracy as well as the power delivered. You actually want
to keep an eye on your opponent’s entire upper body, not just the spot you’re hitting.

• Dropping the left hand

Don’t forget about that other hand. Don’t be lazy and drop it to your waist. Keep it in front
of your face to defend against a counter right! Keeping it high makes your follow-up left
hook quicker!

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Right Cross Variations

There are multiple ways to throw that right hand. In some scenarios, you may have to throw
it a little wider to counter over your opponent’s jab. Or you might aim it downwards to
attack the body. Or you might throw it straighter to penetrate through your opponent’s
guard. Sometimes you’ll want to shift more weight to the front leg because you’re
following up with a left hook to the body. Other times, you want to stay more on the back
leg because you plan to escape to your right.

As long as you learn how to generate power, it really doesn’t matter how you bend your
arm to get the angle you want. Every trainer will recommend that you practice throwing
that right hand as straight as possible, and I’d have to agree. Once you master the body
rotation, you’re free to adjust your right hand to fit the situation.

REMINDER: keep your eyes on top when you throw to the body!

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1-2 Combination (jab-cross)


The infamous 1-2 combination is a jab followed by a right hand. Most combinations you
practice will start off with the 1-2 and then followed by whatever else comes next. The
jab opens up your opponent whereas the right hand does the major damage. If your
opponent’s stunned enough, you can move closer for the left hook followed by another
right hand.

For now, we learn the 4 basic ways to throw the 1-2 combination!

Stationary 1-2

Your feet stay in one place as you throw the 1-2.

• With your feet in place, throw the jab.

• Then throw the right hand as you pull back the jab hand. Be sure to pivot the back foot
when you throw the right.

The stationary 1-2 is good to practice your form but might not be as practical in actual
combat. You will most likely use either the power 1-2 or moving 1-2 more often in combat.

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Power 1-2
This will most likely be your most commonly used 1-2. It’s easy to throw and very powerful.
You first step in with the jab (step-jab), then slide up your back foot, AND THEN pivot the
back foot as you throw the right. The drawback of the power 1-2 is that there is a gap of
time between your jab and right hand. Against faster opponents, you may have to use the
“Moving 1-2” which is more fluid and faster, but with less power of course.

1. Step-jab

• Step forward with the jab.

2. Slide up the back foot.

• Recover the left hand at the same time.

3. Throw the RIGHT CROSS!

Pivot the back foot once it’s finished


sliding up, and throw that right hand.

• Plant that back foot before you


throw the right or your cross will lack
power. When you practice the power
1-2, pause between each distinct
step. Beginners tend to get sloppy
and throw the cross without planting
the right foot.

The trick to throwing the power 1-2


faster to throw is to take a smaller
step, that way you’re not waiting
all day for the right foot to get into
position.

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Moving 1-2
The moving 1-2 can cover ground while attacking; it’s great for speedy boxers or fighters
that like to punch while moving. The moving 1-2 has less power (compared to the power
1-2) because the right foot isn’t grounded during the right cross. Nonetheless, the speed
can surprise opponents and give you time to plant your feet for deadly follow-up punches.

1. Step-jab

Step-forward with the jab.

2. Throw the right while sliding


the right foot up.

• Pivot the right foot as you slide it.

• Use the sliding momentum to


rotate your hips and shoulders.

• Plant the right foot as soon as it’s


done sliding, to give stability to your
follow-up punches.

• You don’t have to slide your right foot forward; you can send it to the side if you want to
move into a different angle. Perhaps for a follow-up left hook? Or a follow-up right hand
from the outside? The choice is yours.

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Backfoot 1-2
This can feel awkward for most boxers, but it will help you deliver a powerful 1-2 with
power AND speed. The trick is to use a back-foot jab to get you into position for the
follow-up right hand. Your body moves in with the jab so that your right hand can follow.
Once you’re use to it, moving up the front foot will feel like more of a trick than a burden.

1. Slide the front foot up first.

• Great move for testing the waters.


Experienced fighters might tap their
front foot forwards and back a few
times before committing to any
forwards movement. In this case, I
test the waters by moving the front
foot without throwing the jab.

2. Throw the jab while sliding your


BACK FOOT up.

• This is known as the back-foot jab.

3. Throw the right hand.

• Notice how both feet are already


in position. Pivot that right foot and
throw the right hand immediately!

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Importance of the Back Foot During the 1-2 Combo


As you can see, throwing the jab is easy. Getting in position to throw the right hand with
full reach and power is what makes the 1-2 so difficult. The reason why you must move the
back foot up is to get your right hand into range. If you leave your back foot behind, your
right cross will not reach your opponent. The 4 methods of throwing the 1-2 is really just
four different ways of moving the right foot into position after the jab.

The key to a successful 1-2 combination,


is getting the back foot into position!

The other problem with not moving up the back foot is a decrease in balance and mobility.
If you throw from a wide stance, you jeopardize your balance. Your stance is also wider
giving you less room to step out, making it harder for you to escape in any direction after
you finish punching. Learn how to move in with the 1-2 combination, and you will always
be in range to add other punches to your combination.

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Straight Punches Checklist


Can you...
• Throw a jab with full arm rotation?

• Throw a jab WITHOUT lifting your hips?

• Keep your chin behind the shoulder when you jab?

• Throw a body jab without looking down at the body?

• Throw a hard right hand into the air without falling off balance?

• Throw a 1-2 into the air without falling off balance?

• Throw a 1-2 without dropping your right hand when you jab?

• Throw a double jab while stepping forward on both jabs?

• Throw a pivot jab without lifting your chin?

• Throw a backstep jab without lifting your chin?

Form and technique is the most important.


I hope you’re ready for the trickier punches: hooks and uppercuts!

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Day 3 - Curved Punches
Curved punches come from deadly angles, easily stunning your
opponent. Learn how to throw powerful hooks and uppercuts, to
the head and body.

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Day 3 - Curved Punches


Curved punches come from an angle, making them harder to see
and potentially more deadly because of how they turn the head.

The Left Hook


The left hook is arguably the most
dangerous punch in boxing. It’s thrown
from the front hand and comes at a side
angle that spins the head, increasing the
chance of knockout (as opposed to a
straight punch which only knocks the head
back). The left hook can cause knockouts
whether thrown to the head or the body.

I must warn you that the left hook is


the hardest punch to master. It may feel
unnatural at first, but having a power
punch in your front hand (the weak hand)
is well worth it.

Many fighters will use the left hook to follow up the right hand and chain together multiple
left hooks, sometimes mixing to the head and body. It makes a great surprise punch
because it comes from the blind side when most fighters are looking forward. It’s great for
targeting the chin, the temple, or hitting the liver on the body.

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How to Throw a Left Hook

1. Throw from neutral position or slightly forward

Your left hand can be neutral or SLIGHTLY forward (like after a right cross.)

• Weight is centered or slightly on front leg

• The right arm is close to the body (covering chin & body).

2. Rotate entire body

Rotate your entire body to the right letting the left fist swing
across.

• Rotate entire body—feet, hips, shoulders, left elbow.

• Shift your weight towards your back leg.

• Drop down flat on your right heel as you pivot the left heel
up.

• Relax the bicep to release the fist, and lift the elbow to keep it
at the same level as the fist.

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3. High Elbow Impact

Left hook lands as the body rotates.

• Left elbow is high and same level as the wrist (for power and
wrist support).

• Try to land with elbow bent at 90 degrees.

• Left shoulder and right glove lifted to protect the chin.

• Make sure your right glove is high so you don’t get hit by a
counter left hook!!!

• Your fist can be vertical or horizontal.

4. Quick Recovery

Recover quickly into your boxing stance.

• Pull the fist back to your face. (If you’re throwing another
hook, rotate back out.)

• Drop the elbow to protect the body.

• Rotate your entire body back to neutral position, or pivot into


a right cross from here.

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Common Mistakes:

• Dropping the right hand (#1 deadliest left hook mistake)

This is the most dangerous mistake you


can make when throwing the left hook.
Many boxers drop the right hand when
throwing the left hook, which is deadly
if your opponent counters with his own
left hook. His left hook, powered by the
combined momentum of BOTH your
hooks, will land on your exposed chin.

Everyone will do this at some point in


their pugilistic career. It’s common to see
even pro boxers getting knocked out because of this mistake. Have a friend keep an eye on
you when you hit the bag and spar. Do everything you can to avoid this deadly habit.

• Over-swing

It is crucial that you pull your hand back to your face at the end of every left hook. You
never know if you might miss the target or your opponent ducks under. In that case, you
must pull your hand back immediately to avoid getting countered. It helps to shadowbox;
practice throwing punches at the air to build these recovery muscles. Think of your left
hook as a boomerang, it loops out and then returns home to its starting position.

• Leaning over

Many beginners fall off balance because


they’re throwing their body weight over
the back leg. Shift your weight TOWARDS
the right foot, not over the right foot.
Bend your knees slightly (lowering the
hips) as you throw the left hook. This will
give you more balance and power.

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• Low elbow

Raise your elbow to the same level


as your fist. Your elbow supports the
wrist, making the left hook stronger and
reducing the chance of wrist injury. The
elbow also serves as a defensive shield
and doubles as a second attack if your
opponent leans into your hook. In many
cases raising the elbow helps your left
hook to counter over your opponent’s
right hands.

• Loading the hook

The power of the hook is not in the arm, it’s in the body rotation.
So don’t telegraph the punch by leaving your arm hanging out
there (unless that’s part of your strategy).

• No elbow arc

The left hook’s power is in the body rotation so you make sure your left elbow swings
across. If your fist is coming across but the elbow isn’t, that means you’re not rotating your
body. Try to imagine that you are slashing your opponent’s throat with your elbow.

• Elbow not landing at 90 degrees

Landing your left hook with the elbow at 90 degrees gives you the most power. When you
throw the left hook, release your elbow wider than 90 degrees and then pull your first back
so the hook lands with your elbow at 90 degrees. This is just a general tip for power, it’s
most important that you hit your opponent.

• Left shoulder dropped

Keep that left shoulder raised. Dropping it leaves you vulnerable and also decreases power
from your left hook. A dropped left shoulder also means your left elbow might be too low.

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Left Hook to the Body


When thrown to the body, the left hook becomes another punch of its own. For some
reason whether anatomically or stylistically, the left hook makes a great weapon for
targeting the body. One body shot can cripple an opponent and paralyze his legs. Even if
his senses and fighting spirit are still intact, he will NOT be able to stand up and fight.

1. Throw from slightly forward stance

Your left hand can be neutral or SLIGHTLY


forward (like after a right cross.)

• Weight is centered or slightly over the


front leg.

• Keep the right hand tight to you


(covering chin & body).

• Keep your eyes on top! (do not look at the body).

2. Rotate on FRONT FOOT

Rotate your body keeping the weight on


your front foot.

• Leave your weight on the front leg

• Drop down flat on your right heel as


you pivot the left heel up

• Pivot your entire left side of your body:


heel, leg, hip, shoulder.

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3. Body Impact

Arc the fist sideways and upwards into your


opponent’s body.

• Use a vertical fist or upside down fist to dig into


the body.

• The left hook lands as the left heel pivots off the
ground.

• Make sure your right glove is high so you don’t


get hit by a counter left hook!!!

4. Recovery

Recover quickly back to defense.

• Pull the fist back to your face. (if you’re


throwing another hook, release the
eblow angle then swing again).

• Rotate your entire body back to neutral


position.

• Or pivot into a right hand punch from


here.

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Common Mistakes:

• Leaning forward too much

Many boxers lean too far forward, trying


to reach the body. Aside from being off
balance and vulnerable to counters, it
doesn’t help your reach at all. You’re also
making it obvious that you’re going for
the body. In the pictures above, you will
see that the proper position is to not let
your head get past your knee.

• Looking at the body

Don’t ever look down when you throw to the body. Keep your eyes looking up so that:
a) your opponent doesn’t know you’re going to the body and, b) you can see your
opponent’s counters.

• Not pivoting the left foot enough

This is understandable because it’s hard to pivot your foot when most of your weight is
on it. Nonetheless, you must pivot your left foot as hard as you can. It really makes a
big difference in power. Next time you throw that left to the body, dig your foot into the
ground and pivot it HARD! The right foot pivot doesn’t matter as much since your weight
is mostly on the left.

• Shifting weight to the back foot

There’s no rule saying you can’t shift your weight to the back for a left hook to the body
but I recommend against this because it takes away your left hook’s range. I would only
recommend shifting weight to your back foot if your opponent is really close and/or you
want to follow up with a different punch angle.

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Pivot Left Hook


Throw a left hook while pivoting. It’s great as an evasive counter punch and works
especially well against fighters that lean into their right hands. Great fighters have made
many knockouts with this left hook. PS: the pivot left hook is also known as the “check
hook”.

1. Start from neutral position or after throwing a right hand.

2. Pivot while throwing the left hook.

• Aim over your opponent’s right glove for a head shot or below his arm for a body shot.

• You can also use a pivoting left hook to get out of the way when you finish a combination.

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Left Hook Tips


Horizontal Fist vs Vertical Fist
A horizontal fist is for shorter hooks or
on the inside. A vertical fist is for longer
hooks or when you want to punch
AROUND an opponent’s guard. Some
boxers can’t throw a vertical-fisted hook,
so they throw with a horizontal fist. Use
what feels comfortable for you.

NOTE: All hooks to the body are thrown


with a vertical fist or even with an
upside down fist like an uppercut.

Long Hooks vs Short Hooks


Many boxers make the mistake of extending their hand out or winding up their arm for
longer hooks. The correct way to lengthen the hook is by relaxing your chest right as you
start throwing the hook. This relaxes your arm allowing your fist to reach out further, you
then tighten your chest as your swing the hook over to the side and back to you. If you’re
throwing short hooks, you keep the chest tight throughout. If you’re throwing long hooks,
you relax the chest for just a split second before the hook. Your hand always starts in the
same position regardless of the hook’s length.

Contracting the Chest & Shoulder


When you throw the hook, tighten the chest and shoulder together. The hook becomes
just an arm punch if you leave the chest or shoulder relaxed. The key is contracting the
chest and shoulder together so that your arm becomes an extension of your body and not
just a free weight being swung around. It also helps to tighten your bicep when you throw
hooks.

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Weight on the Front Foot vs the Back Foot


This subtle difference in technique is a
matter of preference. Some trainers will
tell you to shift your weight over to your
back foot when throwing left hooks,
others will tell you to leave the weight on
the front foot.

Here are some differences between


swinging your weight to the back foot
versus leaving it on the front foot:

• Back foot weight hits harder than front foot


• Back foot loads the right hand
• Back foot has better range for head hooks

• Front foot has better range for body hooks


• Front foot can hit harder at high speeds
• Front foot is better for inside exchanges
• Front foot is better for double hooks (since weight isn’t shifted over)

So there you have it, shifting your weight over to the back foot has more power and more
range if you’re throwing to the head. Throwing to the body, especially on the inside, is
probably faster and more powerful if you leave your weight on the front foot. If you’re
throwing double hooks, you might want to leave your weight on the front foot for the
first hook, and then switch it to the back leg for the second hook. It’s a matter of personal
preference, and I suggest that you experiment with all of them to see which one you like
best.

What About Right Hooks?


The right hooks are more commonly thrown as “overhand rights” which have more of a
downwards loop as opposed to a sideways hook which is easily blocked by the shoulder.
To throw a right hook or overhand right, simply pivot your body as you would for a right
cross but bend the elbow to have a little more arc in your punch. For right hooks to the
body, you can use right uppercuts and even overhand rights.

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The Uppercut

The uppercut is a flashy punch you’ve


probably seen in video games and
movies. Everybody seems to know what
an uppercut is, but not many know how
to throw it properly. It’s probably one of
boxing’s least commonly used punches and
for good reason, too. To throw an uppercut,
you must get closer to your opponent and
expose your chin momentarily.

A proper uppercut is actually not flashy at all. It’s often thrown at close range and with
such quickness that you don’t even see the punch. Although wide uppercuts can cause
massive damage, they leave the puncher extremely vulnerable to counters. The uppercut’s
advantage is not from its power but from its surprise angle. Experienced boxers use
uppercuts to pop their opponent’s head up to follow up with a hook or cross. A well-timed
and well-placed uppercut can knock out your opponent.

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How to Throw an Uppercut

1. Starting from neutral stance


Throw from a normal boxing stance.
Don’t drop your hand or bend your
knees.

2. Shift weight and rotate body

The hand is dropped WHILE you rotate.


(not before).

• Drop the hand only enough to arc


upwards at target.

• Rotate entire body (foot, hip, shoulders).

• Shift weight towards leg opposite of


punching hand.

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3. Fist lands upside down

Fist goes UP, as hips go DOWN.

• Rotate your hand to land with the palm


facing upwards (or facing back at you).

• Drop your hips DOWN as your fist


shoots upwards.

4. Quick recovery

Think of your uppercut as a short


upwards hook.

• Quickly recover your arm after it reaches


head level. Let the uppercut momentum
curve the hand back to your chin.

• Pivot your body back to neutral position


or throw another punch.

NOTE: To throw a left uppercut, simply reverse the directions.

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Common Mistakes:

• Dropping the hand early

Don’t drop your hand before your uppercut. This telegraphs the punch. You drop the hand
as you’re throwing the uppercut, not before.

• Dropping the hand too low

This is the #1 problem with the uppercut. Fighters drop their hand really low (sometimes
to their waist), thinking it adds power to the uppercut. Well, it doesn’t. You only drop that
fist low enough to shoot upwards into your opponent. Just arc the uppercut a few inches
lower than you need. Anything lower than that, you’re unnecessarily exposing yourself.

• Shooting the hand too far up

This is a common mistake that follows the last one. Many boxers will shoot the uppercut all
the way through, causing their uppercut to fly over their heads when they miss. Pull your
uppercut back to your chin after it lands or misses.

• Not rotating the body

Make sure you rotate your body on your uppercuts, or else you lose power. Even though
the uppercut feels like a “DOWN & UP” punch, it still requires sideways rotation for
maximum power. A big rotation with slight upwards motion beats a small rotation with big
upwards motion. Get it?

• Lifting the hips

This is the problem committed by everyone I know. Never let your hips raise when you
uppercut. Many fighters think exploding their hips upwards adds power to the uppercut.
It actually takes off power. Your hips are less grounded and aren’t pushing back against
anything. You’ll be more vulnerable to counters and your follow-up punches will take
longer. Keep your hips DOWN! Don’t let your hips go DOWN & UP. Always drop your hips
down when you uppercut. You’ll know you’ve thrown the uppercut correctly when you can
throw 2 fast uppercuts in a row.

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Uppercut Tips
Visualize Straights and Hooks
Instead of thinking of an uppercut as a punch that shoots upwards, visualize it as either an
upside-down straight punch or an upwards hook. Visualizing it as an upside straight punch
helps you to mask the uppercut so your opponent doesn’t feel like you’re dropping down
and loading an uppercut. Treating it like an upwards hook will help you to recover the
uppercut hand faster instead of letting it fly off into the sky.

Uppercut Without Weight Shift


Like in a hook, it is sometimes more practical to throw uppercuts without shifting your
weight. If you’re in close range, it will be faster and more powerful to leave your weight
over one leg and throw from that side. Or maybe you’re looking to throw 2 uppercuts or 2
hard punches from one side then again, leave your weight on that side. Remember to pivot
that foot hard!

Elbows Tight
Try to tuck your elbows close to your body when you uppercut, especially when you’re
throwing to the body. This makes the uppercut more solid and more powerful because
your arm is connected to your body instead of dangling loosely by your side.

Hips Dropping Down


Dropping the hips grounds your weight, adding power to the uppercut. Most people think
the uppercut requires you to shoot your hips upwards but this isn’t true, you actually drop
your weight DOWN even as the punch is going UP. Think of your weight dropping as the
power behind the uppercut, and the upwards fist is just a connection angle. Your arm is just
there to deliver the power, it doesn’t matter how your arm connects to your opponent as
long as it is transferring the power.

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Hookercuts (hook + uppercut)


A hookercut is exactly what it sounds like: a combination of a hook and an uppercut. It’s
a beautiful punch that can be thrown to the head or the body. The angle allows makes it
perfect for slipping through your opponent’s defense and surprising him.

Hookercuts are great for the head or body!

Some fighters throw it more like a hook with an upwards curve. Other’s throw it like an
uppercut with a slight side curve. It doesn’t matter how you do it, adjust the angle to fit
your needs. For some fighters, a hookercut feels more comfortable on their wrist than
regular hooks and uppercuts. Last note about the hookercut, you can throw with the
weight shifting or with the weight over one leg.

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Curved Punches Checklist


Can you...

• Throw a left hook with full body rotation?

• Throw a left hook with a horizontal fist?

• Throw a left hook with a vertical fist?

• Throw a left hook without dropping your right hand from your chin?

• Throw a jab-cross-hook combination without dropping your right hand from your chin?

• Throw an uppercut with full body rotation?

• Throw an uppercut without dropping the hand lower than your chest?

• Throw an uppercut without leaning back?

• Throw an uppercut without lifting your hips?

• Throw 2 left hooks while keeping your weight on the front leg?

• Throw 2 right uppercuts while keeping your weight on your back leg?

• Throw a left hook while slashing the air with your elbow?

• Throw a right uppercut, right hook combo while keep your weight on your right leg?

• Throw a left uppercut, left hook combo while keeping your weight on your left leg?

• Throw a right uppercut to the body without lifting your chin?

Now let’s put some defense to go with those punches...

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Day 4 - Basic Defense
Basic defensive techniques, like blocking and parrying, rely on
your hands for defense. Learn how to protect your entire body with
blocks and parries.

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Day 4 - Basic Defense

Day 4 - Basic Defense


The goal of boxing is to “hit and not get hit”.
Defense allows you to avoid punches thrown by your opponent.

Defense is really what makes boxing so beautiful. Without defense, boxing is little more
than a punching contest. A true boxer will need both offensive and defensive skills. On the
most basic level, defense allows you to neutralize your opponent’s offense. At the
advanced level, defense allows you to TAKE ADVANTAGE of your opponent’s offense
(giving you a counter-offense). In essence, a great defense allows you to be more offensive.

A great defense allows you to be more offensive,


not more defensive.

The right mindset is not to balance offense with defense, instead imagine that your defense
is another way of being offensive. A true boxer uses his defense to increase his offensive
ability. Fighting is a never-ending cycle of offense and defense. Offense finds the angle
and delivers the power, whereas defense avoids your opponent’s punches while getting
you into better offensive position. The basis of a good defense is an aggressive defense.
The purpose of learning defensive skills is to stay in punching range! Otherwise, the best
defense would have just been to run away!

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Day 4 - Basic Defense

How to Block Punches


Blocking is boxing’s most basic defense. The blocking technique uses your arms to cover
your body. Head punches are blocked by lifting the gloves. Body punches are blocked by
dropping the elbows. Right after you block the punch, you release your arms to neutral
position to see the follow-up punches or counter-punching opportunities.

