Great instruction, man. You did a very good job at clarifying and simplifying what you are looking to instruct. Looking forward to applying this in practice. Thanks!
For D'Amato Shifts, everything is the opposite of what you may think at first. To shift to the LEFT from orthodox, you slip left, loading your weight to your lead leg. Then you push off of your RIGHT leg and also shift your weight to the RIGHT leg as you shift. This loads up your RIGHT hand for power punches out of the shift. You always explode off the opposite leg when shifting. If not, you're just taking a step.
is there a change for me, if I am 5"3 and 63 klios, or should I forget about boxing because I have no chance even with like you said small guys like Tyson xD ? (btw Tyson is 5"10 and 95 kilos )
Why do you see your height and weight as a disadvantage? You're not a heavyweight. That's actually an advantage. It's extremely difficult to have good stamina when you're moving swiftly at 220 pounds or more. You'll be lighter on your feet than most and slipping punches will be easier with your height. You're looking at this the wrong way. There's nothing wrong with being a light or bantam weight. Size and strength don't make good boxers. Speed, timing, and good defense are way more important for success. If you want it bad enough, you can overcome any physical limitations. For context, Tyson was always told he was too short, too small, and had too short of a reach to be a heavyweight champion. We know that was untrue. Just train and subdue the doubt.
Great instruction, man. You did a very good job at clarifying and simplifying what you are looking to instruct. Looking forward to applying this in practice. Thanks!
For D'Amato Shifts, everything is the opposite of what you may think at first. To shift to the LEFT from orthodox, you slip left, loading your weight to your lead leg. Then you push off of your RIGHT leg and also shift your weight to the RIGHT leg as you shift. This loads up your RIGHT hand for power punches out of the shift. You always explode off the opposite leg when shifting. If not, you're just taking a step.
I would like to see a breakdown on David Tua.
You're incredibly talented in teaching
Great tips!
Glad I could help! lmk if you have any other topics you'd want me to break down
good tips thank you so much
Thanks for watching
game changing "
What do think about Tyson fighting Jake Paul? I'm with Tyson. He may not be as good as he once was, but once, he is as good as he ever was, lol
is there a change for me, if I am 5"3 and 63 klios, or should I forget about boxing because I have no chance even with like you said small guys like Tyson xD ? (btw Tyson is 5"10 and 95 kilos )
Never give up on your dreams you can still beat up people your size lol
xD thats... kind of creepy situation.. size is everything@@ajstember_mma
Look up boxer Nick Ball he is 5"2 and 57 kilo he recently had title fight. U can do everything just go in the gym train hard and beat up everybody.
can he fight 6 foot + guys?@@jorky4048
Why do you see your height and weight as a disadvantage? You're not a heavyweight. That's actually an advantage. It's extremely difficult to have good stamina when you're moving swiftly at 220 pounds or more. You'll be lighter on your feet than most and slipping punches will be easier with your height. You're looking at this the wrong way. There's nothing wrong with being a light or bantam weight. Size and strength don't make good boxers. Speed, timing, and good defense are way more important for success.
If you want it bad enough, you can overcome any physical limitations. For context, Tyson was always told he was too short, too small, and had too short of a reach to be a heavyweight champion. We know that was untrue. Just train and subdue the doubt.