Yea Azn, it helps keep you out of range of the right, but also, it throws the opponent off as they have to try and adjust. As they will turn to find you and it makes them pause, or circle looking for target.
I first watched him do it when we went for a show in Grand Rapids and they switched up his match for the GG MI champ, who had 4 inches in height on him, plus nearly 12 lbs. It was a bit of a dirty switcharoo and they thought it would give their fighter an easy warm up for nationals in 2 weeks. Our guy confused the hell out of him, other dude was swinging at air, and getting countered every time he tried to adjust. Was fun to watch and an easy win for us.
You could touch their lead elbow with your lead glove so you get a reaction and move in and around their reaction.
Thanks for the tip Andre. I came across Vasyl Lomachenko from Ukraine and was wondering if a style similar to his "peek-a-boo" style would possibly benefit me?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZEtNHEziJ1M
I dont know about fixing onto one style. If you can learn when to use it and when to leave it; I think good, but then leave it there and use other stuff that works when you know it works.
Who was whoBlue ukraine ,red russia? Is it the blue dude you mean?
The guy in the blue was peek a booing more than the red guy and it wasnt working out too well for him early on, the other dude was measuring him off the end of his jab and beating him to the draw quite easily in the start of the first round because of it.
Then I saw the red guy at it at times too later, also the guy in red was leaning over to the right and backwards alot to avoid the left hand some people would see that twice and next time shuffle forwards and have him meeting up with a right bomb when he was him comming back up.
I think if you can read your opponent very well or if they are comming straight with straight shots more , if they have come in cold or maybe cant open up for some other reason: if you peek a boo roll to lure them in, roll under their jab and catch them from a coiled position with added leg force behind your shot you can change a fight (at least, change their mind slightly while you jump on them).
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