Move your arms into position using the least amount of movement possible. Do it calmly
and don’t make your defense so obvious. Make it quick and subtle so your opponents
don’t learn the way you block and fake you out later.

1. Blocking the Jab

Block using the palm or heel of your right hand.

• Turn your hand to face the jab without taking it away from your face. Stop the jab with a
slight “hit” to stop its momentum. Don’t pull your right hand away from your face in case
it’s a feint.

• It’s ok to block the jab with the outside of your glove if you can’t rotate your hand into
place in time.

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2. Blocking Straights to the Head

Touch your forehead.

• Exhale as you raise your gloves to your


forehead.

• Make sure your stance is stable so the


right hand doesn’t push you off balance.

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3. Blocking Straights to the Body

Tighten your elbows and drop.

• Exhale as you lower your elbows, squeezing them together to


cover the middle.

• If you need to get lower, bend your knees instead of leaning


over. Bending the knees will help you absorb punches without
getting pushed back.

• Drop your hips just an inch to ground yourself and keep


yourself stable.

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4. Blocking Hooks to the Head

Touch your ear or touch your forehead.

• Raise your glove to block the hook.

• Long hooks blocked from the ear. Short


hooks blocked from the forehead.

• Exhale as you stiffen your arm to absorb


the impact.

• Make sure your stance is stable so the


hook doesn’t push you off balance.

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5. Blocking Hooks to the Body

Pull your elbow down.

• Exhale and tighten your midsection right


at impact.

• You can lean or crunch your body to one


side slightly as you absorb the punch or
roll it off your body.

• Bend your knees if you need to get lower.


Don’t lean over.

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6. Blocking Uppercuts

Move your arm to the front.

• Exhale as you stop the uppercut.

• Block with your glove or your forearm & elbow. You can’t always tell if it’s going to the
head or to the body.

• You can also block with your palm down so that you can counter with a punch afterwards.

Recover Quickly After Blocking

Immediately come back to neutral position after blocking.

• Don’t stay in your defensive shell. You can’t see follow-up punches or counter-
opportunities. You might end up stuck in your shell forever and take punches until he
finally breaks through. Close up tight, but reopen immediately or take a step back. Get
back to offense immediately.

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Common Mistakes:

• Not exhaling

Many beginners get so overwhelmed while blocking punches that they forget to breathe.
Holding your breath makes it possible for your opponent to knock the wind out of you.
Not breathing tenses up your body and tires you out more quickly. Ideally, you exhale once
with each block.

• Not looking

You must see punches in order to effectively defend against them. If you cover your eyes,
the punch’s impact will still transfer through your guard because you didn’t know where
and when to focus your defense. Block the punch but don’t cover your eyes. (Don’t look
away from the punch either.)

Learn to see punches; this is critical to developing a great boxing defense. It’s hard to hit
something you can’t see. Staying “covered” means little if you can’t see the punches. Later
on, you’ll be doing more than just blocking punches. You might slip or counter them but
that’s hard to do if you can’t see them! Don’t flinch, don’t blink, and don’t look away.

• Chasing the punch

Don’t focus on the punch, focus on yourself. No need to freak out, just cover YOURSELF.
Your hands protect your face; your elbows protect your body. Focus on yourself. Keep your
eyes open and see where the punch is going. If the punch is going for your head, block
your head. Don’t try to follow the punch’s trajectory. If you let your hands get too far from
your face, you may get faked out and/or hit by the follow-up punches.

• Cross blocking

Avoid using your left hand to block a jab. This exposes the left side of your head while your
opponent’s right hand is free...NOT A GOOD IDEA! Furthermore, blocking your opponent’s
right with your right leaves you open to left hooks.

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Blocking Tips
Don’t Cover Your Eyes
This is such a crucial rule yet it’s broken every time. Your eyes can tell you where to block
and where to punch. Without vision, you will take punch after punch until you dare to look
again. Never cover your eyes, not even for the purpose of blocking a punch.

Better to absorb a punch you see,


than to block a punch you don’t.

Counter Explode on Stationary Blocks


Ground yourself and imagine your guard “exploding” back at your opponent’s punch.
Visualize yourself punching your opponent using HIS arm. Your guard doesn’t push into
his punch; you’re momentarily dropping your hips and repelling his attack by grounding
yourself. Activate your core and lateral muscles, as if you’re punching back with your
elbows. This transfers the impact to your back and down to the ground.

Relax on Moving Blocks


Some punches are lighter or you’re so busy moving that it’s impractical to ground yourself
on every punch. When moving, block using your gloves but without tension. Let your
body’s relaxation absorb the punch’s impact.

Exhale with Each Block


This makes your block solid and keeps you in rhythm with your opponent. Breathe like you
normally would when you throw a punch, using a sharp exhale. If you block two punches,
you breathe twice. The exhale allows you to repel the shot, stay relaxed, and maintain your
fighting rhythm to come back with counters.

Suppose you normally breathe twice during a 1-2, now you exhale as you catch his jab
and exhale again as you throw a counter-punch. Or you might exhale once, simultaneously
blocking and countering his jab. Exhale a quick breath with each block.

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How to Parry Punches


What is a Parry?

Parry - a defensive movement to deflect a thrusting attack

The word “parry” comes from fencing. To parry an attack meant to deflect the attack by
using your sword to divert the opponent’s sword in another direction.

Why Parry in Boxing?

After you’ve learned how to block punches, parrying becomes the next level of defensive
skill. Parrying is a superior defensive move to blocking that uses your opponent’s
momentum against him. The parry will deflect your opponent’s attack while using his own
momentum to leave him open to your counter-punches.

Parrying offers better protection against stronger punches while creating better counter
opportunities using your opponent’s energy. The more your opponent over commits
into his punches, the more effective your parry will be. As you face stronger opponents,
blocking becomes a less likely option. Blocking still absorbs partial damage whereas
parrying can deflect the attack away entirely. Instead of absorbing your opponent’s
power into your guard, you’re deflecting his energy elsewhere to put him off balance and
vulnerable. The parry will also free your hands to counter.

Parrying creates in openings in your opponent,


using his own momentum!

Drawbacks of the Parry

The parry can only be used against straight punches and stronger punches. Hook punches
are harder to deflect since they’re already traveling in a curved motion. If you opponent
throws lots of fast little punches, the parry won’t be able to deflect it since your opponent
is not committing much power to the punch.

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Down Parry
The down parry is a simple downward slap of your palm over your opponent’s glove. The
punch is deflected downwards away from your face giving you a counter opportunity over
the top. It’s the most basic parry and probably the one you will use the most, especially
against straight punches to your face.

Down parry against straight punches

• I slap the jab down with my right hand, opening my opponent for a counter punch. Right
crosses are parried with the left glove. (Keep the parrying hand close to your face.)

• The down parry is the easiest parry to learn, requiring little movement and skill.

• Counter immediately after you parry.

Common Mistakes:
• Dropping your hand

Slap down but don’t send your hand down too far from your face. It could be a fake punch
and you will end up paying the price.

• Too much guiding

Don’t spend too much time trying to direct your opponent’s punch downwards. Give it a
quick bump to change its trajectory and counter immediately as he misses.

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Side Parry
The side parry is a sideways push against your opponent’s glove. Side parries will deflect
punches to the side as you counter and/or escape from the outside. The side parry can be
more effective than the down parry against stronger punches. Parrying down a hard punch
might direct the punch to your body, still causing damage. By parrying the punch to the
side, he will miss you entirely giving you more time to counter.

The side parry can be very tricky to use. The jab might be too fast to side parry whereas
the right hand may be too risky to side parry (if you miss the glove, you take a big punch).
Some fighters will prefer to deflect the right hand with their shoulder or their forearm
instead of using the glove. I’m sure you’ve seen this “shoulder roll” technique used before
by defensive wizards such as James Toney and Floyd Mayweather. Nonetheless, the side
parry is still a beautiful defensive move to use once you have perfected it.

TIP: The side parry works beautifully against southpaws. Push the southpaw left to the side
with your right hand, and follow up with a counter right or counter 1-2. (It also helps to slip
your head to the right as you do the side parry.)

Side parry using the gloves

Push your opponent’s glove from the outside.

• I do slip my head to one side SLIGHTLY to help the parry. This isn’t necessary.

• From here you can counter with either hand or escape.

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Side parry using the forearm

Use your forearm to parry the right hand to the side.

• Roll away slightly while using your forearm to deflect the punch away.

• The forearm side parry isn’t recommended for the jab because it’s such a fast punch and
you might inadvertently roll yourself into a right cross.

Two variations to the forearm side parry.

• You can look OVER the forearm or UNDER the forearm.

• Touch your ear or touch your forehead.

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Circle Parry
The motion of the circle parry is taken almost literally from fencing. You use your forearm
(your sword) to wrap around your opponent’s forearm deflecting his punch to the outside
with a circular motion. A perfect deflection will cause him to fall forward or at least spend
more time retracting his punch, allowing you to counter. If you’re lucky with the circle parry,
you can clamp your fingers around his wrist right above the thumb and prevent him from
pulling his hand back. The motion of him pulling back his glove guides your parrying hand
into a perfect counter-punch.

The circle parry is easier to do if you float your hands in the air at long range, like a cat
pawing the air. Try to counter with the same hand as the deflecting hand. Using the circle
parry at long range can make it difficult for your opponent to get into range. At close
range, you can use the circle parry to neutralize his punches and force clinches.

Get into long range

• The circle parry is best used at long range.

• Float your hands a little bit in front of you.

Circle parrying the jab

I circle parry the jab down and out to the side (deflecting it under my armpit). This peels
his shoulder away from his chin, leaving a hole for my straight right hand on the inside.
The more power he commits, the more I can redirect his punch. If he doesn’t commit as
much to his jab, then I only parry down.

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Circle parrying the right hand

I use my left glove to parry the right cross to the outside.

• Notice the circular motion of my forearm around his (like two swords).

• Try to clamp your fingers around the top of his glove (at the wrist). You have better grip
this way and if he tries to pull his hand back, he will only be guiding your punch into his
face.

• I can easily circle parry all punches if he throws from too far.

• Try to counter with the same hand as your circle parry hand.

Common Mistakes:
• Circle parrying from too close

If he’s too close, he may be able to fake your parry and convert a lazy jab into a big hook
to your head. The circle parry takes a bit of time so you don’t want to be in close range
when your hands are not as quick to counter.

• Making big circles

Try to make a small circle, snaking your hand tightly around your opponent’s wrist. Your
want your glove to make a tight circle as his glove makes a huge circle to try and get free
of your glove.

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Parrying Tips
Treat the Parry as a Moving Block
The best way to learn the parry is to treat it as shifting block. Don’t make too much arm
movement, learn how to block punches first and then slightly shift into a parry. Block the
punch as you normally would but roll away from it slightly.

As you get better at reading punches, you can make bigger motions with your arms and
guide your opponent’s punches further away from you. For beginners, I suggest keeping a
tight defense and doing only SLIGHT parries.

Don’t Chase the Punch


Let the punch come to you instead of trying to slap it away. Don’t let your hand get too far
from your face. You’ll be vulnerable if your opponent throws a feint. Many beginners will
slap down wildly and expose their head when I fake the jab.

Only Parry Straight Punches


The parry technique is best used to deflect forward-thrusting attacks away from you.
Parrying a looping punch like an uppercut or hook is very dangerous if it loops around
your arm. Looping punches will always swing through; no parrying needed. Just get out of
the way and counter after they pass through. Have a great counter that works off of the
parry? Open your gloves and show your face to bait the straight punch.

Don’t Parry the Small Punches


Remember that parrying is more effective against the bigger punches. Don’t try to chase
down smaller punches unless you intend on countering. You don’t want to leave yourself
open for a big punch because you were busy swatting at small punches. I like to block
small punches to bait my opponent into committing a big punch.

BLOCK the small punches,


PARRY the big punches.

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Don’t Cross Parry


Don’t parry your opponent’s right with your right and vice versa. Cross parrying leaves you
open on the side as your opponent attacks with his other hand. You should parry
left-handed punches with your right hand, and parry right-handed punches with your
left hand. You will also counter with the same hand that parries since your opponent is
probably open on that side. (This rule can be broken once you master parrying.)

Easier to Parry Head Punches


Because you only have to deflect the punch just a bit to make it miss. Your body is a big
target, and it’s much harder to guide a punch completely clear of your body. For beginners,
it’s much easier and recommended to block punches than to do anything fancy.

The Beauty of the Parry


The parry creates openings in your opponent using his own momentum!

The more power your opponent commits to his punch, the more vulnerable he will be.
You’re taking advantage of his punches not by stopping them, but by guiding them off
target. A quick wave of the hand deflects the punch and creates the opening all at once,
while leaving your hand free to counter. It’s clever boxing.

Great boxers don’t block punches,


they avoid them entirely!

At the higher levels of boxing, it’s just not possible to block punches. Could you ever
imagine yourself blocking a hammer with your hand? I wouldn’t either, and believe me, the
top fighters punch just as hard as a hammer. When you see pros blocking punches on TV,
they’ll slightly parrying or rolling the punch. It’s crucial to learn how to deflect punches or
avoid them entirely. Once you’ve mastered the art of parrying, you’ll naturally move on to
more advanced defense techniques such as rolling and slipping.

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Basic Defense Checklist


Can you...

• Block a jab without taking your right hand more than a few inches from your chin?

• Block a jab without flinching back or blinking?

• Block a right hand without losing your balance?

• Block jabs, rights, and hooks to the body without losing your balance?

• Block a 1-2-3 combination without losing your balance?

• Block a 1-2-3 combination without taking your eyes off your opponent?

• Down parry a jab without taking your right hand more than a few inches from your chin?

• Down parry a jab and counter with a right cross?

• Down parry a 1-2 and counter with a 1-2?

• Side parry a southpaw left cross (using right hand) and counter with a right cross?

• Forearm parry a right hand without losing balance?

• Circle parry a right hand to the outside?

• Block the jab, parry the right.

• Block the 1-2-3, parry the right.

Additional Resource: How to Parry Punches

Time for the advanced defense techniques. Get ready to ROLL & SLIP punches!

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense
Advanced defensive techniques, like rolling and slipping, rely on
body movement for defense. Learn how to slip and roll with the
punches to free your hands for countering.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense


Advanced defensive techniques allow you to be more defensive
AND offensive.

In this book, the difference between basic and advanced boxing defense is defined by the
use of your hands. Basic defense requires the use of your arms whereas advanced defense
does not. Techniques such as rolling and slipping use your body to evade the punch so
that your arms are free to counter right as you evade. Rolling and slipping allows you to
defend more effectively against combinations of punches and also more powerful punches.

Rolling and slipping are also superior defensive techniques because they make your
opponent vulnerable by using his momentum against him. Rolling can deflect your
opponent’s momentum (similar to a parry), whereas slipping will make him miss wider and
potentially fall off balance. These vulnerabilities open a large window of opportunity for
your counter.

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Rolling Punches
You’ve heard it before, “You’ve got to roll with the punches!” Not just in the square ring,
but in life as well. But what the heck does that mean? And how do you do it? Well my
friend, let me introduce to you one of the oldest moves in the sweet science...

The shoulder roll is a defensive move where


you deflect a punch by rolling your shoulders
away from it.

It’s a simple move and it’s used by even the


most skilled boxers for many reasons.

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Easier Than Blocking


The shoulder roll is ridiculously easy to do. You can block entire combinations just by
rolling your shoulders back and forth. No more worrying about perfect hand placement
or seeing every punch that comes at you. As long as you know which side the punch is
coming from, you can roll away from it easily. The shoulder roll takes all the complication
out of boxing defense.

More Effective Than Blocking

Deflected punches have less impact than blocked punches.

Here’s a little secret: it’s not really possible to block HARD punches with just your hand. At
some level in boxing, all punches become power punches; and just sticking your hand in
front is not going to stop it. Rolling away from the punch effectively deflects the power!
The shoulder roll will minimize the punch impact EVEN IF IT LANDS!

It’s not always possible to block hard


punches. In this case, I should have rolled
the punch instead of trying to block it
square on.

Frees Up Your Hands for Countering


The shoulder roll uses your body rotation to deflect punches so you can use your hands for
something more important, like punching back!

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How to Shoulder Roll


Shoulder Roll Away from Right Hands

Roll away from the right hand.

• Lift the shoulder to cover your chin.

• Keep your back straight and don’t lean backwards.

• Roll just enough to avoid that right hand.

Sometimes the right hand is blocked from the outside, other times from the inside.

• Wide right hands are blocked from the outside.

• Straight right hands are parried by your shoulder to the inside.

• Just roll your shoulders, don’t worry about where the right hand goes.

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Left Hand can be up

Your left hand can be up during the shoulder roll.

Countering the Right Hand

Counter with a straight right or right uppercut.

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Shoulder Roll away from Left Hooks

Roll AWAY from the left hook, not into it.

• Don’t roll so much that you get hit in the back.

• Absorb the punch on your arm or shoulder, not your back.

Countering the Left Hook

Counter with a jab or left hook.

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Common Mistakes:

• Too much focus on the shoulder block

The essence of the shoulder roll is in the “roll”.

Focus on the ROLL, not the shoulder! Don’t try too hard to block the punch with your
shoulder. Focus on deflecting the punch as you turn away from it. Even if the punch goes
over your shoulder, a good roll will still deflect the power.

• Not maintaining rhythm

The shoulder roll is all about rhythm.

The shoulder roll teaches you to move with your opponent. You have to roll at the right
time to deflect his punch. Roll too late and you get hit; roll too early and you’ll telegraph
your movement or leave yourself vulnerable. Do the shoulder roll drills with a pure focus
on rhythm. Keep it slow at first, and don’t speed up until you both have the perfect rhythm.

• Not countering back

You can’t roll off everything, you have to fire back. The point of defense is to setup your
counter-punches. Otherwise, you’re better off just running from your opponent. This is a
fight — you can’t defend your way to victory.

• Leaning off balance

It’s common for fighters to lean over their back foot when they roll away from the right
hand. Doing so takes away your balance making it hard for you to come back with a
counter. Some trainers will even teach their fighters to lean towards their opponents when
they roll the right hand. Also when you roll, try to imagine that your spinning axis is either
at your spine OR at the shoulder that’s rolling. Don’t let your head lean past your knees.

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How to Roll Under Punches

This is actually a very hard technique and requires timing as well as technique. The general
idea is to perform the move correctly by bending at the knees, instead of at the waist,
and turning your shoulders to roll under. It’s hard enough to perform the move and near
impossible when you try to do it under pressure. I’ll teach you how to roll under punches
WITHOUT getting caught!

The key difference in technique between rolling away from versus rolling under punches:

• To roll WITH THE PUNCH, turn away from the punch.

• To roll UNDER THE PUNCH, you still roll away from the punch first and then duck
and turn into the punch.

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A normal shoulder roll, turns AWAY from the punch.

Now rolling under the punch.

The trick to rolling under punches:


let your opponent’s punch do all the work.

The trick to rolling under the punch is simply to get UNDER the punch and let your
opponent’s punch swing over you. The key is baiting your opponent to over-swing. Then
rotate your body away before you duck down; and then rotate your body the other way as
you roll under.

On tape, it might look like the defensive fighter is moving his head a lot but it’s really the
offensive fighter that’s doing all the work. Many beginners get hit all the time because they
don’t know how to make their opponents swing wide.

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The Secret to Rolling Under Punches


What’s the secret?

...SET UP THE ROLL UNDER BY FIRST ROLLING AWAY FROM THE PUNCH!

To roll under a punch effectively, you must turn your head to the OPPOSITE SIDE away from
your opponent’s punch. You get your head to one side by slipping the previous punch
or throwing your own punch so that it rotates your head to one side. Once your head is
rotated to the side, you can keep rolling under from side-to-side as long as your opponent
keeps over-swinging. Your opponent will reach farther with his punches because your head
is farther away. The farther he reaches, the more time you have to roll under.

That’s all there is to it, setting your body to one side makes rolling under punches a billion
times easier.

Set yourself up on the other side by slightly rolling away from the punch.

• Do NOT lean to the side. Keep your legs under you at all times.

Setting your body to the opposite side does 3 things:

1. Your opponent throws a wider punch because you’re farther away.

2. You have more time to roll under the punch.

3. Even if you get caught, the impact is weaker because you were rolling away.

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Rolling Under a Left Hook

Your body starts on the left side, opposite of his left hook.

You can get to this position by slipping a right, or by


throwing your own right hand.

His hook is farther away giving you more time to roll


under.

Notice how he’s over-swung himself because he was


aiming for a far target.

Counter with your left hook, left uppercut, or come back


with a right hand.

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Rolling Under a Right Hand

Once again you set your


body to the opposite side.
You get here by slipping a
jab or throwing your own
left.

The right hand is easy to roll under when it’s coming from
farther away.

Once again, he’s over-swung himself thinking you were


going to be farther away.

Now counter with a right hook, right uppercut, or come


back with a left hook.

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Common Mistakes:
• #1 Mistake - starting from the neutral position

Trying to roll under punches from the neutral position


gives you less time to react and less room to move!

Many boxers make the mistake of trying to roll under from their neutral stance. Trying to
roll under a punch with your body at the center is hard (if not impossible) to do! First off,
your opponent will throw a tighter punch because you’re closer, making it more difficult to
roll under. Secondly, you’ll have no room to roll the punch and less time to react to it.

Me trying to shoulder roll with my head and body from the


center line. Let’s see what happens when I try to go under...

It didn’t matter which way I rolled, I got caught because the punches are aimed at the
center giving me less room to roll.

Don’t try to roll under punches from the center position, and especially don’t try to roll out
of nowhere. Rolling under punches is something that needs to be setup by rolling off to
the side first.

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• Not rolling the shoulders

Remember, this is a shoulder roll. Use the shoulder rotation to clear your head. Don’t think
of it as slipping with your head while bending your knees. The shoulder rotation helps you
clear your head under the punch while rotating your body to come back with counters.

BAD roll under (too wide)

This is too square. Notice how my head is


past my knees, which puts me off balance.
There’s too much head movement going
on, which means you’re doing too much
work and not being efficient.

GOOD roll under

Notice how my head stays closer to the


center and my shoulders are rotated more.
A good shoulder roll stays closer to the
center, letting the opponent’s punch miss
over the top.

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• Bending at the waist instead of the knees

Bend your knees to drop your head under, not at your waist. Bending at your waist tilts
your head towards the ground, making it hard to see what’s going on above your head.
You can’t see the follow-up punches and your body won’t be loaded to come back with a
counter. Develop those legs and use your legs to change levels, not your waist. Keep your
eyes on your opponent at all times!

• Dropping straight down

Dropping straight down is also not recommended. You’ll easily


lose balance and neither side of your body is loaded for a
counter. The only way I would recommend ducking straight
down is if you punched while dropping down.

• Crouching too low

Some boxers like to anticipate the roll under by squatting really low before the punch. It’s
not such a great idea because you’re taking away the amount of vertical room you have to
drop under the punch. You don’t have to stand too tall but make sure you have room to
bend your legs to roll under the punch.

