Hey brother always love seeing people training for whatever reason. Now I only watched this one video of yours and I saw in the comments that you were already tired, but I have a small bit of advice if you'd like. I believe you could use a little more hip power in your punches. At the moment it appears that you are punching with only the power of your upper body. If you care to you might try focusing on generating an amount of forward momentum with a hip thrust like motion and then following through with the punch. This will give you a little more power and speed, but most importantly it will keep your center of balance lower so you don't throw away any momentum or give it to your opponent, it will also alleviate an amount of telegraphing that you may have. Hips/core are sorta like your control center, legs pull power from the ground, arms are like loose hinges that whip in to a solid structure upon reaching the target and then you punch the power through the solid structure. If you can implement this it will not matter as much how tired you get, people don't realize how much arms/shoulders can get in the way when not loose enough. It is the same idea with lifting, it will help for you to loosen the antagonistic muscles, so they do not hinder the muscles doing the lift. Good luck to you Nick, I hope you win your fight.
@@Gong-Fu_Hermit thank you for the detailed advice man. I have always had problems with stiff hips and rotation. I revert to what I know when I am tired which is arm punched (not correct).
@@chumbucket6184 why try and be negative just out the blue? If you see something I can work on then say that. I think I’m pretty quick for being 6ft 2 and 270lbs.
@@BigNick504you got nice technique and i see that you are practicing snap in jabs so eventually you should become quicker but you need to realise that amateurs tend to train their whole life so in cimparison to them you really are in slow motion. Look up butterbean how he fought when he started , he fought at the speed of flash at 400lbs
@ I’m not disagreeing with you bro. This video was shot over 8 three minute rounds with 45 seconds rest after weighted shadow boxing and jump rope. I’m not making excuses but I was spent before I started. I was actually going to have my professional debut in September until my face surgery held that up. Maybe the professionals I spar are slower than I think? But I seem to hold my own for the most part.
@@BigNick504 i'm not gonna pretend i know what i'm talking about but to me it just looks like you're not in a hurry to get to your destination. To my layman eyes it just looks like you're not focusing on starting your punches and movements at maximum velocity, getting from point A to point B immediately, activating those fast twitch muscle fibers.
Nice work buddy! Ignore those haters' comments!
@@MikeyDaHammer thank you bro. I usually do but they got me this time.
Hey brother always love seeing people training for whatever reason. Now I only watched this one video of yours and I saw in the comments that you were already tired, but I have a small bit of advice if you'd like. I believe you could use a little more hip power in your punches. At the moment it appears that you are punching with only the power of your upper body. If you care to you might try focusing on generating an amount of forward momentum with a hip thrust like motion and then following through with the punch. This will give you a little more power and speed, but most importantly it will keep your center of balance lower so you don't throw away any momentum or give it to your opponent, it will also alleviate an amount of telegraphing that you may have. Hips/core are sorta like your control center, legs pull power from the ground, arms are like loose hinges that whip in to a solid structure upon reaching the target and then you punch the power through the solid structure. If you can implement this it will not matter as much how tired you get, people don't realize how much arms/shoulders can get in the way when not loose enough. It is the same idea with lifting, it will help for you to loosen the antagonistic muscles, so they do not hinder the muscles doing the lift. Good luck to you Nick, I hope you win your fight.
@@Gong-Fu_Hermit thank you for the detailed advice man. I have always had problems with stiff hips and rotation. I revert to what I know when I am tired which is arm punched (not correct).
In slow motion ?
@@chumbucket6184 why try and be negative just out the blue? If you see something I can work on then say that. I think I’m pretty quick for being 6ft 2 and 270lbs.
@@BigNick504you got nice technique and i see that you are practicing snap in jabs so eventually you should become quicker but you need to realise that amateurs tend to train their whole life so in cimparison to them you really are in slow motion. Look up butterbean how he fought when he started , he fought at the speed of flash at 400lbs
@ I’m not disagreeing with you bro. This video was shot over 8 three minute rounds with 45 seconds rest after weighted shadow boxing and jump rope. I’m not making excuses but I was spent before I started. I was actually going to have my professional debut in September until my face surgery held that up. Maybe the professionals I spar are slower than I think? But I seem to hold my own for the most part.
@@BigNick504 i'm not gonna pretend i know what i'm talking about but to me it just looks like you're not in a hurry to get to your destination.
To my layman eyes it just looks like you're not focusing on starting your punches and movements at maximum velocity, getting from point A to point B immediately, activating those fast twitch muscle fibers.
@@chumbucket6184 man why couldn’t you have just said that from the get go? Instead just trying to say something shitty?
Still at it my brother, I see.
My title fight is on Saturday the 7th December. I cannot wait
@@Bigleeleeboxing choooo good luck man. But lucks got nothing to do with it. You are going to do great.
Also if there is anyway I can watch let me know
Nice!!!
@@Balonishell appreciate that man