Quote Originally Posted by artistmoving View Post
Quote Originally Posted by Andre View Post
Smile for real on the inside and enjoy the thought and process of making them miss.

You could practice that by only moving and not hitting back at all while getting someone you trust to take pot shots at you, make em miss with your feet and duck and weave, retreat on angles etc. Then after only gently touch their arms to guide them or disrupt with the foot work, then block and catch been them with counters later.

Break it down , know you can do each segment and enjoy each for what it is and you wont give your mind time to freeze up.

Thank you that's great advice Andre. My tai chi Sifu was just telling me about the inner smile. I've also started doing that kind of defensive sparring. Hearing that from you drives it home a little more.

Sidetracking a little-- I've also been practicing switch stance since I started training a few months ago-- reading your "advanced boxing article" got me more interested in this site-- it's rare to hear creative advice like that. It's a lot to follow on paper-- do you ever plan on making a youtube video?

Thanks. My way of thinking in that is more suited to MMA though which came along a few years after I wrote that. To use it in boxing works only if you are smart enough to know exactly when to use it.

I loath switching for no reason and if a boxer does it for no reason theres an opening straight down the pipe mid switch (which amazes me again that people are not taught how to go there very fast against a constant switcher who doesnt use it off someones moves to their advantage instead.) A flying hook or a lunging straight would catch these twits. (Usually they have the cheek to stand square and place one fist in front of the other fast and roll their shoulders back and forth as if to say guess which way Im going to go! so they let you know its coming .
Theres always at least two sides to everything minimum most train with one thought and one outcome in mind. If you watch a fighter and love or hate what they do you can work out what they think or what they want, once you've got that,its easier to work on the reverse to them. Making it fun for you and more composure comes with knowing the enemy better.