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Practicing Shoulder Rolls


Rolling under punches is easy in theory, hard to do, and nearly impossible to do
automatically. For anybody looking to become the next Floyd Mayweather, I recommend
you practice the “shoulder roll” & “roll under” 1 hour every day for a whole week. Yes, 1
hour—STRAIGHT.

Use the shoulder roll as a timed deflection,


not a shoulder block.

Start slowly with steady rhythm and basic punches to learn the technique, then start mixing
up different punches and switching the rhythm. You’re not just looking for perfect form;
you want to develop an automatic defense! That’s what sets Floyd Mayweather apart
from the other slicksters. Anybody can shoulder roll in a mitt session. What you want is
automatic, instinctual shoulder rolls during a fight with a live opponent. You shouldn’t
have to think; your body knows the rhythm, it reacts the way it was trained. Spend a few
hundred hours practicing this. Trust me, you’ll get there.

The shoulder roll is best performed from your boxing stance. It’s optional to have your
forearm up or covering the body. Maintain your balance, don’t rotate your shoulders more
than you need to deflect the punch, and don’t roll before the punch arrives. Pivot your
feet when you rotate your body. Remember not to get caught up in the fancy moves. The
shoulder roll is for countering your opponent. The roll under is nothing without the counter
punch.

Additional Resource:

• How to Shoulder Roll

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

How to Slip Punches

Slipping is an advanced defensive boxing technique that allows you to avoid a punch by
completely evading it entirely. This leaves your opponent entirely vulnerable while he’s
swinging at air, allowing you to counter-punch faster and from a deadlier angle.

Slipping is a superior defensive maneuver to a normal blocking defense because you are
not sacrificing an arm (a potential counter-punch) to shield the blow. You also avoid taking
any partial damage by slipping your opponent’s punch. His punch will take longer to return
giving you more time to counter. The danger of the slip is that you rely on reflexes instead
of a physical barrier to protect yourself. Should you fail to move completely out of the way
of the punch, you will get hit!

Slipping punches without getting hit requires timing, reflexes, and most important of all–
PROPER SLIPPING TECHNIQUE!

NOTE

I say “high & low punches” (instead of “head & body punches”) because you are
slipping punches that are aimed to your head regardless if you are standing tall or
crouched low. It’s hard to slip body punches, so slipping is best used for head punches.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

Slipping High Punches (3-point slip)


What is the 3-point slip? It’s a made-up name for a method that I teach. First we learn
the basic positions and slipping technique. You’ll learn to slip by transitioning from one
position to the next. Next, I’ll show what to do from those positions.

The 3-point slip.

The 3-point slip gets its name from the 3


positions of moving your head. The focus of
moving your head across the three points is to
slip OUTSIDE the punch. Following this system
will help you evade jabs, right hands, and left
hooks.

• Do note that my feet don’t move from their


position (as they may appear in the image
above), they actually pivot in place.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

POSITION #1 – back to the right

Pull your head back to the right.

• Pivot your feet and body, shifting your weight slightly to your
right.

• Bend your knees as you “crunch” your abs.

• Counter simultaneously with a jab to the body or head, and/or


counter with the overhand right after the slip.

POSITION #2 – forward to the left

Pull your head UP & OVER to the left.

• Swing your head up (past the starting position), then down to


your left. Bringing the head up is crucial! Even if you can’t get
your head to the outside in time, just lifting your head up will
be enough to slip the right hand.

• Bend your knees as you “crunch” your abs. Pivot your feet and
body slightly to your left.

• Counter simultaneously with a right, and/or counter with a left


hook after the slip.

POSITION #3 – neutral stance

Pull your head straight back to neutral position.

• Pull your head away from the left hook as you come back to
your normal stance.

• Counter simultaneously with a left hook, and/or throw a right


cross after the slip.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

3-Point Slip (Demonstration)

POSITION #1 - Slipping the JAB

• I slip just enough to get my head


outside the jab. I bend down slightly
without going under the jab. I’m
making space for his jab to pass over
my shoulder.

Counter simultaneously with a jab, or


throw a right after.

POSITION #2 - Slipping the RIGHT

• I lift my head up to get over the right


cross before slipping to the outside.
I’m pivoting my body to the left, not
leaning to the left. I bring myself
outside the right hand, not under it.

Counter simultaneously with a right or


throw a left hook after.

POSITION #3 - Slipping the HOOK

• I pull my head back to let his hook


swing past my face. The key is to bring
my head forward just a bit with position
#2 so that I have room to pull my head
back without getting off balance.

Counter simultaneously with a hook or


throw a right after.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

How NOT to Slip


Now I have to warn you all about this crazy thing I’ve seen guys do. It’s a dangerous way to
slip and I highly recommend for you not to do it. I call it the “2-point wobble”.

Left wobble & right wobble. BAD!!!

• The body is too square, making it an easy target.


The body isn’t turned to any side, no counter
punch is loaded. The head only swings side to
side, it’s missing and UP & DOWN, FORWARD &
BACK motion.

• Your head only moves side to side, leaving you


vulnerable to left hooks and curved right hands.

ANOTHER WRONG WAY TO SLIP - Ducking Under the Right

Here is another wrong way to avoid the right. Richard makes a


very common mistake here by jumping under my right hand.
Sure, he avoids the punch but he’s crushed under me. His head
is no longer above his hips so it’s easy for me to crush him
or hold him down and throw punches at him. I could be any
random brawler and I’d crush him under me easily.

Richard can’t see me and can’t come back with a counter either.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

The “wobble” still leaves you


vulnerable to right hands and left hooks.

WORST OF ALL, you’re STILL in the line of fire! Most punches come from a side angle and
because your head is not moving up/down or forwards/backs, you are basically swinging
your head into the punch! The only thing the “wobble” can slip is a perfectly straight jab or
a perfectly straight right hand.

The move isn’t completely useless. Some fighters use it to slip a 1-2 and then counter with
a left hook. It can be done if you’re only doing it slightly and skilled enough to avoid the
punch by just a centimeter. I don’t recommend it for the beginner boxer. The 3-point slip
can slip the same punches with slower movement and less risk.

Now there IS such a thing as a 2-point slip...and there IS a proper way to slip on two
points.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

Slipping Low Punches (2-point slip)


You must get low to use the 2-point slip.

The 2-point slip is used for getting under punches and slipping lower to the ground. It can
also get you out of tight situations when your opponents are throwing wildly. Never forget
that it’s almost always better to slip on top using the 3-point slip. Slipping on top makes it
easier for you to counter or move away since you’re standing up. Use your knees to bend,
not your waist. This way you can keep your eyes on your opponent. Use your leg muscles,
not your back.

The 2-Point Slip

Bend your knees to get lower to the ground. The


goal is to cut under punches. Pivot your entire
body to swing your head from side to side.
This is a defensive technique to avoid punches
(preferably straight punches) that are coming
down low at you.

• Do note that my feet don’t move from their


position (as they may appear in the image above),
they actually pivot in place.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

DOWN FORWARD to the Left

Pivot your feet and body as you swing your head forward to
the left.

This sharp movement must be done as quickly as possible.


This movement can defend both the right hand and left hook.
Your head would either slip outside of a right hand or roll
with a left hook (deflecting its power).

Even though the movement is DOWN FORWARD, you’re


really just going down and facing forward. Don’t let your
head go forward past your front knee.

DOWN BACK to the Right

Pivot your feet and body as you pull your head down and
back to the right.

Notice that I am pulling my head BACK as I swing it to the


right. This movement can roll with a right hand deflecting its
power, or pull your head back away from a left hook. Don’t
let your head go past or over your back knee. Make sure
you’re pivoting your body slightly to the right.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

2-Point Slip (Demonstration)

POSITION #1 - Slipping down to the left

• Keep your waist under you, stay upright and don’t lean
over or sideways. Stay OUTSIDE the punch and not under it.
Keep your eyes on your opponent.

• If the punch is high enough for you to use the 3-point


slip, then do that instead. Only get low if it’s absolutely
necessary.

POSITION #2 - Slipping down to the right

• Same rules as above. Stay upright, bend your knees to get


low.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

Common Mistakes:

• Not countering (not throwing back)

The point of slipping is to increase your counter-punching opportunity. You are making
your opponent miss entirely and freeing your hands so you can counter sooner instead of
having to block first. Without throwing back, you are wasting your successful slips and
risking yourself for no reason. Remember the old rule:

“Make him miss, make him pay.”

• Not looking at your opponent

You should always be able to see your opponent when you slip. This allows you to see and
avoid his follow-up punches. When you slip, make sure you don’t bend over and stare
at the ground, or move your head in a way that ends up in a head lock. Another thing,
don’t just look at him, look for openings! The point of slipping is for counter-punching
opportunities.

• Slipping INSIDE punches

Always slip to the outside of the punch. This way you always have room to slip the next
punch. If you slip to the middle, you are bound to get caught because the human arm
anatomically bends inwards so most punches will arc slightly towards the middle. If you’re
planning to stay inside the punch, it’s better to roll than to slip. There is one exception to
this rule: you CAN slip inside of jabs because that punch is often thrown very straight.

• Slipping UNDER punches

Never slip in a way that gets you caught under the punch. This makes it easy for aggressive
brawlers or smart boxers to just lean on you to keep you from exploding with a counter-
punch. When you slip, get outside the punch, not under it.

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

• Bending at the waist

Always bend from your knees, not at the waist. Bending from the waist leaves you off
balance and powerless to come back with a counter. Bending with the knees keeps your
legs under you allowing you to counter effectively or slip again if needed.

• Slipping too far

Slipping should be done as minimally as possible. Move just enough to avoid the punch
and then immediately come back with a counter. There is no need to waste energy by
trying to move farther than you need. Moving your whole body requires more energy than
the energy your opponent spends to punch.

• Not exhaling

Exhale on every slip as though you are punching. Breathing allows you to move
explosively and also maintains your movement rhythm so that you can punch and defend
simultaneously without getting out of rhythm (or running out of air).

• Improper practicing

When you practice slipping, never choreograph the drills. Have your partner aim for your
head at all times. It is better for your partner to be punching slowly while aiming for your
head every time, than for you guys to be drilling at high speed in a predictable pattern.
Use the slipping drills to develop sharp eyes that can see punches better. The slipping is
easy once you learn how to see punches coming. At some point, you will become good
enough to FEEL a punch coming.

Additional Resource: How to Slip Punches

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Day 5 - Advanced Defense

Advanced Defense Checklist


Can you...

• Block the jab, roll the right, roll the left hook

• Block the jab, roll the right, come back with a counter right

• Throw a 1-2, and roll under your opponent’s counter hook?

• Throw a 1-2, roll under both your opponent’s counter hook AND counter right?

• Throw a 1-2-3, and roll under your opponent’s counter right?

• Throw a 1-2, roll off your opponent’s counter right, then throw your own counter hook?

• Slip the jab without bending over too much at the waist?

• Slip the right without bending over at the waist?

• Slip the 1-2 without bending at the waist (use only knees and body rotation)

• Slip a 1-2-3 combo

• Block a jab, then slip the next jab

• Slip the right hand, then roll under the hook

• Slip a 1-2, then roll under the hook

Don’t worry about trying to do these at full speed. The most important thing is proper
technique. With time, the development of your muscles and coordination will allow you to
do the motions at full speed. Excellent stuff! Let’s get started on the countering, shall we?

Time to put offense and defense together...learn how to counter, learn how to box!

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 169


Day 6 - Punch Combinations
Learn how to expose and penetrate opponents with deadly punch
combinations. Develop your offense and defense with mitt drills
and over 60 combinations.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Day 6 - Punch Combinations


Fights aren’t won in single punches. It takes combinations — series
of punches to set up your opponent before you can put him away.

No opponent is going to sit there with an opening


for you. Create your own openings by throwing
multiple punches to pry open his defense. You
won’t be able to land any power punches until
you’ve set him up with faster shots. Again, you see
why the jab is so important.

Learning combinations will help you understand


how different punches create vulnerabilities in
your opponent’s guard. Once you know how
opponents respond to certain punches, you are
free to create your own combinations. Practice on
the mitts first (if you can). Your partner’s job is to
refine your technique and point out your common mistakes. Make sure your technique is
perfect before you workout unsupervised on the bags. (Advanced combinations with
evasive maneuvers are best practiced on the mitts.)

Don’t just make new combos,


find new ways to throw old combos.

Mix it up; see if you can find new ways to throw the same combo. Suppose you’re working
on a double-jab: try throwing a step-jab followed by a pivot-jab, or try a pivot jab followed
by a back-step jab. Try mixing up the level of power so you can change the rhythm of the
combo and place power shots at the moments your opponents least expect it.

NOTE

You must be relaxed in order to throw effective combinations. Relaxed arms allow your
combos to flow smoothly from one punch to another. Tense arms waste energy and
slow down your movements; allowing more time for your opponents to counter.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Punch Numbering System

1 - jab

2 - right cross

3 - left hook

4 - overhand right or wide right

5 - left uppercut

6 - right uppercut

b - body

p - pivot CW off front foot

[] - block

() - roll

{} - roll under

// - slip or lean away from

<> - pivot away from

Example: 1-2-3-[2]-2-3b-2-{3}-1p means to jab, right, left hook, block opponent’s right
hand, right, left hook to the body, right, roll under opponent’s left hook, pivot jab.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Easy Combinations (punches only)


Basic Straight Combinations
These combinations may seem basic but do know that they are thrown by world champions
more than half the time. Subtle differences in speed, power, and positioning make these
combinations more than just a jab and a right cross. Try adding a slight pivot to the
first jab or the finishing jab of each combination. Try aiming the right hand at the body
sometimes. Or try making the first jab light and the second jab hard.

• 1-1

• 1-1-1

• 1-2

• 1-2-1

• 1-2-1-1

• 1-2-1-1-2

• 1-2-1-2

• 1-2-1-2-1

• 1-2-1-2-1-2

• 1-1-2

• 1-1-2-1

• 1-1-2-1-2

• 1-2-2-1-1

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Full Punch Combinations


Make sure you pivot your feet with every power punch. This rotates your body to give
you full power with every punch. Remember to keep the other hand up while you throw
punches. Keep your body balanced.

• 1-2-3

• 1-2-3-2

• 1-2-3b-2

• 1-2-5-2

• 1-6-3-2

• 1-2-3-2-1p

• 1-2-3-1-2

Inside Combinations
Use these at close range like during clinches or along the ropes. Make sure you back away
after landing them or follow up if your opponent is opened up. Try to pivot away after the
last punch so you don’t get caught with a wild counter.

3-6-3

3-6-3-2

6-3-2-3

6-3-2-1p

5b-3-2-1p

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Tricky Combinations
These are awkward combinations involving an unusual series of punches that can help
confuse your opponent’s defense. Going up and down to the body, throwing double-rights
or double-lefts, or just weird angles that I’ve figured out over the years. Over time, you will
come to find new ways of being tricky even with conventional combinations like the 1-2.

• 1-3-2

• 1-3-1-2

• 1-2-3b-3-2

• 1-2-3-3bp

• 5-2-3b-2

• 1b-2-3-2

• 1b-1-2-3

• 1-2b-5

• 1-2b-2-3-2

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Advanced Combinations
Now learn how to combine offense and defense simultaneously!

You learn entire combinations by starting with the first few punches. Work your way up to
the first evasive maneuver, then on to the first counter. Keep adding a little more each time
until you remember the whole sequence. Then next time you try it, you just call out the
first part and his reaction should be automatic to the rest. The best trainers can teach their
fighters entire combinations without having to tell them what to do.

The best trainers know how to hold mitts in such a way that the boxer cannot hit with bad
form and won’t develop bad habits. The greatest trainers can teach you without having to
tell you anything.

Mitt work is for developing AUTOMATIC boxing reflexes,


not memorization of combos and counters.

The real focus of mitt drills is to develop good fighting habits. Great fighters don’t bother
trying to remember how they do things, they just do them instinctually. This is hard stuff,
so don’t be down on yourself if it doesn’t come easy at first. It took me years to master all
these combinations.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Advanced Combinations
This will be your introduction to offense and defense. It is the best training you can get
outside of sparring and gives you an opportunity to develop functional fighting ability.
As you throw these punches, learn to develop your timing and coordination. Think
beyond the power, beyond the punches, and beyond the evasion. Find ways to make your
combinations more effective.

• 1-[1]-1-2

• 1-[4b]-1-2

• 1-2-[3b]-2-3-2

• 1-/1/-1-2

• 1-1-/1/-2-3-2 (helps to lean in during the double jab)

• 1-2-/1/-2-3-2

• 1-2-(2)-2-3-2

• 1-2-/2/-3-2

• 1-2-/1/-/2/-3-2 (helps to be fast)

• 1-2-{3}-2-3-2

• 1-2-{3}-6b-{4}-3b-2

• 1-2-3-/2/-3-2

• 1-2-3-{2}-3-2-<2>

TIP

Learn each combination punch-by-punch. Start with the first punch, and then keep
adding one more. Work your way up to the first evasion, before continuing on to the
follow-up punches. Don’t try to learn the whole combination in the first try.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Counter Combinations
These are counter combinations that usually start with a defensive move or a punch to bait
an opponent’s attack. Use them after evading your opponent’s punch. Learn these well so
that you can flow immediately into a combination after landing the first counter on your
opponent. Feel free to adjust them to start with whatever counters you like best.

• 1-(2)-2-3-2

• 1-(2)-6-3-2

• [1]-[2]-3-2-3p

• /1/-1b-2-3-2

• /1/-6-2-3b-2 (slip INSIDE the jab)

• /1/-/2/-3-2-{3}-2-1-1 (overhand hook)

• /1/-/2/-2-3-2

• [3]-3-6-3-/2/-3-2-{3}-2-3-2

Southpaw Combinations
Great combinations for use against southpaws. If you’re a southpaw, you can reverse these
for use against orthodox fighters.

• 1-2-/2/-2-3-2-1

• 1-2-3-{3}-2-3

• 3-1-2-/2/-2-1-1

• 6-/2/-2-1-2

• 1-/1/-5-2-1-1p

• 1-/1/-2-2-3b-2-3p

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Mayweather Mitts Sequence


Here’s a little bonus from me. The Mayweather mitts sequence is made of standard
combinations that are repeated over and over. The trainer will call out the evasive
maneuvers instead of the punches. You know what punches to throw because of how
he holds his mitts. Your offense is automatic and you keep throwing punches while
responding to your trainer’s calls for “roll” or “slip” or “block”.

You can mix and match any part of it you want. Be creative and come up with your own
combos. Have fun, the focus is timing, rhythm, and using defense with offense. Don’t worry
about power!

• 1-2-3-2-(2)-2-3-2-{3}-2-3-2-(2)-2-3-2-[3b]-2-3-2-(2)-2-3-2-[3]-2-3-2-{3}-2

• 2-6-2-3-3-2-3-2-{3}-2-3-2-(2)-3-3-2-6-2-{3}-{4}-3-3-2-6-2

Tips for Mittwork


Try to mix up the rhythm. Don’t go full force on every punch. The most important tip I can
give is to NOT THINK ABOUT POWER. Timing, rhythm, and defensive awareness are much
more important factors when you throw punches. Those are much more fundamental. And
of course, always use good technique. If you find your body too lazy and too tired to fully
turn over your punches, check your form and balance. Good form should make it EASIER to
throw punches, not harder.

For the mitt holders

I know at some point you’re going to feel like you’re running out of hands. Catch with your
elbows or have him punch at your shoulders. Watch videos on Youtube to see how trainers
catch punches. Don’t just stand in one place, make your fighter move around.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

More Focus Mitt Drills


Reflex Drills
These are the most basic boxing reflexes that fighters must develop from mitt drills. They
should be so ingrained that the fighter can do it naturally, without thinking and without
spending any energy. When he does one motion, he is aware of the next possible choice.

The most important thing to know about reflex drills is that they are really EYE AWARENESS
drills. To have great reflexes, you must first learn how to see. And so you must train your
fighters to see everything; to see punches, to see counter opportunities, to see movements.
Most fighters are only great punchers, but they aren’t great boxers because they’re unable
to see the details of movement. The drills you use below should be developing the eyes
long before they develop punching power or accuracy.

• Flinch reflex

Have the fighter move around as the trainer throws random punches or combinations at
him. He should be able to block and stay aware without losing his breathing rhythm or
flinching. Start slowly and speed up once he gets comfortable. It’s more important that he
maintain his breathing rhythm and calmness than to block every punch. I personally don’t
care when a few stray punches get through as long as I don’t lose my rhythm. Make sure
that the fighter does NOT flinch even when he gets caught.

• Auto-jab

Move around the ring and lift the pad up at random intervals for a split second before
dropping them. The fighter should ALWAYS be ready to counter jab. This teaches him to
move with clean footwork and stay alert at all times.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

• Auto-right

Anytime that you call a jab, the fighter should be looking for the RIGHT HAND, not the jab.
Have him jab the left mitt. The moment he jabs the left mitt, lift up your right mitt so that
he throws the right hand. Switch it up, sometimes the right mitt comes up, sometimes it
doesn’t. Train your fighter to always be aware of follow-up opportunities and look for big
punches, not small ones.

“When you throw the jab, look for the right hand opening!”

• Block/slip/roll LEFTS after right hand finish

Anytime that the fighter finishes a combination with his right hand, he should be prepared
to block, slip, or roll a left hook counter. Develop this reflex by testing him randomly at the
end of combinations. The counter can come to the head or body.

• Roll/slip/block RIGHTS after left hand finish

Anytime that the fighter finishes a combination with his left hand, he should be prepared
to block, slip, or roll a right hand counter. Develop this reflex by testing him randomly at
the end of combinations. The counter can come to the head or body.

• Body-Head Reflex

At random intervals, place the left mitt on your stomach to call out the “body jab”.
At random intervals you lift your right mitt as the fighter jabs the body, so that he
immediately throws the right cross should the opportunity present itself. This trains your
fighter to always look for the right hand opportunity even as he’s throwing his jabs up
and down. This also trains your fighters to keep his eyes looking up top even when he’s
throwing body punches. Try finishing some mitt combos with a left hook to the body and
feed him a right cross to the head without telling him. Make sure he’s always looking for
that opportunity.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Movement Drills
It’s nice to know that you can throw punches from standstill, but a live opponent won’t
always stand right in front of you. These are great drills to help fighters develop their
punching ability while moving with their opponent. They’ll have to move swiftly while
maintaining their composure to punch on command.

• Jab-chase

Move around the ring and randomly lift one mitt up to signal the fighter to jab at it. Switch
to using the other mitt. Put the mitt down after the fighter hits it. When the fighter gets
better, you only show the mitt for a split second before taking it away. It’s his fault if he’s
not ready and not in position.

• 1 & 2 chase

Call out “1” and “2” randomly as you lift your mitts while moving around the ring. Force the
fighter to use his legs to maintain distance and always be ready to strike a moving target.

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Day 6 - Punch Combinations

Combinations Checklist
Can you...
• Punch the mitts with good form and technique?

