I kind of agree with both Ray and loser. Learning curve is individual and can speed up progress. For example I started sparring two or three months after starting the beginning of this year. Others who have trained over the years didn't start sparring that quickly because they hadn't developed so quickly. And yes there are some guys who do pretty well with little experience. Carlos Molina turned pro after around 18 amateur fights. But it is only a select few who do that and even then it takes time to develop skill. However I agree with Ray more. You need to understand that no matter how hard you work there will always be someone out there with more experience and that makes a huge difference. I only started at 18 and I just stay humble in order to learn and funnily enough I develop quicker through that. You have the right mindset but you need to know that there are no quick routes no matter what the learning curve is like. Even when you have all of the skills that won't be enough. If is the mental and competitive side of the sport you need to think about.
As an amateur especially you need to stay active. Down in England there's 14 year old kids with around 60 amateur fights because they stay so active. That'd what Ray was getting at. There are people who work hard, get fit and develop all the skills but come fight night struggle with their opponent.
My advice would be to get to this gym as soon as you can and just train for a few months. Then see where you are at. A lot is skill development requires extensive time in the gym to perfect it. It's easy to learn the concepts but you need a lot of time in the gym and sparring to get it all down.
As an amateur especially you need to stay active. Down in England there's 14 year old kids with around 60 amateur fights because they stay so active. That'd what Ray was getting at. There are people who work hard, get fit and develop all the skills but come fight night struggle with their opponent.
My advice would be to get to this gym as soon as you can and just train for a few months. Then see where you are at. A lot is skill development requires extensive time in the gym to perfect it. It's easy to learn the concepts but you need a lot of time in the gym and sparring to get it all down.
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