I am sometimes astounded by the level of knowledge (or lack thereof) by some on boxing forums.
Excessive holding is a foul. That doesn't mean every clinch involves holding. Or that only one fighter is at fault when a clinch happens -- should the ref deduct points for holding from both fighters if both are holding (which is often the case)? What's the point?
If two fighters come together and one throws one of his arms under the other's arm -- i.e. between the arm and the body, he is the guy initiating a clinch. The only way to avoid "holding" a guy when he does this is to keep your elbow extended as if trying to take off and fly like a bird.
And the guy who puts his glove under the other guy's arm is not only initiating the clinch, he's doing so purposely to stop the other guy from being able to hit with that hand.
Case in point, go look at Wlad vs. Jennings and see how many times Jennings slips his left glove under Wlad's right arm and wraps it around his waist ... which is HOLDING his waist.
Yet people come on boxing forums and say Wlad was holding all night (he has in other fights, but Jennings initiated more than half the clinches in that fight).
If you don't want to get clinched, keep your own hands in tight and elbows close to the body and work short shots and you'll find the guy trying to hold doesn't have anything to grab onto ... and if he does hold then it's so obvious the ref has to do something about it.
In Floyd-Pac, I saw some clinches but not an excessive amount, and I didn't see excessive holding. What I certainly didn't see was Pac actually trying to fight inside or work with a free hand ... he gladly accepted what clinches there were, and no ref is going to penalize a guy for holding if the other guy isn't trying to fight out of it. Those are mutual clinches. If the guy beng "held" tries to work and keeps fighting with his free hand, he's a lot more likely to get the ref's attention. If he accepts the clinch and falls into it, it becomes a mutual thing.
And, again, clinches aren't illegal. It's not a case where a ref has to decide one guy is breaking the rules every time two fighters get tied up.
People also complain about a guy "ducking his head too low" as if the other guy isn't allowed to throw an uppercut. Last I looked, it's not illegal to time your opponent and run him into an uppercut, or throw a hook that hits him on the side of the head in such a case.
Mostly these "holding" and "ducking low" complainers are looking for the ref to help out a guy who either doesn't have the fundamentals to help himself, or actually is complicit in the clinching himself.
Excessive holding is a foul. That doesn't mean every clinch involves holding. Or that only one fighter is at fault when a clinch happens -- should the ref deduct points for holding from both fighters if both are holding (which is often the case)? What's the point?
If two fighters come together and one throws one of his arms under the other's arm -- i.e. between the arm and the body, he is the guy initiating a clinch. The only way to avoid "holding" a guy when he does this is to keep your elbow extended as if trying to take off and fly like a bird.
And the guy who puts his glove under the other guy's arm is not only initiating the clinch, he's doing so purposely to stop the other guy from being able to hit with that hand.
Case in point, go look at Wlad vs. Jennings and see how many times Jennings slips his left glove under Wlad's right arm and wraps it around his waist ... which is HOLDING his waist.
Yet people come on boxing forums and say Wlad was holding all night (he has in other fights, but Jennings initiated more than half the clinches in that fight).
If you don't want to get clinched, keep your own hands in tight and elbows close to the body and work short shots and you'll find the guy trying to hold doesn't have anything to grab onto ... and if he does hold then it's so obvious the ref has to do something about it.
In Floyd-Pac, I saw some clinches but not an excessive amount, and I didn't see excessive holding. What I certainly didn't see was Pac actually trying to fight inside or work with a free hand ... he gladly accepted what clinches there were, and no ref is going to penalize a guy for holding if the other guy isn't trying to fight out of it. Those are mutual clinches. If the guy beng "held" tries to work and keeps fighting with his free hand, he's a lot more likely to get the ref's attention. If he accepts the clinch and falls into it, it becomes a mutual thing.
And, again, clinches aren't illegal. It's not a case where a ref has to decide one guy is breaking the rules every time two fighters get tied up.
People also complain about a guy "ducking his head too low" as if the other guy isn't allowed to throw an uppercut. Last I looked, it's not illegal to time your opponent and run him into an uppercut, or throw a hook that hits him on the side of the head in such a case.
Mostly these "holding" and "ducking low" complainers are looking for the ref to help out a guy who either doesn't have the fundamentals to help himself, or actually is complicit in the clinching himself.
Comment