• Throw the jab as soon as you see the opportunity?

• Throw the 1-2-3 combination? (without dropping your right hand during the hook)

• Throw a combination and evade a counter at the end?

• Remember 3 different combinations?

• Hit the mitts for 3 rounds?

• Hit the mitts without panicking or flinching?

• Hit the mitts without losing your balance?

You know how to throw, punch and defend by now. Let’s put it all together!

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 183


Day 7 - Counter Punching
Counter punching is the essence of boxing, and boxing is the ability
to hit and not get hit. Discover over 40 ways to counter the jab,
cross, hook, and uppercut.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 184


Day 7 - Counter Punching

Day 7 - Counter Punching


Countering uses offense as defense, allowing you to stay offensive.

Today you learn how to put your offense


and defense together to create an effective
counter-offense. When you really think
about it, learning how to counter-punch
essentially means you’re learning how to
box.

Since boxing is not really just offense or


just defense, but a simultaneous execution
of the two. Realistically, it’s not possible to
stay defensive. Your opponent will break
through your guard if you don’t fire back.
In light of this, counter-punching will be
your best defensive tactic.

Boxing means “hit & not get hit”.

After learning how to counter, I’ll teach you some of the common boxing combinations
and how to practice it with some common evasive maneuvers on the mitts. Don’t worry
about learning every counter and every combo. Focus on your favorite counters and the
combos that are easiest and feel most natural for you. I included many different ones for
different kinds of boxers. Over time, you will master them all and adjust them to fit your
unique fighting situation.

Do not try to remember all of these counters. For beginners, learn ONE COUNTER for each
punch; one counter for the jab, one for the right hand, one for the hook, and one for the
uppercut. Master the ones you like and slowly pickup new counters with time.

How to Box in 10 Days | ExpertBoxing 185


Day 7 - Counter Punching

Countering Straight Punches


Countering the Jab
• Block & counter jab

Block the jab without flinching your head back, then counter immediately. Try a double jab.

• Parry & counter right

Parry down the jab with a slight downward push or slap using the palm of your right glove.
Then throw a sharp right immediately over his jab. There are many variations to this simple
move. Some fighters make the parry and the counter as two distinct separate movements.
Some other fighters make one smooth movement where the right hand skims the top of
the jab and immediately goes into the counter.

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• Outside slip with jab (to head or body)

Lean slightly to get your head to the outside or under the jab. Throw a counter jab as you
slip. I like to throw this to the body. Regardless of where you decide to throw the counter
jab (head or body), always keep your eyes on your opponent’s head. Don’t look at his body.
Pay attention to his head so you can look for an opportunity to throw a follow-up right
hand upstairs or watch out for his right hand.

• Inside slip with overhand right (to head or body)

Slip to the left and counter with the right hand at the same time. I like to call this “split the
jab” because your head and right hand come around different sides of his jab. You can
setup this counter a little easier by dipping your head just slightly to your right.

If you plan on throwing the right to the body, make sure you move your upper body
EXACTLY THE SAME way you would if you were throwing upstairs. This way, he blocks high
thinking it’s a head punch but in reality you’re digging down to the body.

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• Inside slip with jab/left uppercut

Many experienced boxers use this move. In one combined motion, slip your head to the
inside of his jab as you pop a stiff jab or left uppercut straight to his head. Follow-up with a
big straight right to his face and left hook to the body. An easier way to set up this counter
would be to lean your head slightly to your right, giving you more room to slip left.

• Lean back & counter jab

Here’s a quick way to score during a jab battle. Stay on the edge of range and lean back
when he throws a jab. Bend your back knee slightly to help keep your balance. You can also
try leaning forward beforehand, so that you return to neutral stance when you pull back.

It helps to step back slightly with your back foot and then step in again as you throw the
counter jab. (Keep your front foot in the same place.) Follow-up with a counter right if the
jab connects! Or lean away again, and come back with a 1-2. Have fun with this counter. It
works really well against overly anxious opponents or tired opponents that throw lazy jabs.

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Countering the Right Cross


• Jab or Double Jab

Jab him the moment his right hand leaves his face. This counter is great for opponents that
cock their right hand before throwing it. Follow up with more jabs as you look to throw
your right hand. You can also extend your left arm out and use it to push his head back
instead of throwing a jab. Don’t forget to keep your chin tucked behind your left shoulder!

• Block & counter right

Some opponents swing everything into their right hand making it take forever to retract.
Block their right hand and counter with your own. The trick to this counter is the rhythm.
There are 2 ways to approach it. One way is to treat it like a 1-2 rhythm ( jab, right) but
instead of the jab you block his right as your “1”. The other way is to counter immediately
off the block so he barely feels the block and gets hit by a fast right.

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• Block & counter left hook

Many fighters take forever to retract their arm after a right hand. Wait until you feel his
right hand hit your glove, then release your left hook over the top. Follow-up with another
left hook to the body, or a right to the face, or a quick 1-2.

• Trade counter right (to head or body)

This is an uncommon but very basic counter. Everyone learns to counter a jab with a jab
but for some reason, many aren’t taught to counter a right with a right. Anyway, this is how
you do it. Anytime you see him throwing jabs, you wait for his right hand. The moment you
see the right, come straight into it and land yours. Cover your face so you don’t take his. As
you get better at doing this, you will slip your head to the outside as you land yours. The
damage on this counter is known for causing knockouts because both of you are going full
force at each other. Learn this counter!

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• Shoulder roll & counter right

This is a classic shoulder roll counter. Roll the right hand with your left shoulder and come
back with a counter right. If his right hand comes straight, your left shoulder will parry it to
the inside. If his right hand comes wide, your left shoulder blocks it from the outside. You
can counter with a right cross or right uppercut. Shoulder roll using as little movement
as possible. Don’t lean off balance or roll so much that you’re turned away from your
opponent. You can shoulder roll with your left hand up, it’s not necessary to drop the left.

• Early left hook

This is a tricky counter but very effective once you learn the timing. Your opponent’s chin
is exposed when his right glove leaves his face. It’s not until his punch is extended that his
right shoulder comes up to cover his chin. So the trick is to land your left hook right as
his right glove leaves his face. To accomplish this, you have to throw your left hook early
(hence, the name “early left hook”). He absorbs partial damage even if he blocks. Later on,
his fear of your left hooks will keep him from throwing his right.

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• Slip & counter left hook (head or body)

Slip outside the right hand and counter with a left hook to his head or body. Don’t lean in.
Slip OUTSIDE his right hand, not under it. Keeping your body tall and balanced for better
reach and power. Always keep your eyes on his HEAD, never look down. Many fighters
have the bad habit of looking down to the side that they want to slip. This telegraphs your
movement and makes you easy to counter.

You can slip more easily by setting your head to the right just a bit so you have more room
to slip left outside of his right hand without having to lean off balance. Once you master
this slip, try throwing a counter right hand as you slip his right hand...and THEN come back
with a counter left hook. If you ever get to this level, congratulations!

• Slip & counter left uppercut (HEAD)

Slip the right hand so it looks like you’re going to throw a left hook to the body, but
instead throw a left uppercut straight up the middle. BOOM - you probably surprised him.
Now follow-up with some more leather.

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• Pivot & counter right

This move works best against fighters that throw straight right hands. Pivot away slightly
to take your head outside of his range. Plant your right foot and throw a massive counter
right. This is a dangerous knockout counter. Try to pivot as little as possible so you can
counter sooner. You can try leaning your head to the side beforehand just a bit so you
have more room to pivot out of the way. For added bonus, you can also jab with that pivot.

• Pivot left hook (overhand)

This counter is also known as the “check hook”. Pivot out of the way of your opponent’s
right hand and counter with a hook over the top. In the image above, I made a very small
pivot but it’s sometimes useful to make wider pivots such as 30-45 degrees to take yourself
out of harm’s way.

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• Head lift & counter right

This is a deadly counter and one of my favorites. Stand with your head a little bit lower
and bait his right hand down at your head. When he throws, stand up to lift your head out
of the way and throw your counter right over the top. So easy to do but very deadly! As
the years go by, you will learn to do this with such subtlety that your opponent will never
realize why he can’t land his right hand on you.

Do know that I exaggerated in the image above for demonstrative purposes. I usually only
drop my head an inch or two so it’s not easily noticeable.

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Countering Curved Punches


Countering the Wide Right
For many beginners, this is the most dangerous punch. They usually don’t know how
to defend against this and end up getting hit by huge punches thrown by intimidating
brawlers. Here are some easy ways to avoid this.

• Jab interception

Stick the jab in his face. Anytime you see his right hand drop, jab him or push his face
away, this will guide his right hand up into the air and way off target. It’s easy to do against
brawlers that don’t move their head.

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• Left block + right to the body

If he throws the right really wide, rotate into it and have your left glove at the side ready
to catch his wide right. At the same time, you spin a hard right into his solar plexus. The
harder he rotates, the harder he gets hit. It’s a very effective counter. You’ll teach him very
quickly not to swing wide again. Make sure you keep your eyes ON TOP, do not look down
when you throw at his body!

• Inside hook

Once again the check hook wins. You beat his wide right by throwing a tighter left hook
on the inside. This counter shares the “early left hook” mentality. A good idea is to have
your left glove extended just a bit and then imagine your left hook “slapping” his face right
when he pulls his right hand wide. You can roll afterwards so his right hand misses entirely.
You can also do this move with a pivot.

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• Roll under & left hook

Some guys are really obvious with their wide right hands. Roll under it and come back
with a left hook to the head or body. If he’s shorter than you or you don’t have time to roll
under, then roll away and then come back with a counter right.

• Lean back & counter

Lean away and come back with something (can be any punch). Remember to lean away
by bending your back knee or stepping away with your back foot. (Leave your front foot
where it is). Lean back just enough to avoid the punch.

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Countering the Left Hook

• Jab

Assuming equal arm length, a jab is always longer than a left hook. Stick him with your jab
to score a point and push him back. There is no reason why your opponent should be able
to get into left hook range without first getting past your jab.

• Block & left hook

If your opponent can reach you with his left hook, the opposite is probably true. Block his
left hook and come back with your own. It’s always a good idea because he’s probably
following up with his right hand which means he’ll be open to your hook (according to the
“early left hook” theory).

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• Roll & right jab

Roll his left hook to get your right shoulder closer to him. Then throw an immediate right
jab to his face. You won’t need much power; the unexpected speed of this counter will
surprise him. Now follow up with a big left hook and a real right hand.

• Trade left hook

One of the best counters for a left hook is a left hook. Many fighters (even pros) will drop
their right hand slightly as they throw their left hook. You can capitalize on this by throwing
a left hook at the same time (but keeping YOUR right glove up, of course). This counter
is the most common left hook counter for knockouts. Both of you are rotating into each
other’s punches. Aim for his temple or his chin — usually one or the other is exposed.

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• Lean back and counter right (helps to put head down or closer at first)

Lean away from his hook and come back with a counter right. It helps to have your head in
close at first to bait a short hook, then pull your head out and come back with a counter. If
you think about it, you can throw a counter left hook as you pull your head out, then come
back with a counter right. Beautiful counter!

• Roll under & counter

This is a very hard counter to do and not usually done from a standoff position. It’s more
common when both of you are punching in rhythm. Roll under his left hook and come
back with a counter left hook or right cross or both. If you’re throwing the counter left,
throw it as you’re coming out of the roll. If you’re throwing the counter right, throw it after
you finish rolling so that he’s turning into your right hand as he’s following up with one of
his own.

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• Pivot jab

Many fighters aren’t taught this counter but it’s very effective because you’re moving your
body further away from his hook. His left hook loses power as it over-rotates to reach you.
If you’re having a hard time catching an opponent that leans in, try pushing his face away
instead of punching.

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Countering Left Hooks to the Body

• Elbow block & counter right

Very easy counter. Pull your elbow down to block, and quickly shoot up the counter to his
face. As long as you counter right after blocking, there is NO way his glove will make it
back in time to protect his face. To land this counter, you have to pay attention instead of
hiding in your shell when you’re defending against left hooks to the body. Keep your eyes
open for the counter-opportunity.

• Pivot away & jab

Once again, you pivot away and jab at him.


This is very funny to do against guys that lean
in for the left hook to the body. They often fall
off balance as you pivot away and their left
hook swings awkwardly through the air. Don’t
worry about his hook landing, it lacks power
because you pivot away.

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• Jump out and counter

Make a quick hop backwards and/or lift your arms so his left hook misses completely, then
counter! When you jump backwards, don’t jump up off the ground. Think of yourself as
relaxing your legs and letting your body freefall backwards. Fall back just an inch to keep
yourself in range.

• Inside right uppercut (head or body)

This is a difficult counter but very effective when you master the timing. You rotate
your body into a hard uppercut, keeping your right elbow down to block his left hook.
Your right uppercut should perfectly intercept his left hook to the body, blocking and
countering it at the same time. I recommend this counter to be used at close range. Don’t
think about it, just throw it when you feel your opponent loading up hooks on the inside.

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Countering Rights to the Body

• Block & counter left hook

Pull your elbow down to block the right hand, then left hook over the top to chop his head
off. There’s no way for his right hand to get back to his head on time. He has to roll under
your left hook (so watch for that). You can also try a counter right instead of a left hook.

• Pivot left hook

Pivot out of the way while throwing a counter left hook. Aim for his temple, the top of his
head will be exposed especially since he’s aiming downwards. I focus more on getting my
body to turn sideways, instead of worrying so much about the pivoting.

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• Jump out and counter

Some guys will dip down super low when they want to throw to the body. Just hop out
slightly and come back with anything you want.

(In the pictures above, the left one is me already jumping out of the way. I usually start with
my body just a bit closer and compact to bait the body shot.)

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Countering Uppercuts

• Elbow block & counter hook

Treat this counter as you would with a hook to the body. Pull the elbow down to block and
then come back with a counter before his hand returns to its defensive position.

• Lean back & counter

You can avoid uppercuts by just leaning out of the way. Let it pass and counter with
anything you want. Counter with anything you like. Crosses are straighter but I prefer to
counter with hooks because I don’t feel like I’m turning my body into him (in case he
throws more wild shots).

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• Straight interception

Straight punches are longer than curved punches. If you feel an uppercut, make sure your
head is not leaning over and you’ll counter him easily with a jab or even a push.

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Countering Southpaws
Countering the Southpaw Jab
• Block & counter jab

Block the southpaw’s right jab with your left glove and jab right over it. You can parry it or
block using your knuckles like you’re pawing at his jab. It helps to keep your head moving
when you use this counter. I like to hold my head low and then pop up and jab over the
top. You will need this counter over and over when fighting southpaws.

• Slip & counter right (head or body)

Slip your head to the left as you shoot a counter right to the head or body.

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• Slip & counter left hook (head or body)

Slip outside and throw a left hook over his shoulder to his head, or under his arm to his
body. It helps to get your front foot to the outside when doing throwing this counter. You
can step in when you slip or you can get your front foot to the outside before you slip.

Sometimes this counter is thrown as a left cross to get more range. Remember not to look
down if you’re throwing to the body. You can also throw a left uppercut instead of a left
hook.

You can also throw a quick right as you slip to distract him for your left hook counter.
Throw the quick right just to distract him, don’t try so hard to land it.

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Countering the Southpaw Left Cross


• Parry & counter right

Parry his left cross down or to the side and come back with a counter right cross. You parry
instead of blocking so that you’re not bouncing his fist back at him. Make him miss so you
have more time for the counter. When you counter, try not to lean forward even though it’s
really tempting.

• Parry & counter jab

You can also throw a counter jab after the parry and then follow it up with a right if you like.
Countering with the jab can be very easy especially if you’re standing very sideways and
your jab is extra long.

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• Slip & counter right

This is your #1 counter against southpaws. Slip outside the left cross and come back with
your right. When you first learn this, you will be tempted to lean forward to reach with the
right but as you get better, you will learn to pull away instead of leaning forward. Let him
reach into your space to make your counter easier and deadlier. You can be more elusive by
stepping your right foot to your right when you slip.

• Slip & counter uppercut

This is a great counter to target the body after slipping a southpaw cross. It’s easier to
target the body if you’re pulling back instead of reaching in. Let him reach into you. This
exposes his body and makes it easier for you to land the uppercut without exposing
yourself.

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Countering Southpaw Hooks & Uppercuts


Southpaw hooks and uppercuts can be defended the same way as you would against
orthodox fighters. You can lean away and then counter. Or block and then counter. Or roll
and counter.

Southpaw hooks are also easily avoided by not letting them step their front foot to the
outside of yours. This positional advantage allows them to reach you with more of their
punches whereas your punches don’t reach as well.

Southpaw uppercuts can be blocked or rolled, or also avoided by leaning or moving away.
You should be aware that southpaw uppercuts come from a slightly different angle. The
southpaw’s right uppercut is very close to and will feel like it comes from right underneath,
so watch for that. The southpaw’s left uppercut comes from very far away which can make
it easy to block (theoretically) but sometimes difficult to sense because it’s not thrown
often.

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Counter Punching Tips


Look for the Counter
Be defensively aware but always look for the counter. Focus on the countering opportunity.
Keep looking for openings, not for punches to evade. When you defend a punch, evade
and get back to offense as fast as possible. You don’t want to sit there and defend all day.

Follow Up
The perfect counter isn’t one perfectly placed punch. If you catch your opponent, follow up
with more punches. Chase him down and attack him until he comes back with something
(don’t get reckless, though). Maximize the opportunity to land damage on him.

Use your counters to keep him on defense, instead of thinking that your counters shut
down his offense. Some fighters will hide in a shell and counter only when attacked.
Instead you should think of your counters as part of your offense, not defense. Always
imagine that you are the offensive fighter, using counters to scare him from throwing
anything.

Use your counters to stay offensive, not defensive.

Bait the Counter


The easiest way to counter a punch is to know what punch he’s throwing. You can control
what he’s throwing by baiting for the shot. For example: the easiest way to counter a right
hand is to bait his right hand. So expose yourself or do something that baits his right hand,
then counter it.

Counters Should Be Trained Reflexes


Drill your counter attacks until they become natural reflexes. Just because you perfected
the counter and learned how to set it up is not enough. Practice your counters until they
become instinctual.

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Counter Punching Checklist


Can you...
• Counter the jab?

• Counter the right hand?

• Counter the left hook?

• Counter the left hook to the body?

• Counter an opponent’s 1-2 combination?

• Counter without lifting your hips or leaning off balance?

• Counter using a pivot or back step?

• Counter using a body shot?

• Counter using a roll or slip?

• Counter a southpaw jab?

• Counter a southpaw right hand?

Let’s move on to proper boxing training to develop and refine the boxing techniques
you’ve learned in the past week.

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Day 8 - Advanced Skills
Advanced boxing skills will maximize your fighting effectiveness
and efficiency. Learn tips and tactics to progress your skills beyond
the fundamental technique.

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Day 8 - Advanced Skills

Day 8 - Advanced Skills


Advanced techniques make fighting easier, not harder.

Today you’ll learn some advanced skills and how to put it all together. I’ll give you some
advanced boxing tips to improve your offense, defense, body movement, and fighting
reflexes. You develop these skills by drilling them into habit as you work on the mitts with a
trainer or partner. The person holding the mitts is responsible for telling you what he sees.
A mirror can also tell you if your form is falling apart or show you things you can do better,
etc.

Some of the tips you learn today are meant to be added on to what you already learned
from the previous days. It’s not necessary that you learn everything in one day. Some
things will come naturally whereas others require more time before you finally understand
the concept. With dedication and constant practice, you will ultimately master all of these
tips and come up with more of your own. The advanced boxing tips in this chapter will help
you develop your technique beyond the fundamentals.

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Training Tips
1. How to Breathe
Learn how to breathe with your nose. It’s more effective and deeper than mouth breath-
ing. Build the habit of nose-breathing by doing it as you train. Do it while running, jumping
rope, cross training, etc. Breathe through your nose.

There will be times when you exhale through the mouth; you do it when you want
explosive movement. Suppose you wanted to throw a punch, slip, or make a sharp dash
towards your opponent...you would use an explosive exhale through your mouth. It should
sound like a hiss or a “pshhh.” You would only be exhaling a short tight breath. The shorter
and more compact the breath, the more explosive your movement. By not exhaling all of
the air in your lungs, you have more air to throw more punches and make more explosive
movements. Exhale explosively with short breaths through the mouth when you want to
punch, defend, or move explosively.

2. How to Relax
Relax by controlling your breathing and making sure that you exert force during the exha-
lations, not the inhalations. The clever way to be more relaxed is to keep finding ways to
exhale deeper and sharper; release your body instead of tensing it up. Your body stays
relaxed anytime that you’re not making an explosive movement. Even if you do explode,
your body tightens only for a split second and then it releases again. This is the physical
part of relaxing.

The mental part of relaxing is understanding boxing with the right attitude. Don’t worry
about winning or losing. Work to learn something. Learn to enjoy hard work. Slow down
the pace if it’s too fast and don’t let yourself get hurt for no reason. Put aside your pride
and expectations.

Additional Resource: How to Stop Wasting Energy

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3. Proper Fight Conditioning


Proper conditioning requires efficient workouts that target your major muscle groups.
You don’t have all the time in the world to work on every muscle. You increase your
conditioning by learning how to use proper technique that doesn’t waste energy. You
improve your endurance by fighting to your own rhythm. Fighting to your own rhythm
allows you to fight at a pace that is most efficient to you!

It’s important that you train at different training paces and intervals to allow your body to
adapt to sprint speeds and endurance speeds. Real fighting never runs at one speed. There
are lulls and slow movements, and then explosive bursts of energy. What tires out fighters
the most is not the speed but the changes in speed. This is why it’s important to train at
different speed intervals. Do lots of sprint training and tabata drills (constant changes of
pace during your workout).

Additional Resource: The Perfect Training Pace

4. Reflex Work
Once you’ve trained your eyes to see more things and become more aware, you’re
naturally able to learn the next step which is training your reflexes. When you really think
about it, fighting is all about reflexes. It’s all about what you do naturally that determines
your level of success.

You train your reflexes by hours of drills and mitt work. Mitt work teaches you and
reinforces the right reflexes you should have. Work on developing those defensive reflexes
and counter-punching reflexes. Start slow and work your way up to where you can do it at
high speed AUTOMATICALLY.

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5. Effective & Efficient Movement

Slip small, move small, punch small!

The most effective and most efficient movements are SMALL movements. Slip small, move
small, punch small! It’s easy to see why small movements use less energy and end up being
more efficient, but most people don’t understand why small movements are effective.
Small movements are more effective because they have more accuracy and better timing.
Of course, this implies that you need better skills to have good accuracy and timing. Work
on compact movements that don’t waste energy and leave you vulnerable. (Note: when I
say punch small, I mean a sharp punch that doesn’t have wasted movement. It doesn’t arc
wider or go longer than it needs to. What I don’t mean is a short punch.)

