Yeah, you can learn to take a heavier shot, which is one reason we have trainers to protect us from getting too carried away. The idea is to hit and not get hit. That being said, anybody 200 pounds or more has the power to knock out anyone else if they hit them right....
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
can you eventually learn to take a power shot??
Collapse
-
Well, im not expert but i was on the assumption that ko's happen when your head is hit so hard your brain rattles against your skull. Thats why boxers build up their neck so theyr head doesnt move as much when hit. When your brain rattles against your skull it momentarily makes you "black out" which is in boxing a knock down.
Comment
-
Originally posted by yrrej View PostYeah, you can learn to take a heavier shot, which is one reason we have trainers to protect us from getting too carried away. The idea is to hit and not get hit. That being said, anybody 200 pounds or more has the power to knock out anyone else if they hit them right....
Comment
-
Originally posted by warriorsingh84' View PostI don't mean KO punches necessarily, what i mean is can you eventually learn to tolerate those punches that are meant to seriously daze and hurt you bad enough to even break your nose??? cuz sometimes when I get hit by a heavy hook I end up getting shaken and start bringing my hands down which lets the other guy hit me with a combo. I've only had like 2 sparring sessions though, 3 rounds, so I'm still workin on holding my ground and keepin the hands up...
Comment
-
Originally posted by oshea1690 View PostWell, im not expert but i was on the assumption that ko's happen when your head is hit so hard your brain rattles against your skull. Thats why boxers build up their neck so theyr head doesnt move as much when hit. When your brain rattles against your skull it momentarily makes you "black out" which is in boxing a knock down.
Comment
-
I read this artical on another site I think if is a pretty good one for this thread I'll paste it here instead of link it for the lazy or slow cpu's
The Heart of Boxing
By Tom Shook - Published in 2005
The fighting sports are amongst the most difficult athletic pursuits known. Most sports require a high level of physical conditioning and mental preparation, but only the brutal one on one competition of a fight can so absolutely invoke the primal survival instincts that each of us posses. There is something raw, wild and unyielding that occurs when a fighter steps into the squared circle. Preparing for this activity requires more than physical preparation, it also requires spiritual strength. What motivates a fighter to go on despite immeasurable fatigue, pain and injury? Standing alone, almost naked and facing an opponent bent on knocking you out is a very unnerving experience. Doing that more than once could be considered insane! Champions not only do this many times, they thrive in this environment.
Miles of roadwork and heavy bag punching will not prepare you for the moment when your opponent lands a crisp punch and destroys your equilibrium. The human nervous system is a marvel of evolution. It allows us to think, move, create and express ourselves in many different ways. Unfortunately, it is also subject to the forces of physics. Disrupted nerve impulses lead to all sorts of alterations in cognitive, emotional and motor ability. A fighter that receives a hard blow on the chin could find himself suddenly dizzy, disoriented and unable to move the way he wants to. Does a champion admit defeat and quit the fight? Hell no! He summons up his spiritual strength and fights on. The old timers call the ability to do this heart. It is what separates champions from every one else. The most physically gifted athletes in the world will never achieve success if they fold when the going gets tough.
How does one go about training his “heart” or spiritual strength? This is something that a lot of us are born with to some degree. We all know people with an absolute can-do, never give up attitude. Despite this truth, spiritual strength must also be cultivated. A fighter needs to forge himself in a crucible of focus, discipline and hard work. Each day pushing himself to do more and be more than he was the day before. It starts in the gym, doing one more round of sparring, attacking the bag with ferocity and determination, getting out and training in the cold, wet, uncomfortable conditions that all of us must face if we are committed to winning. Staying disciplined with preparation and making oneself impervious to pain and resistant to fatigue through training, training and more training develops it even further. But training alone is not enough. You can develop a great deal of physical skill and toughness through training, but spiritual strength must be taken a step further.
You have to ask yourself how bad you want to win and be prepared to do what it takes to achieve victory. The time to ask yourself how bad you want it is not when you are reeling from a hard combination. When the day comes, and it will come, that you must fight through the pain and punishment being inflicted upon you by your opponent you need to already have an answer to that question. You must know deep down in your soul that you will be victorious at all costs.
Don’t hide from the truth. Live in the world of the absolute. Boxing is a brutal business, and you will be hurt in the ring at some point during your career. The hidden key to boxing is knowing that truth, accepting it and being prepared to fight through that hurt when the time comes. You must go about all of your preparation for boxing with this fact in mind. This type of spiritual strength is not developed over night. It takes time and work. Don’t wait until you get your bell rung in the ring, get to work today preparing yourself to deal with and overcome adversity.
I agree with the author in that you can summon the strength to keep going when the body wants to stop. I would use this fact to answere Yes to the thread starteres question.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Samuel F. View PostIm 14. You think I could knock someone out in my weight class(Im 137)? :\
Comment
-
Part of our warmup is two rounds of throwing a medicine ball at our partners mid section.. and if you don't throw it hard enough, the trainer will come over and let you know how hard he wants it thrown.I love people who push you to your limits.
Comment
-
its a pyramid graph. itll go up for awhile, then go down if you get too old or take 2 much damage
Comment
Comment