I've started going to the boxing gym for the past 2 weeks & been a hardcore boxing fan for 2 years now......I've recently started sparring..I'm barley starting to get my Grove aka a boxing style .....I started with the peek a boo style but it didn't like it for me...I got hit to much which I don't like....since then I've started fight defensively ...my trainer says I fight scared now lol....I want to emulate my favorite boxer Guillermo Rigondeaux but with more sneaky left hooks to the body.....thoughts ....any suggestions. ....any experiences.... how to stay relaxed while sparring. ...my trainer says I looked to stiff from my back ????any tips.....FYI my trainer(some dude that works at the gym) is not that good so I'm kinda self teaching my self....
When I Was younger, I had a very aggressive but smart style of fighting. I fought southpaw, coming in and out like Manny Pacquiao but with Margarito like pressure. I was always taller than the guys I would fight too.
Patience... Don't go in thinking your gonna woop some a**, come in reserved but respectful. Your sparring, nothing used to piss me off more than a new guy not knowing the difference between sparring and the real deal. Those guys get hurt!! As to the question, your style is based of what your trainer says, my trainer was primarily defense, offense always set up with jabs. Every trainers style is different.
I am too old to spar but when I did spar I never thought of any other boxer. I was the one in the ring and I had to make use of my own skills and do what I do well and what worked for me. I couldn't be somebody else. I did watch other boxers fight and see what they were doing that might work well for me. I would take bits and pieces from them but I never tried to copy their entire fighting style.
You're getting hit too much cuz u probably still didn't learn the right stance, u r probably trying to use the peekaboo style while standing too square with no head movement which is how Mike Tyson used to get his ass whooped when he got older, this is a very difficult style, the safest style and the style u always need to learn first is the normal conventional stance with a defined center line that u can hide and protect at all times, also ur legs have to be positioned properly and not squared up so that u have good balance, these are the first 2 things u learn, stance and balance.
Once u get that right u learn how to throw punches, then combinations with their footwork, then u learn how to be proactively defensive while mounting ur own offense so that u don't get caught coming in either by blocking, head and foot movement (angles), then u learn how to react to different punches thrown at u, then u learn how to set up ur punches and this is the stage where u actually start sparring, it's basically setting traps for ur opponents, there u will also learn how to feint and how to counter.
Bottom line is without knowing the right stance, without knowing how to throw punches correctly while being defensively responsible, without basic head and foot movement, without knowing how to parry a jab or block a left hook, u can't just get in there and start sparring, even if u get the best of some noobs, u will develop a lot of bad habits, first master the basics then try to improvise, not the other way around.
Peek a boo style is defensive, if you're getting hit too much it should all be on your arms and elbows, if not you're doing it wrong, fighting with your hands down is not going to help :lol1:, no one likes getting hit, saying that is just stating the obvious but the more you get hit the more you learn not too look down when you do get hit, you learn to stop blinking when someone is throwing a punch and you'll feel more relaxed when you do feel that something is coming which is gonna let you react much faster, you can definitely tell if someone is stiff from the back and definitely listen to your trainer, teaching yourself is not going to do you any good unless you've got a camera then you can work on little things but you need to listen too him or find another gym.
Stay relaxed, after a few times sparring you should find yourself developing your own style, you can try emulating parts of a style to find things that you like and feel comfortable working with i.e different types of footwork, defense, combinations, traps etc, but if you're not fighting your own way you're not going to be as efficient as you would be otherwise.
Good advice. But mostly I wanted to say: that "coming up" gif/signature is killing me! Hahah
:ninja:I've started going to the boxing gym for the past 2 weeks & been a hardcore boxing fan for 2 years now......I've recently started sparring..I'm barley starting to get my Grove aka a boxing style .....I started with the peek a boo style but it didn't like it for me...I got hit to much which I don't like....since then I've started fight defensively ...my trainer says I fight scared now lol....I want to emulate my favorite boxer Guillermo Rigondeaux but with more sneaky left hooks to the body.....thoughts ....any suggestions. ....any experiences.... how to stay relaxed while sparring. ...my trainer says I looked to stiff from my back ????any tips.....FYI my trainer(some dude that works at the gym) is not that good so I'm kinda self teaching my self....