6. Maximizing Energy vs Conserving Energy


Saving energy is not the best tactic to win a fight. Acknowledge that you have limited
energy but rather than saving it, maximize its use to get the most benefit. Always fight with
the attitude of “How can I do the most damage with the energy I have?”

If you use your energy to be effective, you will drain your opponent’s energy. But if you’re
just trying to save your energy, you will always feel like your opponent is draining yours
and you’ll always be battling fatigue. Try to beat down your opponent rather than outlast
him. Think of ways to SPEND your energy, rather than ways to SAVE your energy. Find effi-
ciency in being EFFECTIVE, not conservative.

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7. Training the Eyes


The eyes incredibly important for boxing. Great fighters have great eyes. They see so much
more than the average fighter. To begin with, you need to know where to look during a
fight, and that is to always be looking forward. More specifically, you are looking forward
for openings to take advantage. Keep your awareness high as you look for opportunities to
punch your opponent’s head or body.

A big mistake is to look for your opponent’s punches. Try to feel them, and hear them. Your
body should already be trained to react to his attack without you having to think about it
(drills will develop these reflexes). Focus on openings.

Now how do you develop sharp eyes? First big tip: work the double-end bag! It is amazing
for developing your eyes. This bag cannot be hit with anything less than 100% focus. You
have to look at it or else you’ll miss. The heavy bag, however, doesn’t require as much
hand-eye coordination; you can close your eyes and still hit a heavy bag. Most fighters
don’t realize a heavy bag can develop lazy eyes.

From a scientific standpoint, your eyes do this because neurons cancel out information that
is constant (like the heavy bag that is always in front of you). This happens with any object
that is in front of you, whether it’s a book, a screen, or any random object.

Second big tip, spar at a slower speed. Learn to see every part of your opponent’s
movement. Not just his punch but what he does before his punches. The foot rotation,
the chest twist, the shoulder lift, the elbow lift, the head lean. Learn to see everything an
opponent does when he fights. This aids in the training of reflexes.

Addtional Resource: Where to Look During a Fight

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Punching Tips

1. Use Less Power


One of the biggest tips I can give any beginner is to use less power when they throw
punches. Everyone gets so excited about throwing punches that they can’t wait to unload
all their power. Unfortunately, putting so much effort into the punches makes them
ineffective. Great effective punches are a combination of timing, speed, accuracy, and
relaxation. You need to be able to hit with your entire body while exhaling sharply and
aiming accurately at your target. If you’re too busy loading power, chances are your body
is not hitting at the same time and energy will be wasted. Your accuracy and speed suffers,
and you risk telegraphing the punch.

The goal is ultimately to relax when you punch. I could go on and on about the endless
benefits of throwing relaxed punches but I’ll end it with this--throwing relaxed punches
is the ONLY way to punch. Without relaxing, you will never be able to punch at maximum
force or maximum speed. It’s that simple. Use less power at first. Punch at 50% effort for a
week straight and see if it doesn’t make a difference in your overall punching ability.

2. Snapping Punches
Snapping punches (only minimal surface penetration) are different from pushing punches
(full penetration). When you punch, release your punch and let it bounce off of your target
instead of trying to push it all the way through your opponent. This will result in much
faster and snappier punching which is more effective for boxing. It saves energy while
increasing speed and effectiveness. It will also decrease your chances of getting countered.
The link below is a great explanation behind this crucial technique.

Additional Resource: How to Throw a Snapping Punch

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3. Keep Your Feet Grounded


Keep your feet on the ground when you punch. Without connection to the ground, it’s
impossible to exert force into your opponent. You would only be pushing yourself off
of him, instead of exploding him off of you. Many fighters jump around too much not
realizing how much power is lost when they punch with their feet lifted. They also lose
mobility and control because they can’t change directions in mid-air.

4. Go DOWN, Not Forward


Power in the hardest punch is not generated by lunging forward, but rather it is found in
the pressure you apply into the ground. In other words, drop your body weight down for
a more powerful punch. Not literally dropping, but applying downwards force into the
ground. Once the power is generated through downwards force, you direct that power
to your opponent by extending an arm towards him and rotating your body towards him.
Imagine yourself as a bomb and that you are simply reaching out with your arm to touch
your opponent who is in reach of your explosive force. Contain your energy, and don’t try
to explode into him.

You go down by releasing your hips as you throw a punch. Let your hips drop as your
rotate your body. Keep your weight centered and drop down (SLIGHTLY) as you rotate your
body. Don’t lean forward off balance in hopes of trying to push him with your power. Many
fighters lift their hips while punching which decreases their power and balance. It might
feel explosive because they’re exerting force to come off the ground but in reality, none of
that force generated contributes to punching power, it does the opposite.

5. Hit with Your Entire Body


Hit with your entire body. Rotate the whole body. Find a way to activate every muscle into
every punch. Your feet, legs, hips, stomach, back, shoulders, forearms, fist... EVERYTHING!
The real trick is to make your entire body, as a unit, hit at once. Punch so that your legs,
hips, shoulders, and arms finish their rotation to “punch” at the same time.

Start relaxed and then tighten your entire body all at once for just a split second as you
punch. (Leaving your body tightened any longer than necessary will tire you faster.) Your
whole body is loose at the beginning and tightens when the punch lands. Remember, the
tension is only for a split second and then it’s all relaxed again.

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6. Build Your Recovery Muscles (back side muscles)


Half of your punching motion is the punch, the other half is the recovery. Working the
recovery muscles allows you to pull your arm back faster for another punch. You will
definitely notice a speed increase in combinations. The other benefit to stronger recov-
ery muscles is that you aren’t left vulnerable because of a slow recovery. You’re also
conditioning your arms not to get tired when you miss punches.

The best way to work those recovery muscles is to punch at the air. Focus on lots of
shadowboxing or even a double-end bag. By punching at air, you are forced to pull your
hands back instead of relying on the impact of the heavy bag to bounce your hand back at
you. Many fighters that only hit the heavy bag will always get tired during fights because
they’re not used to missing punches, hitting air, and having to recover their own arms.
Other good workouts are any type of pulling exercises.

7. Minimized Weight Shifts


Most boxers are taught to shift their weight entirely from one leg to the other as they
alternate between rights and lefts. The reason why they’re taught this is to help them throw
all their body weight into each punch. The problem with throwing all your weight from one
leg to the other, is that you end up leaning back and forth. Leaning makes you fall from
one side to the other as you punch. Sure it hits hard because you’re punching with your
entire body, but it’s slow and not really how the pro’s punch.

The more advanced boxers shift their weight TOWARDS one leg and then the other, and
they never shift it entirely to one leg. When you punch, your weight should feel like 55/45
towards one leg and then shifted 55/45 to the other. It shouldn’t feel like a drastic shift, like
70/30 from one leg to the other. You generate power the easiest and fastest way by going
down. The weight shift through the leg is just to help your body rotate. As you become
a more precise and technical boxer, a small shift in the legs is all you need to rotate your
entire body. Leaving your weight more evenly distributed gives you better balance, mobility,
and combination-punching speed (since your body rotates back and forth faster).

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8. More Shadowboxing
When you’re first learning punches...practice punching at the air. Shadow box, do NOT use
a heavy bag. Many beginners often develop bad habits when they hit the heavy bag. Lazy
recovery, slow speed, lazy eyes, too much emphasis on power, loss of balance, under-
developed recovery muscles, reaching too much, lousy footwork, waiting for the bag... the
list goes on and on. Get used to punching at the air!!! (I know it seems boring but if you
really want to improve your boxing, this is the way to go.) A good trainer will make you
prove your technique before he allows you to punch at anything!

Shadowboxing will help you develop good footwork, balance, speed, self-awareness, good
technique, etc. Do it as a warm-up, as a workout, and as a warm-down. You can’t shadow-
box enough. It’s good for relaxation, visualization, and developing skills.

9. Jump Rope
The jump rope is one of the most underrated boxing exercises. Not many people know
just how useful the jump rope can be for developing fighting ability. In no particular order,
the jump rope can improve your fighting endurance, energy efficiency, punching speed,
punching power, footwork, balance, coordination, and agility. Really, can it do all that? YES!

To begin with, the jump rope improves your endurance because it’s such a demanding
exercise. You have to be constantly moving and paying attention to the rope. You can’t
just jog lazily and drop your feet anywhere you want. You have to pay attention to the
rope and maintain a minimum level of awareness. This type of “active rest” will help you
tremendously in boxing, allowing you to maintain a defense even when you’re tired.

The jump rope also teaches you how to relax your body and to move in the most efficient
way possible. You learn how to relax your body and release your muscles so that you only
exert force at the moment the rope comes under you. It develops your punching speed
because of the fast movements that work your entire upper body and arms. It works your
punching power because it forces you to activate your body muscles all at the very same
time. It develops your balance and footwork because your feet are constantly moving as
you stay light and float above the ground. Coordination and agility comes from paying
attention to the rope and moving around the rope. The jump rope did amazing wonders
for my boxing ability.

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10. Aim for the Chest


A simple but deadly effective tactic. Anytime that you face an opponent you can’t hit, aim
for his chest. It will slow down speedy fighters or overly defensive fighters. It allows you to
touch them. The chest punch is harder to slip and forces them to block which slows them
down. If they block your punch, you can push them back, compromising their balance and
making them more vulnerable. Throwing at the chest forces them to be cautious because
it looks close enough to be a head punch. You’re also making it awkward for them because
if they really want to slip the chest punch, they’ll have to duck extra low, allowing you crush
them beneath you.

11. Short Combinations


3-5 punches maximum, then get out. Short combinations are more powerful because
you’re not running out of breath. It’s also a perfect rhythm for you the quick attack-and-
retreat style. He’ll miss when he counters, and you will have caught your breath again to
begin another assault. 3-5 punches, get out, and then come back in again.

12. Punch Variety


Learn to mix up your punches. Try light and soft punches along with some hard ones. Try
throwing two lefts or two rights consecutively, to break up your opponent’s defensive
rhythm. Don’t just aim for the head or stomach; try aiming at the chest, shoulder or heart.
When you aim for the head, try the chin, the forehead, the temple, or the ear. You can also
punch at his glove. Don’t forget to mix in some feints with your combinations!

13. Improve Foot Coordination


The biggest problem with power for most fighters is slow footwork. Naturally your hands
are faster than your feet and so it’s common to see fighters throwing with less power as
the fight goes on because their hands are still fast but their feet are too slow to load the
body behind the punch. Try to shadow box and jump rope more so that you develop feet
that turn as fast as your hands. This will allow you to punch at full speed with full power!

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14. Jab Power


Where does the jab’s power come from?

The jab’s power doesn’t come from the arm. It comes from the drop of your hips. Any time
you jab, try to release your hips and let them free fall for a split second as your feel your
weight drop. I yell at every beginner, “DROP YOUR WEIGHT” when they jab. Do it on every
jab and you will see a huge difference. Try to feel your feet applying more downwards
force on the ground when you jab. The force doesn’t come from stomping the ground, it
comes from releasing your hips right as you jab.

I’m a bit leery about teaching this because I imagine every fighter would telegraph all their
jabs by trying to add too much power. When you drop your weight, only drop an inch and
step your front foot forward just an inch. If anything, drop your weight to add snap to the
jab, not just power. Try applying this “dropping-weight” technique to your other punches
and see how much of a difference it makes!

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Offensive Rundown
Jab
• Fastest and longest punch, leaves you the least vulnerable.

• Uses the least energy, great for scoring.

• Sets up bigger punches.

• Use as offense or defense.

• Use to get in and out of range.

• Can be used to punch or push.

• Best used at long range, it’s not recommended in close range when your opponent can
land harder punches.

Right Cross
• Your strongest power punch.

• Typically follows the jab.

• Can be thrown quickly as a power jab.

• Thrown with body rotation for full power.

• Most deadly when you land as your opponent is throwing his own right (your opponent’s
body is also exposed to your right hand when he is throwing his right).

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Left Hook
• Great for angled side shots.

• Great for head and body.

• Great punch for knockouts.

• Excellent for tricky shots since your left hand can drop to the side and out of view.

• Can throw at your opponent even when he is blocking to pin down his right arm and
neutralize it.

• Your body rotates away from opponent, instead of into opponent like during a right cross.
This sometimes means less risk and vulnerability for you.

Uppercuts
• Powerful punch, very effective at close range.

• Lands at tricky, blind angle which helps you to surprise opponents.

• Great for forcing opponents to lower their guard.

• Great against overly-aggressive opponents (and anybody that leans their head past their
hips)

• Can be thrown more forward (mid range) or more upwards (close range)

• Can be thrown even when your opponent is blocking so you can pin down his arms and
follow up with more punches.

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Punching Checklist
Good punching is not just power. Good punching has good form, good technique, and
good balance. Power, speed, and endurance come naturally when you have the right
technique and attitude.

Can you...
• Maintain your balance while punching?

• Keep the non-punching hand up?

• Maintain a defensive awareness while punching?

• Punch with great power AND efficiency?

• Throw fast power punches with fast recovery?

• Throw relaxed combinations?

• Can you move swiftly away after throwing a combination?

• Can you shadowbox for 15 minutes straight? (Without resting for more than 3 seconds?)

• Throw 2 consecutive punches from the same hand with power AND speed? (The trick is to
keep your weight over the same leg).

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Defense Tips
1. Basic Defense Stance
Hands up, chin down, elbows in. Gloves covering the chin but not the eyes. And ALWAYS
be in position to counter. Never stop breathing. When taking punches, don’t compromise
your stance by leaning back off balance or taking your eyes off your opponent.

2. Defend When You’re Not Punching


It sounds obvious but many fighters don’t realize this. One of the best coaches I’ve ever
made use to say, “If you’re not making an offensive movement, you’re making a defensive
movement.” If you’re not punching, you’re looking to defend AND counter. You should
never be floating around the ring doing nothing.

3. Move the Head or Move the Body


When you’re evading punches, move your head or move your body but not both at the
same time. This way you always have an extra movement left in you. For example, try 2
slips, then a back step, then another 2 slips, then a pivot. By moving only one or the other,
you save energy and always leave room for yourself to move out of harm’s way.

4. Use Your Whole Body


Just as you use your whole body to punch, you should use your whole body to defend. If
you want to stop a hard punch, it’s more effective to move your whole body slightly to
deflect or evade the punch entirely. This allows you to stay in rhythm with his movement
and to come back with a solid counter-punch. If you’re blocking a punch straight on, try to
solidify your whole body so it feels like you are blocking the punch with your whole body
instead of just your glove. The only exception to this tip is when your opponent is not
throwing a hard punch. Suppose he’s only throwing a light jab or soft punches, then it’s not
effective for you to spend extra energy in using your whole body.

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5. How to REALLY Block Punches


Block punches by tensing your body RIGHT AS the punch lands. Tensing up and bracing for
the impact beforehand leaves you tired.

More tips for absorbing punches: 1) GROUND YOURSELF. Dropping the hips right when the
punch lands allow you to ground yourself momentarily and take the punch without being
pushed off balance. To further add to this “grounding effect”, you should activate your lat
muscles and your abductors. This will further transfer the energy to the ground.

2) EXHALE. Breathe like you’re punching. This allows you to repel the shot more powerfully.

3) Deflect, roll, or parry. Turn slightly away from the punch to deflect the power off of you.
Don’t over-rotate or you’ll leave yourself vulnerable or blind to the follow-up punches.

6. Advanced Boxers Don’t Really Block Punches


Funny, I spent the last tip telling you how to block punches, now I’m teaching you NOT
to block punches. The reality is that the best boxers don’t just block punches, they evade
them. Blocking is not effective against the deadliest punchers and should only be used as a
last resort. It’s better to combine your block with a slight parry or rolling motion to deflect
the power. Don’t just obstruct the path of the punch; let your body or hand roll it off. A
small turn of your body can deflect much of the power and guide your opponent off bal-
ance if he over-commits to the punch. During high speed boxing, you need your hands to
counter immediately, and slipping becomes the more common defense.

7. Always Counter
The best defense is a good offense, remember that? It’s not enough to just defend. If all
you do is defend, all your opponent will do is keep punching. Eventually, he will find a hole
in your defense and hit you with something. You can counter right as he throws a punch
or evade the punch first, then counter. At the very least, you must throw something to get
him off of you. If you don’t have any energy, at least fake a counter or do something to
make him stop and think for a second.

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8. How to Defend Against Combinations


There will always be times when you get overwhelmed by combinations. You can stop the
punishment right away by fighting back. Exchanging punches is dangerous so we’ll apply a
more tactical approach. The biggest openings are made when your opponent commits to
his hardest punches. Use that opening to counter or evade.

The easiest way to evade a combination is to step away. You normally shouldn’t do that
against single punches because it’s a waste of energy to move your body against one
punch, but if your opponent is committing to multiple punches, moving away is an easy
way to escape cleanly. You can even walk away, you don’t have to run or jump.

9. Focus on the Bigger Punches


When you’re taking a lot of punishment, it’s not recommended to try and block every
punch. You’ll tire quickly if you try to slip every little jab. Block the jabs if you can but watch
for the most dangerous punches like the right cross or the left hook.

10. Expect Counters on Your Punching Side


If you throw a punch from your left hand, expect your opponent to follow with his right
hand (and vice versa with your right.) If you throw a jab, expect a right hand counter. If you
throw a right cross, expect a left hook counter. If you throw a left hook, expect a right hand.
Anytime that you finish a combination, be ready to evade the counter on the side you just
punched from. I am amazed at how many boxers finish their combinations with a right
hand but aren’t ready to roll the left hook counter. This is an automatic reflex you should
have. It should be as automatic as blocking the jab.

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11. Defense is Awareness


Defense is more than just a position or a technique. A great defense is actually a great
awareness. The most defensive fighters are the most defensively aware. They notice
everything their opponents do. This takes good eyes and lots of drills and sparring with
different opponents. You should always be raising your defensive awareness. Even more
important than keeping your hands up is to keep your defensive awareness up.

Additional Resource: The Meaning of Defense

12. Escape by Changing Directions


The easiest way to escape is to exploit changes in directions. For example if you want to
escape to your left, you should take a step to your right first to draw all his punches to that
side, then step out to your left. It’s a simple tactic that works. If your opponent catches on,
change directions twice — step to one side, then to the other, then change back again and
escape.

You don’t have to bounce, you can simply walk out. Once you get better at this tactic, you
won’t need to take a step. You can do it with your head. Slip to the right, and then walk to
your left. Or slip to the right, slip to the left, and then escape to your right. As you become
more skillful, you will be able to make your opponent change directions simply by stopping
or faking a change of direction. The more clever you become, the less movement you need
to fake your opponent.

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Defensive Rundown
BASIC Defense V.S. ADVANCED Defense

Now that you’ve learned how to defend yourself using blocking and parrying, it’s
important to learn the advantages and disadvantages of different types of defenses.

Basic defense (using the glove) - blocking & parrying

Advanced defense (without using the glove) - rolling & slipping

Blocking
• Very easy to do.

• Protects against many punches.

• Makes you slow to counter (because hands are busy blocking).

• Will still absorb partial damage (less effective against bigger punches or bigger
opponents).

Parrying
• Great for tiring out opponent.

• Great for knocking opponent off-balance.

• Setting up counters.

• Doesn’t work against soft punchers that don’t over-commit.

• Doesn’t work against curved punches, soft punches, or very fast punches.

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Rolling
• Easy defense and very effective.

• Works well when off balance, or blind.

• Can easily defend multiple combos.

• Very deadly if you turn the wrong way.

• Saves leg energy.

• Not effective against jabs and small punches.

Slipping
• Sets up deadly counters.

• Helps you escape entirely (great for moving out of bad positions...like the corner).

• Will tire out your opponent.

• Hardest to do, takes great skill and sometimes even energy.

Footwork
• Can escape bad situations immediately (ie: stuck in corner or when losing exchanges).

• Takes up a lot of energy.

• Can tire out your opponent if you have more efficient movement than he does.

• Great for escaping power punchers that plant their feet to throw.

• Hard to counter if you’re running away.

Additional Resource: Boxing Defense Techniques

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Defensive Skills Checklist


Good form, good balance. A great defense is automatic and always leaves you in position
to counter. The best way to test your defense is to see if you can fight more offensively
while taking less damage. You’re not just trying to be more offensive or more defensive but
both.

Can you...
• Block punches without falling off balance?

• Defend against punches without taking your eyes off your opponent? (Don’t cover your
eyes or look down)

• Defend against combinations without getting tired?

• Defend while moving your feet?

• Defend while staying planted?

• Defend in a way that makes your opponent tired of punching?

• Defend in a way that moves your opponent off balance?

• Defend in a way that makes your opponent vulnerable?

• Counter-punch from a defensive position?

• Counter WHILE you block?

• Counter WHILE you roll?

• Counter WHILE you slip?

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Footwork Rundown
Step-drag
• Low energy, relaxed, efficient

• Maintain stance for offense/defense

Pivot
• Good for simultaneous offense/defense

• Offensively – creates new punching angles, can outbox at close range (without getting hit)

• Defensively – allows you to evade while staying in range to counter

• Useful when trapped in corner, and have to escape by getting around opponent

Bounce-Step
• Good for moving fast while retaining stance, fast reaction time

• When in air, body has poor balance, low power, and is vulnerable to punches

• Lots of energy used, can’t be sustained throughout fight

• Hard to counter from

Shuffle
• Efficient way to cover lots of ground quickly and with low energy

• Can’t attack or defend while moving.

• Takes time to reset for fighting

• Safest when used out of range, not recommended in close

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Footwork Skills Checklist


Can you...
• Keep your back off the ropes?

• Stay out of the corner?

• Move after every combination on the heavy bag?

• Keep your opponent at arm’s length at all times?

• Close the gap every time your opponent distances himself from you?

• Move away instead of taking combinations?

• Use your legs for an entire fight?

• Chase down a retreating opponent?

• Escape an advancing opponent?

• Move without jumping?

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Day 9 - Boxing Workout
Follow the weekly workout routine to develop your boxing skills
and conditioning. Learn how to train and hit the bags properly.

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Day 9 - Boxing Workout

Day 9 - Boxing Workout


There’s an old saying, “Fights are won in the gym.”

Today we’ll try a full boxing workout to get into fighting shape while we develop boxing
skills. But first, I’ll show you how to properly use boxing equipment. I didn’t mention them
earlier because I didn’t want you to develop poor technique by hitting the bags on your
first day. Beginners should be practicing with a trainer or at least in front of a mirror where
they can see their own form. If you put them on the heavy bag unsupervised too early
on, they tend to focus on nothing but power. This develops poor balance and the habit of
pushing the bag instead of hitting it correctly.

The most important steps to working out properly:

1) Safety

If something hurts, STOP! Do not wreck yourself by over-training. Boxing is a long-term


commitment. There is no way that you can speed up your natural learning process by over-
training. Get some rest and give your body a break. Over-training can lead to temporary
and permanent injuries that will affect your time in and out of the ring. Take it slowly and
take care of your body for the long-term.

2) Using equipment properly

By using equipment properly, I mean that you should learn what each piece of boxing
training equipment is used for and how to maximize it to your benefit. Some things may
be obvious but not everything is. By learning how to exercise correctly, you develop your
boxing skills in less time and with less effort.

