People have always regarded my arm punches as a weakness, ineffective, and Jeff Lacy even described them as slaps, but he was the classic example of how much these rapid-fire bursts can do damage. I pick a point at which to fire three or four rapid-fire shots, bah-bah-bah-bah, and these baffle opponents, then boom, I hit the guy with a harder punch, a big one. It's unexpected because I haven't given him time to think or any warning that it's coming. I'm so busy for a super middleweight and I'm always on top of my opponent, crowding him, probing him, making him commit and luring him into making mistakes. If I stood back and threw only forty punches in a round, my opponent could think up all kinds of plans of attack but I let the punches go and I mix them up, jabs, hooks, uppercuts, crosses, so it's hard for my opponent to think when he has all of this going on around his head.
- No Ordinary Joe.
I typed it up again so there may be some more spelling errors.
- No Ordinary Joe.
I typed it up again so there may be some more spelling errors.
Comment