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About Us :
Boxing Tips :
The Basic Punches - The basic
punches in boxing, if you're right handed, are the left jab, the
straight right, the left hook, right hook, and the uppercut. The first
of the boxing tips is to take the time not only to learn these basic
punches, but learn all that goes into them. Punches are not just arm
movements. When you punch, you're punching from the balls of your feet,
up through your legs, with power being transferred from your legs and
hips through the torso to your shoulders, arms, and eventually the fist.
Sound overly complicated? Well, it is complicated, but only in the sense
that you have to put all the pieces together if you want to throw an
effective punch. Leave a piece out, and you're not going to knock anyone
down.
The hips are even involved in the jab, not usually considered a power
punch. Still, you want to have an enough sting in a jab to keep your
opponent at bay and set him up for a power punch or a combination. For
the jab to have this sting, your feet, hips, etc., must come into play.
Try standing on the ball of one foot and pushing someone over. Unless
they are super weak, or off-balance, tor both, you can't do it. To
repeat, punching is not done just with the arms. You have to be balanced
to start with, and put the major parts of your body into play.
Among your toolkit of boxing tips are also those associated with the
other punches, the power punches. When you look into what goes into
these punches, the role your legs and particularly your hips play,
becomes even more obvious. In throwing a straight punch, seemingly a
simple thing to do, you'll learn to instinctively tighten your abdominal
muscles, your "core". This would seem to have little to do with the
punch, but the punch itself tends to throw you off balance, and
tightening your abs counteracts this tendency. In throwing a right
cross, the hips should rotate counter-clockwise. This comes naturally,
but you should be aware of it, and if it isn't happening you're doing
something wrong and your punch will have no real power. You can't just
learn to throw a punch without learning all the mechanics associated
with throwing that punch. Then, you must work to make certain those
mechanics are always there, even when you don't have time to think about
it, and you won't have time.
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