Hey guys,
Does total punch stat numbers mean a thing to today's fight game? Total jabs, power punches AND punch percentage?
For example, what if the guy that "won" the fight, be behind on all stats? How could he win?
Hey guys,
Does total punch stat numbers mean a thing to today's fight game? Total jabs, power punches AND punch percentage?
For example, what if the guy that "won" the fight, be behind on all stats? How could he win?
Bigger man George, bigger punch!
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Amateur boxing is punch counting; in professional boxing you also consider the damage done by punches.
The problem I have with punch-stat numbers is that I don 't know the criteria by which they determine if a punch lands. An example is the first Chavez/taylor fight. They were counting punches that seemed to be being caught on gloves or deflected off shoulders and elbows.
Bigger man George, bigger punch!
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Hell naw punch output dont mean shit to me unless the other guy isnt throwing anything..
Effective aggression and clean punching over high workrate..
I think it breeds boxers in the ameaturs who just try and land anything rather than anything significant to get ahead on points. One of the things that impressed me the most about lomachenko's debut was he didn't seem to waste energy like most ameaturs coming up to the pro's.
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Exactly. Its supposed to be a guideline of sorts but when you listen to Lapdog you would think the numbers were some kind of established fact. I remember its debut in the Mancini/Bramble fight. They kept it simple and it seemed much more accurate then today and even it was way off most times. I've often wondered how judges are effected that are sitting within ear shot of Jim because just like the clicker crew he routinely calls punches that were not even thrown.
Here is a little bit of what compubox co-founder Bob Canobbio had to say in an interview on another forum back in 2011.
Pure comedy.“Over the years, we’ve enhanced the program, and our database has, of course, increased as we’ve done more fights,” explained Canobbio, who says the standard margin of error with CompuBox stats is in the neighborhood of two percent. “We’ve been able to build a database and determine what a weight class average is, what our record is for a weight class for punches thrown in a round and in a fight, one fighter, both fighters. So the stats have evolved as we’ve collected more data over the years. We’ve also added stuff to our live program, like being able to break down the punches landed minute by minute. And we do the Punch Zone now, which shows where the punches landed. That’s an addition.
“From my standpoint, I could probably add more categories, but I don’t want to sacrifice accuracy. We could do left hand and right hand if we wanted. But too many keys leads to too much thinking, and we don’t want to be thinking while we’re working. I don’t want to sacrifice accuracy.”
The answer is no.
You have to land point scoring punches even if they are soft like Floyd's or Calzaghe.
Last edited by Master; 11-24-2015 at 05:00 AM.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
% of power punches landed seems to be a good indicator when you are landing close to 50%.
No.
This is why I scored Burns v Beltran a draw, Beltran throwing constantly, flurries of sloppy combos on burns arms and burns would land a little counter and move.
Effective punching.
You say tomato,
‘n I say …… it correctly.
pitter patter assholes like _______ and ___________ maY LAND a hundred more punches, like butterflies alighting on a stem, but they have no effect on the opponent.
And then other fighters may land only 2 punches, and........
agreed, they got hit with a barrage of monarch shots, a few flurries of moth shots, and even a chrysalis or two, then the butterfly ref fluttered in and waved it off. utterly perplexing, really.
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