what kind of defense can be used against them as far as blocking punches goes? i encountered a south paw the other day, and i didn't know what to do (im a left lead). should i catch his crosses with the rear hand or cover up? and with the jab...should i catch the jab with my lead hand or cover up?
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Block his right hook with your left hand, try to catch his right jab with your left hand (see if that works, watch for follow-ups), catch his left jab with your right hand if possible. It just takes practice... Keep moving left with your foot on the outside and use your left hook as much as you can.
I hope I got this right... I train southpaw (I'm right handed but have a tiny bit of JKD influence) as does one of the guys I train with and am trying to remember what we do...
There's actually a lot of boxers on here, maybe one of them will chime in. (I'm just a hobbyist.)
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-Try to keep your lead foot outside his lead foot. This actually applies to boxing generally, but lends itself particularly to the open stance.
-Pat block his jab with your lead hand and counter with a jab off the same hand.
-Fake the jab and see what he does, if he reflexively reaches to block it (as many beginners do, and some not-beginners), then fake the jab again and this time follow-up by going over the top.
-pat block the right hand with your left (rear hand) and again, go over the top.
-If you're feeling a little dirty, allow yourself to step on his toes every now and again, it won't win you a fight, but its irritating.
Mike got the high points, these are just some little tricks.
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Originally posted by Mike BrewerI am a natural right hander, but I fight southpaw. Have since I was six. The "formula" for beating us left handers is pretty cut and dry. Circle to the outside of our lead hand. This kills the jab and makes the power shots harder to land. Use the straight right as a lead blow from time to time. If you're circling correctly, it will land with surprising ease. It slips through the guard the way your jab would on an orthodox fighter. Work the left hook to the body. A southpaw puts his liver up front, and your body blows will have more effect, so use them. Try this strategy, and let me know how it works out. I'd be willing to bet that you'll enjoy some immediate success. If that works out for you, I'll add to it.
Summary:
- Circle outside his lead hand.
- Throw the lead right hand (use your cross the way you normally do your jab) from time to time.
- Work the left hook to the body.
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- Circle outside his lead hand.
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Originally posted by Hardball View PostAre you saying convert to south paw? That's what it sounds like.
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