Some of it is. And some of it is god giving that person the power to one punch KO people.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Is punching power simply a combination of speed and bodyweight?
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by Slappin' Maxie View PostSome of it is. And some of it is god giving that person the power to one punch KO people.
If people said who has the greatest right most people would say Hearns. He had a God given right but they would be wrong he learned his right and mastered it. Look at it when he was 17
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThUhD...=results_video
he turned it from that to the best right there is through improved technique.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Prince Mongo View PostWrong, a tightly clenched fist tightens up the muscles in the forearm that inhibits speed. For the first part of the punch you want a degree of relaxation in the fist to have relaxed muscles in the forearm for maximum speed just as you would have a degree of relaxation in those muscles if throwing a ball at high speed. You can clench the fist more at impact but for max speed you don't want that before.
Comment
-
Also its worth remembering that in the Force=mass x Accelleration equation your body weight is not the mass. The mass accounts for how much of your body weight you can force into the fist (poorly worded but i hope you get my drift). The best punchers are the ones who can push as much of that body weight through the target as possible. Hence why a fat guy wont necessarily be a big puncher because his body weight is flopping all over the place, even drawing power away. So good technique is essential.
As others say there are other factors like accuracy and punching through the target. Also whether you are punching to the body or head the punch you dont see coming will hurt you most. So in that sense 'power' can be magnified by people who throw punches from odd angles (RJJ, Pac, Hamed) even if their actual force is equal or less to other fighters.
Comment
-
Originally posted by CubanGuyNYC View PostIndeed, the throwing arm should be as relaxed as possible, but you don't "clench the fist more" at impact. You clench it as tightly as possible, otherwise you risk breaking a bone in the striking hand. This is vital with a bare-knuckle punch, but it's still very important even when wearing wraps and boxing gloves. Besides the safety issue, you almost certainly dissipate power when you connect with a "somewhat clenched" fist.
Comment
-
If you're looking just to hit bags and to be a strong puncher, technique is everything. It's the number 1 thing that generates your power. If your technique lacks in any area, you aren't maximizing your hitting potential.
A strong punch is about harmonizing your bodies movements, and carrying momentum from the ground up. By the time that momentum gets to the end of your fist, it should explode. The more refined your technique is, the faster you can make this happen. "Speed" is not just about moving fast. It's about refinement of technique, and minimizing loss.
That said, in an actual fight on the level we watch boxers, timing is everything. It's not the harder puncher, or faster one, it's the smartest one. And timing is smarts. The ability to recognize when somebody is going to attack, and intercept them while they're doing it, is the most devestating thing.
Pacquiao vs Marquez
Mayweather vs Hatton
Anything Donaire does
Comment
-
i feel one frequently overlooked factor is confidence. confidence gives a fighter the ability to take risks and sit down on his punches, and throw punches that he might not have otherwise thrown. the main example i have in mind here is sergio martinez.
Comment
-
Originally posted by AlexKid View PostOr is there more to it? More contributing factors?
Is speed and bodyweight the most important factors accounting for say 90% of a punches power?
Or is power comming from other major factors as well?
Comment
Comment