Peek a boo style is defensive, if you're getting hit too much it should all be on your arms and elbows, if not you're doing it wrong, fighting with your hands down is not going to help :lol1:, no one likes getting hit, saying that is just stating the obvious but the more you get hit the more you learn not too look down when you do get hit, you learn to stop blinking when someone is throwing a punch and you'll feel more relaxed when you do feel that something is coming which is gonna let you react much faster, you can definitely tell if someone is stiff from the back and definitely listen to your trainer, teaching yourself is not going to do you any good unless you've got a camera then you can work on little things but you need to listen too him or find another gym.
Stay relaxed, after a few times sparring you should find yourself developing your own style, you can try emulating parts of a style to find things that you like and feel comfortable working with i.e different types of footwork, defense, combinations, traps etc, but if you're not fighting your own way you're not going to be as efficient as you would be otherwise.
For the sake of the thread though when I used to box (****in diseased now so can't box anymore:puppy_dog:puppy_dog, heartbreak) I'd fight somewhat like Jofre, Napoles and DeJesus, maybe because I've watched so much of them and admire them that subconsciously I just tried to incorporate a lot of what they do into my routines, not sure, but I never forced myself to fight like them, it just kind of came to me naturally.
Stop trying to be like pro's it took them YEARS of failure to reach that level
I completely agree.
This is a funny thread. It seems everyone is "emulating" the craftiest and most seasoned fighters (Lomo, Rigo, Salido). So, novices trying to operate at genius level--no bueno
My advice is: find your own stance, comfort level, and fight relaxed. Sparring 2 weeks in is pretty soon. Good for you. Find your own way. "Emulating" someone else is no good. The mechanics of a stance is based on a fighters skill set that they built. If you're not a power hitter don't stand in there like you're Babe Ruth. You may be Pete Rose.
I've been boxing since I was a kid. I have my favorite fighters but I can't say I've ever emulated anyone.
looking at all the post on this site daily... most posters would just bang it out and get hit for fun, I use the out boxer style when sparring but I get tired after 2 rounds smh
training for 2 week and want to box like a pro?
take your time and start from the basics
dont waste time in trying to emulate pro boxers if you can't trow a fckuing one-two properly
Larry is talking bull****...why is Sugar Ray Leonard the fighter he is today? Because his favorite fighter was Frazier(which why's Leonard hooks are amazing) but after the Ali fight decided it was better to fight like Ali.
I try do everything like the best do it.
I hate 5-6 stages I fight in in 2 stances. From defensive to overly aggressive. My center-my go to style is a Cotto/Canelo style meshed with Gamboa that in my mind focuses on staying in constant balance to strike while being able to transverse the ring effortlessly. One step up in aggression is a Pirog/Morales type style that involves a lot of upper body movement and angle shifting with a height/level game thrown in. Then above that is a complete Tyson type style. I think you can see my drift here. I believe in being able to do everything in the ring.
Also work at punching at different distances. Most can either punch up close, mid range or from outside but very rarely can someone do all of these.
Also be obsessive about technique...record yourself and assess. I also worked hard on teaching my brain to throw punches as soon as the other has come back like Manny and exploding in my combinations like Broner...these two have seen my speed double at least.
I'm surprised that you're sparring so early to be honest. You're better off starting with a conventional stance and learning to throw the basic punches and combinations from them. It's more important that you get your technique right and that you don't fall into bad habits such as leaving your hand low, lunging into your punches and stepping over yourself.
you have to get your distance and timing right.cant be trying to rip shots to the body out of position.
LOL I'm trying to "Orlando Salido" my Body shots
Each time I try the rip in left/right hook body shots I always get clocked going in....I've started using jabs to the mid section working from the outside my inside game sucks .....
you have to get your distance and timing right.cant be trying to rip shots to the body out of position.
I get tense as **** when I'm about to spar but after eating a few leather shots I star loosing up ..the problem is that I have broad shoulders sorta like broner so sometimes I look stiff as ****.....
Just relax and focus,as with any sport when you are nervous it is hard to keep your legs up under yourself. Experience is something you can not buy,it comes with time..Just learn from your mistakes and better yourself each day. and most importantly HAVE FUN!!!!
Each time I try the rip in left/right hook body shots I always get clocked going in....I've started using jabs to the mid section working from the outside my inside game sucks .....