Good post Adam
Good post Adam
Pain lasts a only a minute, but the memory will last forever....
boxingbournemouth - Cornelius Carrs private boxing tuition and personal fitness training
Missy,If someone nips my arse Ill move in response fast. If someone puts a live electric wire on my arse Ill move faster response to feel which is the bodys fastest response system other than taste its got the longest memory. Eyes have only a 1/6 of a second memory and slow you down they get to much information. The clues are there who lives in this House
Pain lasts a only a minute, but the memory will last forever....
boxingbournemouth - Cornelius Carrs private boxing tuition and personal fitness training
i guess by low intensity, maybe just exercises you could start out with, cuz i don't wanna do like advanced plyo's, just something that you can begin with and progress from there.
a lot of knowledge in this post and a lot of good takes.
but im pretty sure missy is crrect. you cant convert slow to fast, but you can enhance fast AND convert type IIA to IIB, or something like that.
IMO, NOBODY knows for sure. a lot of theories out there but none conclusive. the so called expert can't generaly agree...their claims are often contradictory.
this is simply my take. you do something as explosively as possible. if it's your body weght, fine. as long as you do it as powerfully and quickly (explosively) as possible.
this is also my opinion. i call it regressive weight training. you start out heavy, do things as expolisvely as you can, and reduce the weight over your sets. what this does it bring the true feeling of the motion back and re-establish your form and muscle memory. (AND reminds your muscles that the true motion, the one you want, is the fast one.)
with that said, you want to do the plyo movements as close to the real motion as possible. that's why overloading is good, because most movements don't start from a static position, but the muscle is overloaded and then the desired movement kicks into effect. what's that calles, ecentric, concentric, or whatever.
so what type of exercises would be closest to the real motion in boxing?
I like clap push ups for the upper body.
My other favourite is to get a mat and from standing drop onto my back as quickly and as smoothly as possible (bending knees a lot) then by using a fairly strong contraction of my abs spring up again without allowing my feet to go out to the side (that would strain my knees).
Once I'm up I immediately add a jump straight upwards at the end of the movement.
When i'm tired I sometimes fail to get enough power out of my abs to get up with enough momentum and I have to roll back onto my back and try again. it's a hardie but a goodie .
woww i know for sure i can't do that yet. my abs are the weakest thing i have (which is probably bad, since that's where the power comes from), i think i'll work on my core so i'll actually be able to do that
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