Quote:
Originally Posted by greynotsoold
Personally I hate lefties but I have found this to be true: ain't nothing harder to hit than a jabbing southopaw that steps to his right.
Yeah if you dont deal with it somehow they get free reign as you react.
If you practice before hand and know what your about to do and his only two ways out, you can do some rare stuff that is safe to do as you protect and smother as you change your centre line of fire to where he is going to.
This is outa left field and dangerous too if you dont watch their rear left the whole time and use your rear landing straight or cross to go through its path as your body moves behind it in the same direction .
You can deal with their right jab steppig to their right by turning slightly and facing it (opening up your front foot slightly),checking it with your left hand and extend your left on contact as you step through them (opening them up) as you send through a right straight cross while moving away from his rear arm but through his front one, covering it /maintaining contact, as you move and counter off your rear.
you can move away from that rear and get a shot home as you move into into his right arm maintaining contact with it,depending on where he heads to in reaction ,you can actually end up standing there in south paw yourself (with out moving!) like if he moved back in to your right you just pull your lead leg back so that your right cross is now the lead protector cheking where he moved to etc.
Then you pull that right foot back as you land left and he is now to your right and will clean be walking into your left jab if he wants that same ground again.
At the very least he will have questions occuring next time he wants to move right on you.