Am I the only one who likes to hinge my hips slightly back (like a squat or deadlift), bend the knees and have a slight bend in the boxing stance or do other people do it? It just feels natural to me especially the face I played football for 8 years. Defense and offense is way better. Punches come smoother as well as head movement and counters. It’s the common position that I was taught to maximize my strength, agility, and explosiveness. I try to stand up straight since most boxers do it, but I feel like I’m standing. Not ready for any athletic movements at all
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Does anyone else do this?
Collapse
-
Tags: None
-
Originally posted by Muhammad234 View PostAm I the only one who likes to hinge my hips slightly back (like a squat or deadlift), bend the knees and have a slight bend in the boxing stance or do other people do it? It just feels natural to me especially the face I played football for 8 years. Defense and offense is way better. Punches come smoother as well as head movement and counters. It’s the common position that I was taught to maximize my strength, agility, and explosiveness. I try to stand up straight since most boxers do it, but I feel like I’m standing. Not ready for any athletic movements at all
I see some guys do that, mostly shorter guys because they can get more thrust behind their punches. I think it limits your range and could make you over-commit on punches. I'd take young Mike Tyson as an example of how to do it right.
If you're tall, I'd stop doing this.
-
Originally posted by Redd Foxx View PostWelcome to the forum.
I see some guys do that, mostly shorter guys because they can get more thrust behind their punches. I think it limits your range and could make you over-commit on punches. I'd take young Mike Tyson as an example of how to do it right.
If you're tall, I'd stop doing this.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Muhammad234 View PostThank you. I am fairly short, only 5? at 140 lbs
Comment
-
-
-
Comment