This artical breaks down boxing..
i mean i know boxing and this artical taught me something!
this was the bomb..
you know if i like it ..
it will have no bulls.hit just straight to the point...
my favorite shit was this..
fighting against a boxer or street fighter..
Where he talks about how if your fighting a boxer, he has tricks for your ass.. he might try to grab your shirt and pound you off.. i've seen it. a friend of mine fights like that...
PEEP THIS
My own experience is that stop hits are very difficult to use against a good boxer, since he's ready to walk into your first shot and land three of his own. They work great against traditional martial artists though (there are exceptions), and against untrained fighters who don't expect to get hit when they're hitting.
Stop kicking -- same story.
Now, hands up high, elbows in, and muay thai round kick -- sometimes a different story. He tries to nail you as/after you kick him, your hands are high and the punch deflects as you grab his neck, he's lunging forward off balance, you pull his head into a solid knee to the face. This works sometimes.
Boxers will generally not clinch in a streetfight. What a boxer *will* do is enter with a simple jab/slip/jab/cross to see what you will do, and as soon as you're in range he'll hold onto you with his lead hand as he tees off on you with his straight right. If you try to duck and shoot in on him, a good boxer with decent reflexes will tend to lower that lead hand of his and check your shoulder while he continues to tee off.
Or, he'll just stand there and wait for you to come in. As you come in, he'll nail you with his hook. Very effective.
This I've seen and done in my own experience, and they both work very well in a streetfight.
If a boxer gets ahold of the collar of your shirt with his lead hand, you won't be able to clinch or shoot, and you won't be able to back away either. You *will*, however, get nailed in the next second with three of the hardest straight rights you've ever felt. He just holds you there -- at range -- and keeps hitting you. It's very common to see a boxer do this in a streetfight -- and it works like a charm. Only recommended if you hit like a truck.
Forcing the clinch on a boxer is not always easy. A boxer with a strong attack will tend to force his opponent to back up. The opponent doesn't even want to back up, but he does, because in that moment it seems like there's nowhere else to go.
Also, I would listen to what John has to say on this, as the guy can fight.
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS!! THIS IS A GREAT ARTICAL!
i mean i know boxing and this artical taught me something!
this was the bomb..
you know if i like it ..
it will have no bulls.hit just straight to the point...
my favorite shit was this..
fighting against a boxer or street fighter..
Where he talks about how if your fighting a boxer, he has tricks for your ass.. he might try to grab your shirt and pound you off.. i've seen it. a friend of mine fights like that...
PEEP THIS
My own experience is that stop hits are very difficult to use against a good boxer, since he's ready to walk into your first shot and land three of his own. They work great against traditional martial artists though (there are exceptions), and against untrained fighters who don't expect to get hit when they're hitting.
Stop kicking -- same story.
Now, hands up high, elbows in, and muay thai round kick -- sometimes a different story. He tries to nail you as/after you kick him, your hands are high and the punch deflects as you grab his neck, he's lunging forward off balance, you pull his head into a solid knee to the face. This works sometimes.
Boxers will generally not clinch in a streetfight. What a boxer *will* do is enter with a simple jab/slip/jab/cross to see what you will do, and as soon as you're in range he'll hold onto you with his lead hand as he tees off on you with his straight right. If you try to duck and shoot in on him, a good boxer with decent reflexes will tend to lower that lead hand of his and check your shoulder while he continues to tee off.
Or, he'll just stand there and wait for you to come in. As you come in, he'll nail you with his hook. Very effective.
This I've seen and done in my own experience, and they both work very well in a streetfight.
If a boxer gets ahold of the collar of your shirt with his lead hand, you won't be able to clinch or shoot, and you won't be able to back away either. You *will*, however, get nailed in the next second with three of the hardest straight rights you've ever felt. He just holds you there -- at range -- and keeps hitting you. It's very common to see a boxer do this in a streetfight -- and it works like a charm. Only recommended if you hit like a truck.
Forcing the clinch on a boxer is not always easy. A boxer with a strong attack will tend to force his opponent to back up. The opponent doesn't even want to back up, but he does, because in that moment it seems like there's nowhere else to go.
Also, I would listen to what John has to say on this, as the guy can fight.
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS!! THIS IS A GREAT ARTICAL!
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