3) Not developing bad habits.

For your early days of training, it is very helpful to have someone watching you for
mistakes. You can also record a video of yourself and watch it later. Many people never
know what they look like until they see a video of themselves. Don’t overlook this!

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Shadowboxing
Shadowboxing is the simple act of making
boxing movements using nothing but maybe
a mirror. They call it shadowboxing because it
looks like you might be fighting your shadow
since there’s nothing else moving with you. In
reality you’re fighting an imaginary opponent
and visualizing an actual fight as you run
your body through the motions.

How to Shadowbox
Shadowboxing can help you develop many things. Good form, technique, punches,
combinations, speed, balance, endurance, defensive movement, footwork, and mobility.
Any movement that you learn, you can practice through shadowboxing. Move around and
throw punches. Keep those arms relaxed and snappy. The movements are sharp, fast, and
well-balanced. Beginners should shadowbox in front of a mirror to watch their form.

There are many other things you can add to spice up your shadowboxing. You can have
a partner shadowbox against you so both of you can move, throw punches and defend
without actually connecting. I call this shadowbox sparring. It’s a great exercise to get you
accustomed to fighting live opponents. You can also shadowbox around a slip rope to
practice your slipping and roll-under motions. Some gyms will have 2 slip ropes crossed
so that you have 4 quadrants to move through. You can also shadowbox with a tennis ball
under your chin to help you keep your chin down.

Some of my favorite benefits of shadowboxing are that you develop more speed this way
since your hands aren’t weighed down by anything. Your hands move freely and quickly
allowing you to throw numerous punch combinations. I also like that I have to use my own
muscles to retract my arms so this builds my back muscles. I’m not pushing anything and
nothing is pushing, so I develop better balance through shadowboxing because I’m 100%
in charge of the integrity of my boxing stance.

Basic Footwork & Stance Drills


• Move around heavy bag (swinging & no swinging) for 1-2 rounds.

• Move around trainer (throwing punches to test your guard) for 1-2 rounds.

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Heavy Bag Training

The heavy bag is like the most cliché piece of boxing training equipment. It’s almost as
though you can beat up the bag for an hour and call it a workout. Well, I have to say it’s
actually a very limited piece of boxing equipment. Hours spent on the heavy bag will
definitely increase your punching power, but not much else. Unfortunately, punching power
is not enough to make you a good boxer.

When used with too much focus on power, the heavy bag can develop bad habits...such as
poor defense, slow punch recovery, lazy eyes, and poor footwork. It can also destroy your
hands if you pound on it at full force every day. Give yourself a chance to develop your
other punching skills such as timing, accuracy, and speed. Power is not the only important
attribute of quality punching.

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How to Hit a Heavy Bag

1. Hit It, Don’t Push It

This is the technique about snapping punches that I mentioned earlier. Learn to hit the bag
with a snap instead of trying to shove your fist through the bag. Against a live opponent,
trying to push your fist through him means over-committing to the punch and leaving
yourself vulnerable if he evades it.

2. Keep Your Balance

Use your own legs to balance yourself. Don’t lean into the bag, don’t shoulder it or push it
around with your head. Leaning into the bag is a very bad habit that opponents can take
advantage of later on in the ring. Don’t be sloppy when you get tired, use those legs! The
only contact you should have with the bag is with your fists!

3. Move around the Bag

Always be moving around the bag. You should be hitting it softly enough that the bag
swings slowly. Move with the bag, follow it around and back away from it to maintain arm’s
distance. You can also circle but always maintain the arm’s distance through footwork. You
should be moving anytime that you’re not punching.

4. Hands Up

Do I even have to explain this? Have a friend watch you or record a video of yourself. You
will be surprised at how many times you drop your hands and how low you drop your
hands. Most beginners don’t realize they spend half the time with their hands down and
they don’t realize that their hands sometimes even fall BELOW their waist!

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5. Active Rest (Don’t wait around)

This is what separates the men from the boys. Watch any professional fighter work the
heavy bag and you’ll see that they’re ALWAYS throwing punches. Even when they rest, they
only rest for maybe 2 seconds at most.

The beginners are always waiting around in between combinations. They’ll throw big
punches and then walk around for 5-10 seconds to catch their breath. These long periods
of inactivity will kill you. Real fights don’t have 10-second breaks for you to catch your
breath. You don’t always have to punch hard, but you have to keep throwing. Put in some
light punches, and jab as you move around the bag to catch your breath. When you’re
ready to throw the big shots again, step in and fire away.

6. Active Eyes

A common problem with heavy bag training is that it can cause lazy eyes. Compared to the
double-end bag or speed bag, the heavy bag is the easiest to hit even when you don’t look
at it. Don’t let its size develop a bad habit of looking away. Don’t let your eyes wander off
to look at other things around the ring. You don’t have to stare at the bag but always pay
attention to the bag. Use your peripheral vision to watch the whole bag. Imagine that you
are keeping an eye on your opponent’s entire upper body.

7. Don’t Get Tired

You can interpret this any way you want. Use less energy or throw fewer punches. Or jump
around less often. Whatever you do, you are not allowed to get tired against a heavy bag.
The easiest way not to get tired is to relax and use good technique. You can have a burnout
round at the very end of your workout but don’t make every round a burnout round.
Conserve your energy.

8. Maintain Arms Distance

You should never be any closer to the bag than you need to hit it. The right distance is
arm’s distance from the bag. This will take tremendous practice and constant footwork but
it will develop your range awareness over time. Never stand in left hook range if you’re not
throwing left hooks! Even if you are throwing hooks, throw them and get out immediately.

Additional Resource: 10 Heavy Bag Training Tips

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Heavy Bag Drills

For regular heavy bag workout

For a normal heavy bag workout, spend 3 rounds on the bag. Use the guidelines above.
Stay sharp and try out the combinations you’ve learned. Although the heavy bag is best
known for developing punching power, it’s important that you use it to develop your other
punching skills as well. Power is no good if you don’t have the speed, endurance, or foot-
work to go with it.

For Speed/Endurance

To develop your speed and endurance on the heavy bag, we do tabata drills. These are
non-stop rapid short punches on the heavy bag. Most fighters will do this on the final
minute or final 30 seconds of each round. You can take turns with a partner on the bag,
hitting for 15 seconds at a time. Or you can do a whole round all by yourself.

For Footwork

Hit the bag with light punches to make it swing around. Move in and out with it while
maintaining the proper arms distance. You can also do a drill called “forwards & sideways”
where you follow the bag moving only sideways or forwards but never backwards as you
attack it nonstop with punches. This drill is also good for learning your range.

For Accuracy

Stick some pieces of duct tape randomly over your bag. Just use a few. You can try using
different colors or placing them at different levels. Again, make it random. As you punch
the bag, try aiming for the pieces of duct tape and even making up combos that target
different pieces.

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Speed Bag Training

The speed bag is for developing your speed, endurance, rhythm, timing, and accuracy. At
the very least, it improves your hand-eye coordination as well as your arm and shoulder
conditioning. It’s a great workout for your shoulders and fun to do. Check out the
“SpeedBagSkunk” link below from some inspiration.

Additional Resources:

• How to Hit a Speed Bag

• SpeedBagSkunk (watch this master speed bagger) - Youtube

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How to Hit a Speed Bag


In order to hit the speed bag properly, you must first understand the rhythm. Just know
that the speed bag will rebound 3 times for every hit. So if it you hit it once, it will go
FORWARD-BACK-FORWARD, and then come at you to be hit again. *HIT!*, wait 3 bounces,
*HIT!*, wait 3 bounces, repeat for an entire round.

1. Open your hands

One of the best tips for beginners is to open your hands and hit with your fingers instead
of your knuckles. (Hit as if you’re slapping downwards at the bag.) Beginners hitting with
their knuckles will quickly lose control and end up hitting the bag too hard or too fast.
Hitting with the fingers will help beginners slow down the pace and get use to the rhythm.
Once you get the hang of this, you can then close your hand to make a fist.

2. Hold both hands close to the bag

Keep your hands close to the bag. Keeping your hands close will allow you to hit the bag
without having to race your hands to it. If you let your hands get too far from the bag,
you’ll end up moving it too quickly to hit the bag which makes you hit the bag too hard.
Keep your hands close! When one hand is hitting, the other hand should be waiting right
under the bag.

3. Hit in small circles

Your hand should draw small circles in the air when you hit the speed bag. You’re not
swinging your fists back and forth; you are making circular motions in the air. You can even
practice making small circles in the air to get used to the motion before trying it on the
speed bag. Just remember to make circles.

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4. RIGHT-RIGHT-LEFT-LEFT rhythm

The best rhythm for beginners is to go right-right-left-left. This means hitting twice with
your right hand, then twice with your left hand, and repeat. On the first hit, use the front of
your fist. On the second hit, use the bottom of your fist. It should feel like a natural setup
for when you switch to the other hand.

Some trainers will recommend for beginners to hit 3 times with each hand before
switching. It’s up to you.

5. Stand square

You are not in your boxing stance. You should be standing square in front of the bag with
both feet at equal distance from the speed bag. Stand a little closer than arm’s length from
the bag. You can move closer or farther until it feels comfortable. Your eye should be level
with the bottom of the speed bag, but a little lower or higher would also be ok.

NOTE: once you get the hang of hitting the speed bag with your hands open, try doing it
with your hands closed!

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Speed Bag Training Tips

4 Different Speed Bag Rhythms

Try learning different rhythms. After learning the basic rhythms, see if you can make up
your own speed bag rhythm. The most important thing is keep your arm moving the entire
round, this conditions your shoulders for non-stop punching later on! Slow down if you
need but don’t rest during the round!

Forward-Down – this is the basic rhythm taught above. Hit with the front of your fist and
then with the bottom, and then repeat with the other hand. This rhythm is usually the most
natural and comfortable for beginners.

3 Down, 3 Down - hit with the bottom of your fist 3 times with each hand, before
switching. Pyramid up to 10 and back down to 3 again if you like.

Alternating Hands – switching hands on every hit, keep hitting with the bottom of
your fists. Most boxers doing this will stand at a slight angle with the bag lined up to
their rear arm (instead of centered on their face). You should feel an intense burn with
both shoulders and triceps. I usually feel more of a burn on my front arm. I like to do the
alternating hands rhythm during the last 30 seconds of each round, going as fast as I can.
For beginners, you can start with the last 15 seconds of each round.

FORWARD-Down-Down – hit with a forward, then down twice with each hand before
switching hands. You can do more “down’s” before switching hands if you like.

Different Speed Bag Workouts

You can make the speed bag workouts more interesting by doing different things as you
hit the bag. You can hold the free hand up by your ears to work on keeping your hands up.
You can bounce up and down with your feet like you’re jumping rope. You can also learn
more advanced ways to hit the bag. Search Youtube for “speed bag skunk” and watch how
this guy hits it. You can try hitting at single rebounds or even slipping the speed bag every
now and then. There are videos of old-timers hitting the speed bag with their temples,
which is an incredible neck exercise. (Roberto Duran comes to mind.)

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Double-end Bag Training

Also known as the “floor-to-ceiling bag” or the “crazy bag”, the double-end bag is one
of my favorite pieces of training equipment. I love it more than the heavy bag and
have always claimed that this is the best bag to develop your higher level boxing skills.
Defensively, the double-end bag will raise your awareness because it swings quickly back at
you. Offensively, the double-end bag will increase your hand speed, timing, and accuracy.
The small size and constant movement of the bag makes it impossible to hit cleanly unless
your speed, timing, and accuracy is perfect. At the higher levels of boxing, timing and
accuracy becomes far more important than punching power.

How to Hit a Double-end Bag


Working the double-end bag is easier than you think. Go slowly and keep hitting it slowly.
Hit it softly enough so that the bag doesn’t bounce back more than a few inches; this pace
allows you to follow it up with non-stop hits. Treat it like a speed-bag, focus on rhythm and
continuous hitting. It’s tempting to try and hit it hard but this isn’t how boxing works. The
most important thing is to make sure you can touch the bag on a consistent basis. Once
you know you can hit it over and over, you slowly increase the power while maintaining
constant hits.

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Double-end Bag Drills

• Left-left-Right, Right-right-left

This is the basic drill still used by many pros. Throw two punches with the left hand,
then finish with the right. The important thing is to not wait around. Throw the first two
immediately to feel the bag and aim the 3rd. You can also work with a partner so both of
you are taking turns hitting the double-end bag and moving around. Don’t forget to mix
up the punches; you don’t always have to start with a jab.

• Combo and Slip

This works best on the really loose double-end bags. Throw a combination and finish with
2 slips, moving your head to avoid being hit by the double-end bag. You’ll pivot to the side
or move and then come back with another combo and slip again.

• Combo and Move

Throw a fast combination and the moment you miss, step off to the side and try to connect
again. Keep moving and punching until you connect, then plant yourself and throw a
combo. The moment you miss again, you move again.

• Constant Shuffle Punching

Shuffling your feet as though you’re jumping rope and throw a punch for each bounce. I
do this drill randomly throughout my workout, like in between rounds or when I’m waiting
around before sparring. It develops smooth footwork as well as feet to hand coordination,
so I’m always punching with leg power. You can stand square around the bag as you do
this drill; it’s not necessary to be in your boxing stance all the time.

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Maize Bag Training


The maize bag aka slip bag, looks like a speed bag but much
heavier. It hangs from the ceiling and swings as you shadowbox
and slip around it. Start off with a few slips here and there, before
you get more creative with multiple slips. Some guys like to use it
in front of a mirror so they know when it’s coming from behind.

Focus on rhythm rather than speed. You shouldn’t feel like


you’re jerking your head around to avoid the bag. Keep throw-
ing punches and slip the maize bag without losing your punching
rhythm. Let your head swing naturally as you shadowbox around
the maize bag.

NOTE

They do sell large maize bags that look like small pear-
shaped heavy bags. They are still meant to be used as
a “slip bag” but with the difference being that you can
punch them.

They are somewhat more practical since you have to


punch and defend against it. Nonetheless, there are
still guys that prefer the small maize bag to practice
more precise head movements.

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Jump Rope Training

I personally use the jump rope as my warm-up. But other gyms might use it as a cool
down. It’s completely up to you. Hands down, the jump rope is one of my favorite exercises.
For $5, you can’t find a more effective piece of training equipment. It develops everything
from endurance, power, and speed to balance, footwork, rhythm, and coordination.

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How to Jump Rope


• Relax

You have to relax to last long with the jump rope. The jump rope will teach you how to
breathe and how to move your body in the most effortless way possible. When you first
start out, it’s natural to get tired within 50 jumps. As you get better, you can jump straight
for hours if you want. The key to the jump rope is breathing. Try to breathe using nothing
but your nose.

• Bend Your Knees

There may be moments when you straighten your legs to move around, but you always
land with your knees bent. This prevents injury.

• Land on the Balls of Your Feet

Always land on the balls of your feet. This builds the calve muscles and gives you that fluid
jumping rhythm. Landing on your heels will transfer the impact to your joints and cause
long term pain and/or injury.

• Use Your Arms

Swing your arms to spin the rope. A quick flick of the forearms is all you need. Don’t hold
your arms in one place and spin the rope with your shoulders; this builds tension and
makes you prematurely stiff and/or tired. Relax your arms and use them to move the rope.

• Variety

Learn some basic jump rope tricks and alternate between them so you develop different
muscles. Knowing tricks will also keep you from getting bored of jump-rope workouts. I
included a list of basic jump rope tricks below. Turn on some music and find new ways to
jump to the music, and make up your own jump rope tricks.

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10 Basic Jump Rope Tricks

1. Basic jump - hop up and land with both feet together at all times. (Also try one-legged
hops.)

2. Run in place - jump over the rope one foot at a time, while simulating a running motion.

3. Side swing - putting boths hands together, swing the rope on one side of your body and
then the other while jumping.

4. Skier - with both feet together, jump side to side while skipping over the rope.

5. Side-swing skier - with both feet together, jump side to side while swinging the rope
from side to side with both hands together.

6. Bell - with both feet together, jump forwards and backwards while skipping over the
rope.

7. Straddle - spread your feet and bring them together again after every jump.

8. Scissor - land with one foot in front and then repeat after each jump, forming a scissor
motion with your legs.

9. Crosses - cross your arms while jumping to make the rope cross. Un-cross your arms
on the next jump to make the rope cross back. (See if you can do crosses while doing the
other the “run in place”.).

10. Doubles - jump a little higher than you would normally and spin the rope twice under
you before landing. See if you can do a double-cross which would cross and un-cross the
rope with a single jump.

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Partner Training

Boxing is a social activity. You can’t have a fight without having at least two people. Aside
from having an opponent, a training partner will help you progress faster through your
boxing career. Training partners make boxing more enjoyable and personally satisfying.
You’ll have someone to talk to about boxing and life itself instead of standing around by
yourself in between workouts.

From an athletic standpoint, having a partner means having someone who can push your
limits every day. Both of you can challenge each other and give each other feedback.
Ultimately, having a training partner in anything speeds up the learning process.

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Partner Exercises

• Bag Work

You can work opposite sides of a heavy bag or double-end bag. One punches as the other
moves, and repeat. The moment one finishes punching, the other one continues right away.
This sets a nice rhythm similar to an actual fight and keeps both of you alert. Both will work
harder so that there are no lulls in activity.

• Shadowbox Sparring

Both of you can shadowbox against each other so you can see the movements of a live
person instead of trying to visualize one in your head.

• Assistance and Motivation

You can take turns holding each other’s feet for sit-ups, crunches, and reverse sit-ups.
Count the reps and motivate each other to do more. It doesn’t have to be stoic; you can
talk and tell jokes to make the exercises more light-hearted and enjoyable. In one of the
gyms I trained at, it was common for us to crack jokes and laugh as we did crunches for an
hour. Throw the medicine ball at each other, or work tabata drills on the bag. Hold mitts for
each other when your trainer is busy. There are endless exercises you can do with a partner.

• Road Work

Running is incredibly boring for many people. If that’s the case with you, then I highly
recommend getting a running buddy. It doesn’t have to be running; it can also be
swimming or even jump rope. If running on flat ground bores you, try running up hills.
Whether you’re challenging or entertaining each other, running with a friend helps you
accomplish more.

• Focus Mitts

Takes turns holding mitts for each other and giving feedback to each other. If one person is
not experienced enough to give valid feedback, he could at least say, “Ooooh, you hit really
hard THAT time.” Or even “your hands seem much faster today”. Any feedback helps.

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Most Important Fighting Muscles

The key to effective boxing training is in understanding how your muscles are used in
boxing, and to train them to best fit that purpose. Smart athletes will know that certain
muscles should definitely be given priority over the others. A good training routine will
also keep your body balanced so that your muscles get tired all at the same time. You
don’t want a weak muscle to prevent a stronger muscle from being used to its maximum
potential.

A great example of imbalanced muscles would be the back versus the chest. Most fighters
have strong pectorals but a very weak back. This means they can punch powerfully but
unable to retract the arm as quickly. Their hands are so slow on recovery that they get
countered before they can even punch again.

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LEGS (Power)
By “legs”, I’m referring specifically to the quads and the calf muscles. This is something
that should be ingrained into anybody ever wanting to learn how to do anything powerful
with their body. ALL power comes from the ground, nowhere else! Because your legs
are connected to the ground, they are most responsible for pushing off the ground to
generate power throughout your body. Your legs also happen to carry the biggest muscles
in your body, which is why boxing punches are best thrown with the legs pivoting and
rotating (therefore contributing to the power).

The legs generate the most power! Not the chest and definitely not the triceps. If you look
carefully at many of the most dynamic and complete punches or boxers in history, you will
see that they have big legs more often than big arms or big chests. Look very carefully at
the typical boxer’s body and you won’t find over-developed chests or huge triceps. Marcos
Maidana, Manny Pacquiao, Thomas Hearns, Julian Jackson, and Felix Trinidad are some
names of guys that immediately come to mind. These guys did not have big upper-bodies
but they carried HUGE power in their fists. Even Mike Tyson, as dynamic a puncher as he
was, was still more muscular in his legs than his arms!

HIPS (Lower Body Core & Balance)


The hips hold your lower body and legs together. They also generate a huge amount of
power by pivoting your whole body when you need. Another important function is that
your hips have to do with how well you are balanced. Since your hips are very close to your
body’s center-of-gravity, strengthening the muscles around the hips (e.g. adductors) would
give you better control of your balance. I shouldn’t have to stress that balance is definitely
one of the most important factors in boxing. Balance essentially determines the effective-
ness and efficiency of your offense, defense, movement, and overall fighting ability!

You can also think of your hips as your body weight. By using the muscles in your leg to
move your hips with every punch, you will be able to put your entire body weight into each
punch maximizing its power.

The most underrated core muscles are probably the abductors and adductors. I can’t stress
enough how important it is to target these muscles. These muscles allow your feet to grip
harder and more firmly against the ground. Think of the way your fingers grip a basketball.
The stronger the grip, the more control you have over the ball. The stronger your leg’s grip
against the ground, the more control you have over the power generated from the ground.

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ABS (Frontal Body Core & Snap)


The abdominal muscles are a very powerful set of muscles that hold your whole body
together. Every limb in your body generates a certain amount of power individually, but
your abs are what allow you to combine the force generated by every limb into one total
force. Simply put, your abs allow you to combine the forces generated by all your limbs
into one powerful punch. Aside from connecting your whole body together the abdominal
muscles help you breathe and allow you to take frontal body shots.

BACK (Rear Body Core & Punch Recovery)


The back also functions as a total body core muscle by holding your body together and
combining the power generated by all your limbs. Another fact (I’ve mentioned numerous
times) is that the back helps a lot in punch recovery–which is the speed of how quickly you
can pull your hand back after a punch.

Many fighters are too busy building the front of their upper body through push-ups and
punching at the heavy bag but very few of them focus on building up the back of the
upper body like the rear shoulders and the back. When you spend all your time hitting the
heavy bag, you may not realize that the heavy bag is bouncing your hand back at you on
the recovery phase. By neglecting to work out your back and rear shoulder muscles, you
will have weaker punch recovery muscles. The moment you start missing punches during
a real fight, your arms will tire very quickly because your back muscles aren’t used to the
weight of the gloves.

SHOULDERS (Punch Endurance)


The shoulders are most important for punch endurance. Yes, the shoulders do generate
power and snap for the punches, but in my experience, they are most important for
endurance. Typically when boxers are too tired to punch or hold up their guard, it is usually
due to shoulder muscle fatigue! Think about it: when your arms get tired, it is usually
always the shoulder that is the first part of the arm to get tired. From a physical standpoint,
it makes sense since it’s a relatively small muscle on the edge of the arm that has to hold
up the entire arm. From a physics standpoint, it’s not hard to see why the shoulder can get
tired so fast.

I highly recommend training your shoulders for endurance. Don’t worry about making the
shoulders stronger, they only add small amounts of punching power compared to the leg
muscles.

