In general your stance isnt really the problem, you can box side on you can box someone squared up and each stance have their own advantages at times, what makes the problem is the situations and knowing what to use in which situation, break it down and at each step of the movement ask yourself can you move in all directions fast, controlled and on balance from here if need be? if you cant then there is a problem somewhere and it needs finding/correcting,
herb is spot on with what hes saying often ive had some somtimes annoying training sessions that have lasted 2 hours and have little or no fitness/strength benefits, but these sessions are dedicated to correcting the tiny little imperfections that make the world of difference when you throw the whole thing together. the more figured youve got the biomechanics, the smoother itll all be, often the little things are forgotten but its the little things that count and really make the difference in the overall quality of the end product. and its the even littler things inbetween those little things that make things really interestingor atleast for me it is, thats what i love so much about the sweet science, the attention to detail.
Sure it would be easier, less tedious and more fun to just do 6 rounds shadow boxing and 6 on the bag and 3 skipping, but no matter how annoying it may get i think this is what makes the difference between getting 100% from your training sessions and getting 30% from them like most do


Thanks:
Likes:
Dislikes: 

or atleast for me it is, thats what i love so much about the sweet science, the attention to detail.
Reply With Quote
Bookmarks