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My Technical breakdown of Loma vs Rigo.

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    My Technical breakdown of Loma vs Rigo.

    First let's start by looking at each fighter and what they do.

    Loma is a combination puncher but his strong and more often used hand is the lead or the right hand. He varies his jab, he hooks it, he doubles it, he fakes it, he triples it, he probes you with it, he goes to the body with it, he counters you with his jab when you commit. He's a very strong lead hand puncher if not one of the best. And his quick footwork and shuffling steps get him in out of range, and at that point he already has you on your toes. Once he figures out his range and timing with his lead hand, there is no coming back and that's exactly what happened to Rigondeaux.

    Now Rigo on the other hand is a boxer that relies mainly on the back hand. He uses the lead hand as a range finder to set you up for the straight left, looping left and the left uppercut. He does use footwork and feints when he leads the attack in order to find holes in your defense and then detonate. He relies on his timing and head movement to land the left as a counter. Again he can shoot it to the body, head, loop it or uppercut with it. Rigo is not a combination puncher the way Loma is.

    So the fight essentially was a battle of the lead hands because that's what Loma wanted. Rigondeaux's jab is not his strong point. He's not great at throwing it and he's not great at defending against it. Loma is great at both throwing and defending against the jab. Rigo could get away with his lead hand flaw on both defense and offense when he faces an orthodox fighter. This is not the case however, when he faces a fellow southpaw. Ricardo Cordoba gave Rigondeaux his hardest fight prior to Loma and guess what,Cordoba was a southpaw too. As a matter of fact Cordoba knocked Rigondeaux down with a jab.

    In the fight itself you could see how Rigondeaux tries to parry Loma's jab with his lead hand in order to throw the left as opposed to trying to parry it with his back hand and exchange jabs. Loma faked him enough, got in, got out and then starting doubling the jab and countering Rigo with his jab. It was pretty simple what Loma did to Rigo, which is crazy. He took the back hand away from Rigo and said let's see whose lead hand is better. This is why the jab and not just throwing it but knowing how to defend against it is the most important skill in boxing.
    Last edited by pesticid; 12-12-2017, 07:00 PM.

    #2
    Loma is right handed. He fights in an unconventional Southpaw stance, and indeed his strong hand is his lead hand. He said his father trained him this way on purpose, he wanted his strong hand in front. It’s interesting, unusual, and worked well for Loma so far.

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      #3
      Originally posted by Vlad_ View Post
      Loma is right handed. He fights in an unconventional Southpaw stance, and indeed his strong hand is his lead hand. He said his father trained him this way on purpose, he wanted his strong hand in front. It’s interesting, unusual, and worked well for Loma so far.
      Its a great tool for a fighter to possess especially one as athletic as lomo. But its not that unusual mike tyson oscar delahoya miguel cotto andre ward tho he switches at times are a few who’ve lead with their strong hands.

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        #4
        An older smaller fighter who suffered a hand injury got beat.

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          #5
          Originally posted by TonyGe View Post
          An older smaller fighter who suffered a hand injury got beat.
          It could be but I was breaking down the technical-tactical aspect of the fight and how it played out.

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            #6
            Originally posted by pesticid View Post
            It could be but I was breaking down the technical-tactical aspect of the fight and how it played out.
            Ok. Fair enough.

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              #7
              Originally posted by TonyGe View Post
              An older smaller fighter who suffered a hand injury got beat.
              hehehe if it makes you sleep better

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                #8
                Originally posted by Mrsantiago View Post
                Its a great tool for a fighter to possess especially one as athletic as lomo. But its not that unusual mike tyson oscar delahoya miguel cotto andre ward tho he switches at times are a few who’ve lead with their strong hands.
                Yeah i was going to say it's not that uncommon at all. I never knew Tyson was included in that though. De La Hoya is always the name people bring up when talking about leading with their dominant hand.

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by TheBigLug View Post
                  Yeah i was going to say it's not that uncommon at all. I never knew Tyson was included in that though. De La Hoya is always the name people bring up when talking about leading with their dominant hand.
                  I think Tarver is a converted southpaw also.

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by jmrf4435 View Post
                    hehehe if it makes you sleep better
                    I really don't care. I'm not a fan of either guy but that was the reality of that fight.

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