Originally Posted by
Ali. R
When working the pads, far as with different trainers or what not… If your trainer is not fueled far as combination fighting, partially with three to four punches while catching with the shoulders, slipping, pulling away from the right and the left hand, rolling back off the left hooks and constantly countering with three to five shots at a time, then the trainee will not do the same…
Most of the time boxing trainer only does what they know, and what they don’t know they’ll find someone else who knows to train they fighter… Fighters will become a carbon copy of their original trainer… Whatever the trainer can’t do the fighter will not be able to do, because the trainer will only stick to his game play…
If the fighter doesn’t learn how to work three to five punches off a slip or catch when working the pads, then he or she will only throw one to two punches at a time when under pure pressure, rather then two to four punches, because they are taught to throw one or two punches hard with and for power standing in one spot and straight up when throwing combinations, most of the time with just only three punches per combo and by training like that, anything over three punches will be wild as h*ll (one dimensional)
When the trainer have taught the fighter all the basic on the pads, then the trainer should push all kinds of punches on his fighter from all kinds of angles, then he should be catching with the shoulders, slipping, pulling away from the right and the left hand, rolling back off the left hooks and constantly countering with three to five shots at a time, then he or she will throw two to four shot when under pressure, the more punches you throw on the pads the more you will throw in the ring, simple is that….
Ali Rahim.