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ARM (Power Delivery, Speed & Snap)


The arms are all about power delivery! By power delivery, I mean that the arm’s most
important boxing function is to connect the power to the opponent. The arm is not
responsible for generating power, that’s what you have your legs for. All your arms need to
do is to connect the power generated by your body to your opponent!

So all your arms really need to do is to reach out and make contact your opponent,
nothing else! Now that you realize your arms are meant for connecting punches and NOT
generating power, you’ll see that it’s more important to have fast arms than powerful arms.
Fast arms give you that speed and snap. The speed helps you sneak that punch past your
opponent’s defense. The snap helps you recover that arm quickly to defend yourself after
punching.

More specifically, the triceps are for speed in straight punches. The biceps are for the speed
and snap in your hooks and uppercuts. Don’t try to bulk up your arms for power; keep
them lean so you can get those fast punches and fast combinations in! Let the lower body
add power while the arms add speed.

CHEST (Upper Body Core)


The chest muscles are part of your upper body core muscles. Their most important
functions are to connect your shoulders, arms, and lats into one combined force. They also
generate the most of your punching power relative to the rest of your upper body muscles.
A big chest isn’t necessary for punching at all so don’t go out trying to bench press for
punching power.

SMALL MUSCLES (Control & Coordination)


The neck is for punch resistance. Many fighters strengthen their neck so that their head
doesn’t get whiplashed and left in a more vulnerable angled position during a head-
shot. The forearm muscles are for tightening your fist harder when you punch. A tighter
fist means your hand will hit with a more solid punch. At the same time, a tighter fist
means your hand is less likely to be injured since the bones don’t have much room to be
misaligned.

Smaller muscles are more about control than they are about size and strength. For
example: it’s better to develop forearm coordination to parry punches than to build
forearm muscle for blocking punches.

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Boxing Workout
This is the official ExpertBoxing EASY
boxing workout, great for anyone
just getting into boxing training. This
weekly plan includes boxing drills,
conditioning, and sparring sessions.

The workout is easy enough for


beginners but still challenging
enough for athletes. You’ll have fun
learning how to fight while getting in
great shape.

The key is taking it slowly. If something feels too hard or too painful, stop immediately. Give
yourself some time to adjust and modify exercises so you don’t develop or reinforce bad
habits. Increase or decrease the reps as needed and skip or replace entire exercises if you
don’t like them. If you don’t have enough time, feel free to skip some of the exercises.

You’ll be working out from Monday through Friday. The sparring days are your easy days,
also known as the “fun days”. Friday is for running only. The weekends are your rest days.
Actually, you know what? This is the EASY boxing workout; take a rest day whenever you
feel like it. Or take an easy week if you need. (Seriously, it’s ok.)

Boxing Workout Schedule:

Monday - power & speed conditioning

Tuesday - sparring

Wednesday - speed conditioning

Thursday - sparring

Friday - easy day

Saturday & Sunday - rest days (do nothing or stretch)

NOTE: Rest about 1 minute between each set of reps.

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MONDAY - Power Conditioning


Use your momentum to complete the workout. Some exercises are easier when you go
a little faster. No resting. Try to finish the conditioning portion within 60 minutes before
your body adrenaline runs out. Do the power conditioning workouts in any order you want.
(Share the equipment.)

You are building power, not size or strength. Use lighter weights than what you can handle.
This is conditioning, not weightlifting.

Warm-up

• 15 minutes jumping rope

• 15 minutes stretching

• 15 minutes shadowboxing

What if it’s too easy? Increase the reps or difficulty. You can add the running and end-of-
day core workout to Tuesdays and Thursdays as well. Or add some mitts to your workout
every day to develop your boxing skills more quickly.

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Power Conditioning Workout

Clapping push-ups

• Set your hands on the floor at shoulder width or slightly wider.

• Do a push-up and clap as you push yourself up and off the ground.

• 2 sets x 10 reps

Explosive Box Jumps

• Stand on a box (about 12-24 inches high) or the edge of the ring.

• Drop off, land on the balls of your feet, and immediately bounce back up.

• Rest only at the top and not at the bottom (if you need).

• 2 sets x 20 reps

Alternating Jumps

• Stand by a box (12-24 inches high) or the edge of the ring.

• Keeping one leg on the floor, raise the other leg to lightly step on the box.

• Keep jumping and alternating your feet.

• Keep your weight on the lower leg, and your head over your lower leg.

• 2 sets x 20 reps

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Squats

• Stand with feet at shoulder width or slightly wider.

• Bend your knees until your thighs are parallel to the ground, before going back up.

• 2 sets x 30 reps

Medicine Ball – Lunge

• Stand straight while holding a 10-20lb medicine ball on your head.

• Lunge forward on one leg and then return to standing position. Repeat with other leg.

• 20 reps each leg

Medicine Ball – Chest Throws

• Stand with a partner facing each other from about 5-10 feet apart.

• Throw the medicine ball back and forth between each other.

• 20 throws (each person)

Medicine Ball – Side Throws

• Stand side-by-side with a partner about 5-10 feet apart.

• Swing a medicine ball in an upwards diagonal direction at your partner as you rotate your
upper body.

• The other person catches the ball and lets the momentum swing the ball away before
swinging it back again. (NOTE: The ball is swinging in a pendulum rocking motion.)

• 2 sets x 10 throws for each side

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Medicine Ball – Cross-over Push-ups

• Place medicine ball in the middle.

• Do push-ups from side to side landing a different hand on the ball each time.

• 15 crossover push-ups for each hand

Medicine Ball – Cross-over Press

• Using platform in the middle (or another medicine ball).

• Step on and off the platform from side to side.

• Push a medicine ball straight up into the air as you come up each time.

• 20 reps each leg

Medicine Ball – Step to Press

• Step up onto a box (12-16 inches tall) one foot at a time.

• Push the medicine ball straight up into the air as you step up.

• Step back down and repeat with the other leg.

• 20 reps each leg

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One-Arm Dumbbell Row

• Bend over a bench and brace yourself with one arm.

• Hold a 10-20lb dumbbell with your other arm, with the palm facing you.

• Pull the dumbbell up, bend your elbow as you point it towards the sky.

• 15 reps each arm

Standing Military Press

• Hold a barbell at shoulder level right by your neck.

• The weight 15-80lbs (should not exceed 30% of your body weight).

• 15 presses into the air

Dumbbell Side Swings

• Stand straight a 10-20lb dumbbell in one arm.

• Swing it out to the side up to shoulder height and let the weight swing the arm back
down.

• Switch the dumbbell to the other hand at the bottom and let the momentum swing the
other arm out.

• 15 swings on each arm

Ab Roller

• 15 reps from your knees

• Do 50 crunches if you don’t have this equipment.

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Chin-Ups

• Grip the pull-up bar so that your palms are facing you.

• 2 sets x 8 reps (do all at once if you can)

Bag work

• 3 rounds heavy bag

• 3 rounds speed bag

• 3 rounds double-end bag

Mitt work

• Work techniques and combinations on the mitts with your trainer.

• 3 to 4 rounds

• The mitt work can interrupt your bag work anytime your trainer is ready for you.

Core

• 100 push-ups (at any interval you want).

• 100 sit-ups (at any interval you want).

• Do this at the end of your day.

Running

• Run 3-5 miles

• Do this at any time of day. It doesn’t matter if it’s before or after your workout.

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TUESDAY/THURSDAY - Sparring
If you’re not sparring, you’re not boxing. It becomes “boxercise” which is like taking a
cardio fitness class. Sparring is fun and safe as long as you keep it EASY. Speak up if you
feel uncomfortable. Ask the other guy to slow down or lighten up his punches. Fighting
through the pain will ruin the learning process. Also show your sparring partner the same
respect. Control your punches and give him some breathing room if you’re overwhelming
him. Don’t let your ego destroy the fun of boxing for you or for others.

Warm-up

• 15 minutes jumping rope

• 15 minutes stretching

• 15 minutes shadowboxing

Technique & Mitts

• Light work on the mitts with your trainer to learn some new techniques.

Sparring

• Do 3-4 rounds EASY sparring.

• Can have an extra first round as “jabs only” to warm-up.

• Can have an extra last round as “very light punches only” to work at inside range.

• Try to work on the new techniques your trainer just showed you.

Bag work

• 3 rounds heavy bag

• 3 rounds speed bag

• 3 rounds double-end bag

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Day 9 - Boxing Workout

MONDAY/WEDNESDAY - Speed Conditioning


This is a combination of speed and speed-endurance. It’s not enough to be fast; you
must be able to maintain your speed throughout an entire fight. There will also be drills
to improve your balance and coordination. Don’t take any breaks during the drills and
conditioning, go from one exercise to the next. Find speed in relaxation rather than tension.
Don’t get tempted to add power to your speed.

Warm-up

15 minutes jumping rope

15 minutes stretching

15 minutes shadowboxing

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Footwork Drills

1-legged Balance Squats

• Stand on one leg.

• Bend the knee to squat down and touch your feet.

• Straighten the leg as you clap your hands above your head.

• 20 reps in a row, then switch legs

T-cone Drill

• Get 4 cones. (You can substitute with weights,


medicine balls, or any objects.)

• Place the cones in a “T” formation about 12-feet wide


and 12-feet long.

• Run and touch cones in this order A, B, C, D, B, A.

• Face your body forward the whole time and don’t


cross your legs.

• Do the T-cone drill 5 times continuously

Foot-Tag

• Have 2 fighters chase each other around the ring trying to step on each other’s feet.

• Once you get better, try “foot-tag” without looking down at each other’s feet.

• Do it around the gym if no ring space is available.

• Have fun and don’t take the drill too seriously. Stay close to each other and exchange
more foot tags. Try to do this exercise without jumping!

• 2 rounds

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Leg-Tag

• Same as ideas as foot-tag but this time fighters try to tag each other’s upper thighs with
their hands.

• Use lots of back & forth footwork.

• 1-2 rounds

Shadowbox Sparring

• Have 2 fighters in the ring shadowboxing against each other as if they’re sparring.

• Make sure they stay 1-2 feet away so nobody connects.

• Encourage them to throw lots of combinations and pay attention to each other.

• 1-2 rounds

Slip line Drill

• Tie a rope or string across 2 posts at shoulder height.

• Have boxers weave back and forth under the rope.

• Go forwards and backwards.

• Throw a few punches on each side of the rope before going under again.

• 1-2 rounds

Dumbbell Shadowboxing

• SLOW shadowboxing while holding 1-2lb dumbbells.

• Going fast will damage joints, do NOT go fast!

• 15 minutes

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Punching Drills

Tabata Heavy Bag Drill – “High Hands, High Knees”

• 2 fighters pair up on the heavy bag.

• One holds the bag while the other throws fast straight punches on the bag.

• Switch every 15 seconds.

• The focus is PURE SPEED, not power! Go as quickly as possible, keep pushing it.

• Aim high at an area ABOVE the fighter’s head.

• Lift the knees and move your feet as you punch (high hands, high knees).

• It helps to motivate and yell at each other.

• 2 rounds

Tabata Heavy Bag Drill – “Combinations”

• 2 fighters pair up on the heavy bag taking turns punching & holding.

• Fighters will continuously throw whatever combination the trainer calls.

• Fighters switch every 15 seconds.

• Trainer calls a new combo every 30 seconds.

• The combos we used were: 1-2-3, 1-2-sidestep-2, 1-3-2, 1-2-5-2, 1-2-3-2-sidestep, 1-1-2.

• Make up some of your own combos!

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Jumping Jabs along the Ropes

• Jump in and out as you jab the ring ropes.

• Every time you jump back, jump back diagonally to the side.

• Continue all the way down the rope.

• Go 3 times moving to your right, repeat again but moving to your left.

• Try to move while jumping as low to the ground as possible.

• (It’s best if you can “jump” without taking your feet off the ground.)

Jab Race

• Put up to 4 fighters on opposite sides of a heavy bag.

• Have someone count SLOWLY from 1 to 10, pausing at random intervals.

• Every time a number is called, all fighters jab the bag as quickly as possible.

• Do 3 jab races. (Everyone should be relaxed and focused on pure speed, not power.)

Jab Defense

• Pair up 2 fighters in the ring.

• Have one fighter chase the other around with multiple jabs at a time.

• The other fighter simply slips and rolls off the jabs (with his hands behind his back).

• The drill works much better if the defender is chasing the puncher.

• First-time boxers can use their hands to defend instead of having to slip.

• Focus on maintaining balance.

• 2 rounds of jab defense for each fighter.

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Bag work

• 3 rounds heavy bag

• 3 rounds speed bag

• 3 rounds double-end bag

Trainer

• Work techniques & mitts with your trainer.

• 3 to 4 rounds

Core

• 100 push-ups (at any interval you want)

• 100 sit-ups (at any interval you want)

• Do this at the end of your day.

Running

• Run 3-5 miles

• Do this at any time of day. It doesn’t matter if it’s before or after your workout.

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FRIDAY - Easy Day

• Run 3-5 miles

• 100 push-ups

• 100 sit-ups

• Stretching

Fridays are your easy days. Be lazy and enjoy it. Run with a partner and talk about stuff. The
3-5 miles will be done before you know it. If you still have lots of energy, do some intense
stretching. Don’t try to sneak an extra workout in.

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SATURDAY/SUNDAY - Resting Only


Resting only! If you can spend this day stretching for an hour or two, or getting a massge.
Do NOT, I repeat, DO NOT WORKOUT on Saturday or Sunday. Enjoy your non-boxing life.
Don’t try to burn every ounce of energy you have. It’s a common beginner mistake to
waste all their energy on days that don’t matter. If you have a lot of excitement to workout,
GREAT–save it for the week!

Your long term goal is not to succeed.

Success is inevitable if you are persistent.

Your long term goal is to stay motivated!

Staying motivated requires that you don’t use up all your motivation. Save that mental
strength and let your passion for boxing and training grow.

The secret to always having energy to workout,


is to always use less than what you have!

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Day 10 - Sparring
Sparring drills to develop your skills inside the ring. Learn the
classic boxing style and general fight strategies for different styles
of opponents.

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Day 10 - Sparring

Day 10 - Sparring
Entering the ring...

Sparring is not just the most fun part of boxing,


it IS boxing. You can hit the punching bag
and work mitts with your trainer all you want,
but until you get in the ring, you’re not really
boxing.

Sparring is truly the essence of boxing and I


would even say that if you have limited time, I’d
rather you spend it in sparring then working on
technique or hitting the bags. Even if you never
plan to compete, you can still enjoy sparring if
you go light!

It is through real life fighting that you truly learn first-hand what works and what doesn’t.
Sparring might not improve your punching ability or defensive technique but it certainly
makes you a better FIGHTER. If there is one tip I could give to beginners, it is to find a way
to spar every day. Go slowly and have fun. Always learn something in sparring. Don’t think
of sparring as a test or rite of passage that you have to work up to. As soon as you can,
jump in the ring and enjoy boxing.

However, don’t spar hard until you’re ready for it. How do you know if you’re ready? If
you’re not scared of getting tired, if you’re not scared of getting hurt. If sparring hard
doesn’t take away your ability to spar the next day, then you are ready to spar. Don’t spar
so hard that you compensate for your lack of technique with heart. Save that fighting heart
for competitions. Be honest and look at yourself in the mirror, only you know what you are
ready for.

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Sparring Drills
Please do these drills before you start sparring. I recommend beginners to start slowly.
Actually, slower than slow. Spar in SLOW MOTION if you have to — I’m serious about
this. Run through the basic sparring drills so that you get accustomed to boxing a live
opponent.

Shadowbox Sparring
First time boxers aren’t use to standing face to face across another person. In this drill, two
beginners will shadowbox against each other in the ring. You move around like a real fight,
except you’re 6-12 inches out of range so nobody actually connects with any punches. This
can be done with just hand wraps on (good for warming up), or with gloves on so both of
you can get used to the weight of the gloves.

You’re not throwing random punches whenever you feel like anymore. You have to pay
attention to the man in front of you. Respond to his punches as you throw your own. You
have to move when he moves at you, and throw punches when you see openings. This
might be your first exposure to spontaneity in boxing training. (Beginners: don’t forget to
breathe.)

Extended Jab vs Shadowbox


Have one fighter chase the other fighter around the ring with an outstretched arm. The
other fighter has to keep slipping, parrying, blocking, and outmaneuvering the jab arm and
throwing counter-punches and combos at his opponent (without connecting). The fighter
with the outstretched arm keeps his arm up for the whole 3 minutes!

After the round is over, they switch. Do this for 6 rounds straight. This teaches both fight-
ers the value of focusing their fight on the jab. The boxer with the outstretched arm
develops shoulder muscle that allows him to pump the jab the entire round. The other
boxer is always aware of his opponent’s jab reach and works constantly to avoid the most
important punch in boxing--THE JAB!

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Day 10 - Sparring

Catching Jabs
Here’s your first chance to practice punching at each other, but very lightly. Move around
the ring and take turns catching each other’s jab. Each person takes a few steps in any
direction and then throws a jab as the other one catches. Be calm and smooth. Don’t worry
about scoring. Pay attention to your balance, your stance, and form. Try not to get out of
balance when you throw a jab or defend against one. No flinching!

You guys are not supposed to hit each other hard, no “rocket jabs”. Both fighters are not
allowed to get closer than arm’s length. The goal is to get use to throwing and catching
each other’s punches. The goal is not to actually land jabs, so the fighters should be
throwing easy jabs at each other to make catching easier.

5-Jab Drill
It’s like the catching jabs drill but now each boxer throws 5 at a time before he switches.
This time, be a little more creative in throwing and defending against the jabs. Don’t always
aim for the head. Try aiming for the body, chest, shoulders, or elbows. You can throw your
5 jabs anyway you want. It can be 2 quick ones and 3 slow ones, or all 5 thrown one at a
time. You can throw the jabs any way you want but keep arms distance when you jab.

The defender can avoid the jabs anyway he wants. He can block with the right hand or right
arm. He can parry if he wants, it doesn’t matter. The defender is also free to move entirely
out of range if he wants and just let the jab hit air. As long as the defender isn’t jumping
out of balance to avoid the jabs, moving in and out of range is a great boxing skill to learn.

Another variation of this drill is to throw 2 jabs at a time instead of 5. Each boxer will take
turns throwing double-jabs at each other. The defending boxer has to catch the first one
and slip or out-maneuver the second one.

1-1-2 Drill
Both boxers are now allowed to use their right hand, but combinations are limited to only
3 punches. Both fighters will take turns throwing jab-jab-right combinations. No hooks
or uppercuts allowed. The defender is not allowed to counter, he can only block. This
prepares both fighters to absorb right hands. Again, the power should be light!!! (This drill
helps beginners to recognize the right hand coming after the jab, and to effectively defend
against it instead of flinching away.)

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Jab Sparring
Now the boxers are free to spar using ONLY their jabs. Again, no powerful rocket jabs
allowed! The boxers don’t have to go back and forth taking turns anymore. They can attack
and defend at will. Pay attention to form and balance. Make sure the back hand doesn’t
drop while the jab is thrown. Use offensive jabs, defensive jabs, and counter-jabs. Don’t
just aim for the head; throw some at the body or even the other boxer’s guard to test his
defense.

Punching vs More Experienced Fighter


A great way to start off a beginner is to have him throw punches against an experienced
trainer or fighter who will not punch back. Don’t pit the beginner against someone only
slightly better. The beginner might land a good punch which challenges the other fighter’s
ego into firing back. It’s better to put the beginner in with someone much better who
can take the punch and defend without returning fire. Have the trained fighter adjust the
beginner on form, breathing, offense, defense, etc.

Have the trained fighter touch him here and there, identifying holes in his defense without
hurting him. Make sure his offense and defense are somewhat solid before you let him in
the ring with another beginner. (Getting in the ring with better fighters builds confidence.)

Center Ring Sparring


Another good drill for beginners is to spar at center ring. The rule is they can throw
punches but only at the center of the ring. The ropes are designated as “safety zone” for
beginners to back step if they feel a bit overwhelmed. Once the fighter on the ropes moves
back to the center, both can resume punching again.

Forwards & Sideways


After beginners get comfortable with center ring sparring, move on to a new sparring
drill called forwards & sideways. The rule is that both boxers can only move forward or
sideways circling around their opponent. They are never allowed to step backwards. This
rule keeps them off the ropes and always in distance to counter. They evade by moving lat-
erally not by running away from their opponent. It’s a great habit to build and in the future
if they ever need to back step, they do it easily without overdoing the back-pedal.

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Sparring Tips

Sparring is to develop skills,


not determine a winner.

Focus on Technique, NOT Winning


Sparring is the time for you to develop your technique. Practice different things even if
it means eating punches. (That’s why sparring is controlled!) Don’t try to win a sparring
match. You should also let your opponent work on his skills. You want to bring out the best
in your opponent so that he brings out the best in you. Beating up your sparring partner so
badly that he doesn’t fight back won’t allow you to develop your technique. If you’re much
stronger or faster than him, tone it down a bit.

Relax
Have fun and don’t get out of control. You have much less endurance than you think.
Fighting a live opponent is much more tiring than fighting a heavy bag, but I’m sure you’ll
find out soon enough. Don’t get tired! You want to spar for as long as possible, 10-15
rounds if you can. You learn so much more when you spar so don’t spend all your energy
in 2 rounds.

ALL Sparring is Controlled


Don’t hit too hard. Avoid flinching, closed eyes, or panic movements. Slow down the pace if
one of you is beginning to make panic movements. Work with each other!

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Day 10 - Sparring

Hard Sparring
I was hoping it wouldn’t come to this so soon but I trust that you’ve taken no shortcuts to
prepare yourself. You’re a warrior and this is what warriors do, they FIGHT! Ok, some final
tips on your first real sparring match!

• Use your jab! (I can’t stress this enough.)

• Breathe! Exhale when you punch, defend, move.

• Return fire, don’t wait all day.

• Go up and down, to the head and body.

• Box at the center of the ring, punch hard along the ropes.

• Keep your hands up and your eyes on your opponent.

Typical amateur boxing strategy:

• 1st round: feel-out, learn your opponent’s style (speed/power/movement capabilities)

• 2nd round: combinations and hard punches (start fighting)

• 3rd round: empty your gas tank! (use the combinations that worked best and don’t stop
punching even if you’re tired!)

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Day 10 - Sparring

Classic Boxing Style


I highly recommend all beginners to learn the classic boxing style before they try anything
else. This is a safe fighting style that allows you to fight effectively while exposing yourself
as little as possible. It’s commonly used by many amateur fighters and still used by many
pro fighters. Master this before you learn to fight with another style.

Stay at Jabbing Range


You can win an entire fight throwing nothing but jabs so why risk getting caught by
your opponent’s bigger punches? Don’t get any closer than you need to be to hit your
opponent. At the amateur level, power shots are counted the same as jabs —just one point.
Even knockdowns still only score as one point. Keep your opponent at arm’s length and
beat him with your jab.

Jab from High Guard


Start with your hands high and jab your way in. Even though you’re having a jab fest, you
should be looking for opportunities to throw your right hand. Work hard to maintain the
jab distance. Don’t get any closer than you need to land the jab. Block your opponent’s
jabs while you land yours.

Right Cross, Left Hook


The fight won’t last long at the jab distance. If you can win the jab battle, KEEP IT A JAB
BATTLE. Keep moving in and out using your jabs for as long as possible. Eventually your
opponent will get restless and try to come in with the right hand. Anytime that you stun
him with your jab, follow up with that right hand. If your opponent wanders any closer,
release your left hook. After landing your combo, establish the jab distance again.

Don’t Trade Until You’re Comfortable


Once you get comfortable with your opponent, you’re free to wade into close territory
for hooks and body shots. You don’t need the uppercut unless it’s absolutely necessary. I
prefer beginners to use the uppercuts as defensive weapons, not as offensive weapons.
Don’t go out there looking to land the uppercut when the right hand and left hook have
much better range.

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Simple Defense
Keep your defense simple. Block and parry until you see opportunities. Don’t bother rolling
or slipping unless you have a great counter in mind. Even better, don’t roll or slip unless
you have a counter-COMBO in mind. Keep it simple, cover yourself and save your energy. If
you’re going to spend energy, spend it on offense rather than defense.

Walk, Don’t Run, Don’t Jump


Move around but keep your feet on the ground. Learn to hold your balance and move in
and out of range without jumping around. This is a crucial skill you will need later down the
line. Some fighters don’t know how to “walk”; they’re bouncing around and wasting energy
while the better fighters are grounded saving energy for punches. Jumping around gives
you more air time, or less “ground time”, which gives you fewer opportunities to punch.

Aggressive Defense
I could argue that there is no such thing as defense. Use your defense to set up your
offense! Defense is not for you to hide and avoid fighting. You’re always throwing punches
or throwing counter-punches. Stay in range, and stay offensive. Don’t get too reckless or
overly offensive, of course. A good defense makes you more offensive, not more defensive!

Box at Center Ring, Punch at the Ropes


When both of you are at the center of the ring, use the space to keep circling around your
opponent and box him with long jabs. Fighters don’t usually throw hard punches at the
center because it’s easy to step away at an angle and counter. Usually the closer they get
to the ropes, the harder they punch. The aggressor punches harder to trap whereas the
defender punches harder to fight his way off the ropes.

75/20/4/1 Punch Count


75% of your punches should be jabs. 20% should be right crosses. 4% hooks and 1%
uppercuts. You don’t need to count your punches but keep this as a general guide. The
jab is your most important punch and number one scoring weapon especially in amateur
boxing. Without a solid jab, your right cross will never land, and your left hooks will never
matter. The uppercut is best at close range which you should be at in the first place.

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Fighting Strategy
Here are some general approaches to fighting different types of fighters. Everybody has
a style and with every style comes a weakness. Sometimes you win with a superior style,
other times you win with better technique. What’s most important is that you find a way
to win with the style and technique you already have. There will always be opponents that
have an advantage over you for some reason. Experience, training, and a good trainer
will help you deal with that. For now I offer some general ideas on how to beat common
styles of opponents. Keep in mind that these are generalizations: not every fighter will fight
exactly to these styles nor will they fight with only one style.

Brawler
Just about everyone starts off as a brawler because he doesn’t know any technique yet. Roll
or block the wide right and come back with some counters. Keep your hands up so none of
the wild punches can land. Use your defense and let him waste energy throwing punches.
When you use footwork against a brawler, make sure you’re doing more walking than
bouncing. Pick the brawler apart with jabs while you let him tire out.

Power Puncher
Many power punchers like to stand in range and trade power shots. If you face one, use
your footwork to establish range and make him miss. When you retreat, step back just an
inch or two so you can counter back after he misses. Beat his heavier punches with faster,
more accurate punches. Box smart, use your jab, use your defense and watch him tire out!

Tall Fighters
Many boxers, amateur and professional all have problems dealing with taller opponents.
The natural instinct is to trade punches with the assumption that the shorter fighter has
more power (because of more muscle) but this isn’t always the case. The taller guy can be
incredibly annoying and keep you away with his jabs. Stay outside his range and dart your
head in and out to make him swing at the air. This will wear out his long arms.

Feel free to trade punches at close range but don’t get crushed under him. If you can,
attack the body and head even when he blocks and push him off balance. Find ways to
walk around him and make him use his legs. Learning how to CALMLY defend against jabs
is crucial to fighting tall fighters.

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Short Fighters
Quite possibly the easiest opponent to beat if you throw lots of jabs and don’t get sucked
into brawls. Use your defense and crush the opponent every time he gets close. Imagine
yourself projecting your chest onto his head when he tries to get close to you. If you plan
on using lots of jabs, don’t make it so obvious that he counters easily.

Use a wide variety of punches to get around his guard when he closes up. Throw lots of
punches into his guard when you retreat to keep him on defense. It’s also easier to slip
than to roll under punches against shorter fighters.

Speed Fighters
These guys can be especially dangerous since we all know speed kills. It’s hard to fight an
opponent that outpunches and out moves you. Quite often, this physical attribute alone
can defeat you even if you’re the better skilled boxer. It’s crucial that you learn to move
with perfect balance so that you’re ready to respond.

Learn to time his combinations. Speedy fighters sometimes use the same combinations
over and over because they can get away with it. It helps to use many feints to make the
speedy fighter respond, and follow that up with a real punch. You don’t need to chase him
down and brawl with him. See if you can fight him at a distance like a tall guy and throw
combinations that force him to block. If you can’t hit his head, try aiming for his chest and
work your way up. Instead of throwing power punches, try to touch him with lots of fast
shots. (Fast guys hate getting touched, even on the gloves.) Once you figure out his rhythm,
you can start aiming more towards the head and add power. Hit the speed fighter like a
speed bag not a heavy bag — using timing and accuracy, not power.

Pressure Fighters
Pressure fighters are especially a nightmare if you have a boxer (hit & move) style or don’t
have the greatest conditioning. My nightmare was usually the guys with great endurance,
high punch volume, constant pressure, AND power! Don’t get sucked into trading punches
with them or else you’ll run out of energy fast. If you run away, walk calmly away instead of
bouncing around. Instead of trying to block and counter his every punch, focus on his best
punches. Suppose he likes the right hand, keep moving and wait for his right hand. Once
you see it, evade and counter hard. If you stop him in his tracks, try to follow him up.

Pressure fighters are also known to slip and roll under a lot. If he rolls under you, try to
lean over him to trap his head under you and walk into him to crush him. This will give you
some time to breathe and also a chance to regain some ground.

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Defensive Fighters
Many crafty boxers will hide behind a defense all day and let you tire out. Others will be
incredibly annoying by potshotting you behind a high guard. Instead of trying to force a
brawl or waste punches into their guard, you can treat them like a speed fighter. Throw fast
and light punches with little power to try and touch them. Keep touching them here and
there, and punch their arms every now and then to keep them pinned. Aim up and down.

Use some feints to see if you can get a reaction out of them. Or throw a test punch and slip
their counter. If they’re hiding behind a really high guard, see if you can walk around them
slightly to get into a better position and then throw around their guard.

Southpaws
Southpaws are left-handed fighters. They stand with the right hand in front and are
potentially every right-hander’s nightmare. The punches come from an angle you’re just
not use to. There are three conventional pieces of advice for fighting southpaws: 1) Keep
your front foot outside his front foot. This puts him in your punching range and slightly
takes you outside of his punching range. The fighter with the outside front foot has a
better position during southpaw-orthodox match-ups! 2) Avoid his left hand. Learn how to
slip it and counter it. If you can avoid the southpaw’s deadly left cross, you can defeat the
southpaw! 3) Throw your right hand. Throw lead rights, straight rights, and overhand rights.
Keep your right hand busy. It’s a key punch against the southpaw along with your jab.

Bigger Opponents
This isn’t a fair fight but it happens all the time. Fighting a big opponent is like fighting a
taller fighter, shorter fighter, power puncher, and pressure fighter all at once. It’s hard to
beat him if he’s bigger than you AND more skilled than you are. Walk calmly around him
instead of jumping. Use footwork and head movement to make him miss. Throw punches
but don’t trade. Instead of blocking every shot, try to focus on his biggest punches and use
that opportunity to counter or escape off the ropes.

Additional Resources:

• How to Beat a Better Fighter

• How to Lose a Fight (Skillfully)

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Day 10 - Sparring

DING! DING! DING! FINAL BELL!


Congratulations on your first fight!

It doesn’t matter if you win or lose. Seriously, you went in there...you had fun, you had
a great workout. If you lost, just know that it’s not easy losing. (If it were, more people
would be in the ring, right?) If you won, just know you’re only better than the person you
fought and only for that instance. You still have a responsibility to improve. Failure is part of
developing success.

Win or lose, I want you to celebrate your first sparring match. You can be hard on yourself
tomorrow but always celebrate today’s improvement. You’ve gone so far and you deserve
it.

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Final Words
Answers to popular boxing questions and parting words of advice.
CONGRATULATIONS!

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Final Words

Final Words
A few words of advice. Things to think about as you journey
beyond the basics.

Boxing for Beginners


The biggest concern for beginners is the rush to improve. It’s easy to step into a boxing
gym and feel like you don’t belong because everyone around you looks so good. Give
it time and be patient. The most important thing is to enjoy boxing. I promise that if you
find a way to enjoy it, even being lazy at times, you will improve just because you’re in a
learning environment.

Technique vs Physicality
Now everyone wants to know what matters most, technique or physicality? It’s both. Good
conditioning allows you to practice more technique. Good technique allows you to last
longer and fight more effectively and efficiently. Beginners need to get in shape AND refine
their technique. Over-training increase the risk of injury or burning yourself out. Focusing
too much on technique takes away time from sparring and developing your body’s fighting
reflexes.

Learn How to Use Your Body


Before anyone can ever truly learn how to box, they must first learn how to use their
bodies, and be made aware of the things they do subconsciously. It’s important to know
that all fighters are different both physically and mentally.

The easiest way to learn how to use your body and develop a better body awareness is to
expose yourself to different styles and different techniques. The more you expose yourself
to different methods, the more control you will have over your body in the future, which
then gives you a higher capacity to learn new and more complicated fighting techniques.

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Final Words

Perfection vs Automation
When is something good enough? Good enough doesn’t mean when you can do
something perfect, but when you can do it instinctually (automatically). I remember a time
when my trainer told me, “You’re not ready for competition; you keep dropping your right
hand when you throw the left hook.” To which, I retorted, “You mean like this?” as I showed
him a picture-perfect left hook while keeping my right hand raised. My trainer snapped
back, “Yeah, but you weren’t doing that automatically when I watched you 5 minutes ago. I
had to tell you to do it.”

When you can do everything perfectly without consciously thinking about it, that is when
your technique is good enough. The greatest fighters aren’t thinking about technique
when they fight, they are thinking about fighting!

Additional Resource: Automatic Boxing Skills - Take Your Game to the Next Level

Developing Your Fighting Style


Many beginners think they can just create any boxing style they want. While this is true to
a certain degree, you must understand that your fighting style should come natural to you.
It shows itself when you are not trying. In the early stages of boxing, it’s temping to mimic
your favorite boxer. You don’t need to copy your idol or another boxer, you just have to
fight and your style will develop naturally.

Beginners should expose themselves to as many styles as possible and work on everything.
Over time, some styles will feel more comfortable and you will end up with a perfect style
made up of bits and pieces of other styles you learned along the way.

Don’t go out looking for the BEST technique or the BEST style, instead learn ALL techniques
and ALL styles. This will serve you well when you face an opponent that knows how to
counter one style perfectly, you can switch to another.

Additional Resource: What’s Your Fighting Style

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Final Words

Learn to Think Critically


There is a reason for every movement in boxing. Every single detail of a technique, form,
position, or style can be explained and should be explained by logical reasoning. One of
the greatest coaches I ever had, stopped answering my questions. He told me, “No Johnny,
I’m not going to answer your question. The nature of questions is more questions. The
reality is that you won’t learn anything until you learn how to answer your own questions.”
Within academic circles, this is known as the Socratic method.

He taught me that the most important thing to teach a boxer was not skills or technique,
but how to think for himself. Teaching boxers how to teach themselves. He taught me
how to analyze fights and copy technique. Funny thing is, coach Brian never taught me
any real technique, yet I learned more from him than many of my other coaches. I learned
how to emulate others, I learned how to analyze another fighter’s technique. Just by
fighting another fighter, I could duplicate his success. Even by watching other fighters, I am
sometimes able to copy their technique. I was able to learn on my own because I learned
the process of observing carefully.

It all starts with the process of questioning. “Why should I put my foot this way?” Well, try
it another way. Invent 5 different ways to place your feet and see how each of them affect
you. If you can’t tell the difference, your technique isn’t refined enough that it even matters.
If you CAN tell the difference, learn what difference it makes.

When an opponent beats you, instead of trying to beat him...try to change your style. Have
him beat you in 5 different ways. Try one attack and see how he reacts. Ask yourself why he
keeps reacting that way. See if you can do something different to make him react different.
Don’t keep doing the same thing and expecting a different result. TRY DIFFERENT THINGS!
Boxing is a sweet science, so be a scientist — EXPERIMENT!

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Final Words

Top 10 Boxing Questions


Popular questions asked by readers over the years.

1. How do I punch harder?


Punching power is really a 2-part question. The first part is the amount of physical force
your body can generate. The second part is what your opponent feels. Proper conditioning
and punching technique will maximize your body’s punching power. Boxing skills such as
timing and accuracy will maximize the amount of power transferred to your opponent.

To develop true punching power, start with perfect form so that your body is able to
leverage all of its muscles effectively. With practice your body will become faster and more
efficient at contracting all your punching muscles simultaneously so that your punch is
faster and uses more muscle (not more effort) in a shorter period. True power doesn’t
require so much muscle but rather the timing all your muscles to “punch” simultaneously.

Muscle conditioning for power punching requires exercises that develop speed, power and
endurance. Fast punching tabata drills and core exercises are preferred over slow exercises
like heavy weight lifting. When you punch, drop your body weight and bend your knees.
Let your weight project down into the ground instead of forward into your opponent.

To maximize the amount of power transferred to your opponent, learn how to use angles,
timing, and accuracy. Training with the speed bag, double-end bag, and focus mitts will
teach you how to punch at the right time and in the right place so that you inflict the most
damage possible. This ability is what sets the experienced boxer apart from the average
power puncher. Angles, timing, and accuracy takes years to develop and make any punch
far more deadly than just power alone. Ultimately, power is wasted if you don’t know how
to place it.

2. How do I improve my hand speed?


Hand speed is a product of genetics and trained reflexes. Your hand speed depends
on your mental quickness, muscle contraction rate, and trained reflexes. Developing
faster muscles is a combination of good conditioning and relaxed punching technique.
Developing mental quickness and trained reflexes requires constant practice or drilling
technique to the point that it becomes second nature and you don’t have to think before
throwing a punch. The better trained your reflexes, the faster you will react and the faster
you punch. Having fast hands is not enough, the hands need to be trained for maximum
coordination and control!

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Final Words

3. How do I improve my fighting endurance?


Fighting endurance is part mental and part physical. Mentally, you have to be relaxed and
fight with a good attitude. Everyone panics but it’s your job to keep yourself calm even
while taking punishment. Those who can keep a clear head under pressure tend to be less
tired. Individuals that panic will burn out faster. The easiest way to develop your mental
resolve is to take it slow! Train at your pace and spar at a pace you can handle. Give your
body and mind a chance to strengthen little by little every day. It will get there as long as
you give it a chance to develop.

Physical endurance is part cardio and part arm endurance. To develop your cardio, make
sure you run regularly and use good fighting technique. It helps to be well-conditioned but
staying calm and using good technique makes the most difference. Develop your arm and
shoulder endurance to sustain punches in the later rounds by working with the speed bag
often. It also helps to do fast punching tabata drills on the heavy bag. Shadowbox regularly
so that your recovery muscles are just as conditioned as your punching muscles.

Additional Resources:

• How to Stop Wasting Energy

• How to Fight Tired

4. How does lifting weights affect my fighting ability?


The old school frame of mind argues that weights make you slow and also add unnecessary
bulk to your body. Old school boxers argue that weights (strength/power) don’t mimic the
physical requirements of a boxing match (speed/power/endurance). The new school frame
of mind argues that modern training principles have found special weight training to be
beneficial to boxers. They’re both right. It all depends on how you lift the weights. If you’re
lifting heavy weights, you’ll most likely develop slower (but stronger) muscles which are
not as beneficial for boxing. If you’re lifting lighter weights and do many reps with faster
contraction, you’ll probably get more benefit out of that as boxer.

My personal advice is to stick to natural bodyweight exercises. I did powerlifting before


going into boxing and all the trainers that told me to stop lifting weight were right. My
body did lose some muscle but it became faster, more powerful, and my stamina increased.
Once I learned higher level boxing skills, I realized that muscle strength made up only a
very small factor in punching ability and I swore never to lift weights again. I also don’t
believe in doing both heavy weight training AND lower weight training. The body will get
into great shape but physically won’t perform as well for boxing. If you want to be safe,
stick to what the old timers say. (Or try both and see for yourself.)

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Final Words

5. How do I deal with emotions in fighting?


Fear will always be a part of life, no matter where you are. You can’t make it go away. You
can’t deny that you’re facing an opponent that’s trained to hurt you. Dealing with fear is
more about having the right attitude in boxing (and even in life). Be excited, be happy for
all that you’ve achieved. Give it a 100% in the gym and you’ll have nothing left to fear. If
you don’t give 100% in training, don’t cry when you lose. I think that’s fair enough.

Have a purpose for fighting, have a game plan and stick to it. Be afraid but also be
prepared. Failure always comes before success. Learn to give it your best shot and accept
yourself regardless of what happens. Coach yourself positively to bring out the best in you.

6. What’s a good diet plan for boxers?


Eat healthy. Avoid alcohol, cigarettes, sugar, junk foods, etc. My biggest tip is to eat 5-6
smaller meals a day. This alone will make the biggest difference in your diet and the
way your body feels and performs. I highly recommend for you to read my diet guide. It
teaches you how to eat healthy for high performance and and to maintain a lean body.

Additional Resource: The Common Sense Boxing Diet

7. How should I train to improve faster?


The best way to train is to increase your exposure. Physically, your body can only handle
so much training. 2 hours of intense training in the gym, 5 days a week is the maximum
your body can handle. Anymore than that won’t do anything for your body. Your brain
on the other hand has a high capacity to absorb much more than that. To stimulate your
brain, you must expose yourself to as many methods of boxing as early as possible. Focus
on proper techniques but expose yourself to many different ways of learning and different
styles of opponents. Even if you’re tired, you can still improve yourself simply by watching
other boxers spar. See if you can understand them. Look for small details and the little
things they do. Watch videos and talk to people. Try everything.

Most importantly: have fun. There is no other way to improve quickly than to have a
passion for it. Protect your passion, don’t let yourself burn out physically or mentally from
working too hard. It takes years to develop a champion, physically, mentally, spiritually. The
individuals that have the most fun learning and tackling challenges will learn the fastest.
The individuals that push themselves too hard and get down on themselves for every
failure will eventually quit. My secret to getting better quickly is to have fun. Work hard but
have fun; put that together and you have passion. Continuous passion leads to success.

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Final Words

8. How do I develop better balance and footwork?


The best exercise for footwork is the jump rope. Learn complicated patterns and skip
around the gym. Learn how to jump rope for 30 minutes while staying relaxed. Developing
balance is a more complicated matter but must be done before you can develop better
footwork. First off increase your balance awareness. This can be done with regular footwork
drills and one-legged holds. It teaches you to be more aware of your center of gravity. Next,
you develop the muscles such as the legs, back, and core so that you can maintain a better
posture while fighting. Once you’ve done all that, then you’re ready for balance and foot-
work drills.

9. What does it take to be a great fighter?


Great fighters have a strong vision. Beyond the self-confidence and dedication is the clear
vision. They know what they want and they’re willing to sacrifice everything to get there.
They don’t care about not being born with natural power or speed. All they care about is
that they have a goal and they’re willing to do anything possible to fulfill that goal.

They’re not invincible, they’re just as human as anybody else. They have fear, and they
feel pain too just like the rest of us. The difference lies in that they’re still willing to do
everything possible to achieve their dream. Great fighters don’t let pain, criticism, and
failure bring them down. Great fighters have fun but don’t let video games, parties, and
girls distract them from their goals. The only thing great fighters live for is success and it’s
this clear vision that leads to inevitable success.

10. Do you have any tips for my fight coming up?


You either have the skills and conditioning needed to win or you don’t. Hopefully, you’ve
been preparing diligently. What’s important now is that you relax and keep your body in
peak condition so that you can perform at your best. I recommend lots of water, stretching,
staying warm and relaxing. Wear sweats so that your body is really warm all day long. It’s
ok to be hot and sweaty.

Mentally, you should be excited to fight. This is what we live for! Sure, be nervous and
scared but then look back at your training and realize that this fight is a step forward into
the future. You’re going to find out what you do well and what needs improving.

Eat lightly the day of the fight. Be ready to counter hard crosses and hooks. Win or lose,
FIGHT CONFIDENTLY. 3-5 shots and get out. Go to the head and body. Pump the jab and
look for opportunities for your right cross. Fire fast punches at close range and get out!

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Final Words

Final Checklist
Can you demonstrate and teach others these boxing basics?

• Proper stance and movement

• Proper punching form ( jab/cross/hook/uppercut)

• Throw a snapping punch

• How to block, parry, roll, and slip

• 3 boxing combinations (3-5 punches max)

• At least 3 counters for every punch

• Evade a counter after throwing a combination?

• Work the heavy bag, speed bag, and double-end bag consistently for 3 rounds each?

• Spar 3 rounds at a controlled pace?

• Win AND lose a fight with calm, reserved confidence?

If you can do all this, congratulations, you’ve learned the basics of boxing!

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Final Words

Congratulations!
Congratulations on learning the fundamentals of boxing!
You’re not many steps closer to becoming a champ! I’m so proud of you, I really am. Not
because you stepped into the ring...but because you found something you were passionate
about and you went for it. You might have doubted yourself but you didn’t let it stop you.
You took matters into your own hands, you put in the hard work, and made it a reality. The
skills, work ethics, and positive attitude you learned in this book will make you successful
in all areas of your life. People like you aren’t just great boxers; they become the most
successful and happiest people on Earth. Keep working hard, make those dreams come
true, and live the life you’ve always wanted. Cheers!

More advanced fighting guides available!


....What next? Are you thirsty for more knowledge? Do check out my advanced boxing
guides on power punching, slick footwork, pro workouts, diet, and fight strategy. I share all
the knowledge and methods I’ve learned over the years, to further your fight game.

Contact Me
Please don’t hesitate to email me if you have any comments or suggestions about this
boxing course. I’m really interested in your success stories, and I want to be as much help
to you as possible.

Email: expertboxing@gmail.com

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