Trying to study the shifting that lomachenko uses to step around his opponents do you have any recommendations for any old school fighters that were doing this way before his time? trying to find the origins of it like a George Benton for the Philly shell
@jonniesalmonthekickboxingd84667 күн бұрын
Keep these coming! I like the format. Also, any chance on doing this for Pernell Whitaker and Ricardo Lopez?
@marcinmaleszyk191412 күн бұрын
I add this movement to my skill
@ericjascha950716 күн бұрын
Thanks for giving us great film sstudies please teach us more about IQ and stuff yk
@Inaimboxing16 күн бұрын
@@ericjascha9507 will do 🫡
@abudujana1316 күн бұрын
👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿 Beautiful boxing!!
@milojanis490117 күн бұрын
One round took almost as much time as 4 rounds!!!
@haitianmaniac7418 күн бұрын
I see why he was ducked religiously
@yestersongs19 күн бұрын
Good fight to study. Great analysis as always.
@Inaimboxing19 күн бұрын
@@yestersongs 🙏 thank you 🙏
@StuartPhillips-z4d23 күн бұрын
Tommy made the fatal mistake of going toe to toe with the ‘marvellous one’ Joe Calzaghe is so fortunate not to have fought in this era as he would have been destroyed.
@RexCAG23 күн бұрын
I am a huge fan of D'amato and his method. Read "The Non-Compromised Pendulum", by Oleg Maltsev. It will tell you everything you could want to know about Cus and how he developed his methodology.
@Chente_Bui27 күн бұрын
Gorgeous
@RodageadoАй бұрын
Beautiful left hook
@ArchieFatcackieАй бұрын
Scintillating hand speed from Floyd there.
@LandreWilkinsonАй бұрын
I sat front row when Quick and Mike did and exhibition in Chicago. This Tyson here would've gotten beat by a prime Quick Tillis. The fight they had here Tillis ended Tyson's knock out streak and the next day they hired Tillis to be his sparring partner.. Tillis was like a generic Ali Lol 😂 This fight was a lot closer than the score card showed
@RaimundoLuis-xk5zeАй бұрын
Fera esse boxeador
@ajaxcatchАй бұрын
His squareness greco style posture allowed him better side to side slipping and also better use of power from both hands hence his ability to rib body punches to both sides of body to set up head shots. Confusing opponents His weakness was he was open for the uppercut dn the centre but even then it needed someone of the strength and expertise of hollyfield or tua or riddick bowe to set it up. Cause he was great at slipping that too. I think Riddick bowe could have got the job done. Danny Williams did a masterful piece of inside fighting to knockout tyson. A great example of inside fighting greatness. The Danny williams fight was a brilliant rxample of the power of peak a boo in the first few rds but then also exposed its flaws which Danny Williams on that night exposed to get the KO.
@davidrodriguez7641Ай бұрын
Legend!!!!
@TheRexrapperАй бұрын
What is the difference between an excuse and an explanation? If asked and they are actually injured, is that an excuse to bring it up or is it an explanation?
@killerkdawg88Ай бұрын
0:09 That says everything you need to know about the kind of fighter he was. It wasn’t in Aaron Pryor’s DNA to have a boring fight. He always gave the fans what they paid for. RIP Champ. You were one of the all-time greats.
@PotbellypugilistАй бұрын
Scary power.
@PotbellypugilistАй бұрын
Beautiful to watch.
@mikebsibbАй бұрын
Maybe Mark didn't reach his full potential as a pro but there were moments of brillance from him in the ring!
@laurag-y4lАй бұрын
I believe the dip Arguello did to the right side of watt was more so to dull or numb his senses or reaction time to the right hand you get them used to that constant movement to that side and you use it to set up punches that require a similar movement like when he threw that right hand he dipped to the same side its also why I believe lomachenko does it although constantly moving your head is good and is part of the reason I believe it would be to mainly dull or numb this opponents senses for when he would lunge in. It's more so a type of feint in my opinion.
@John-zz5gtАй бұрын
Rated 37th greatest Heavyweight of all time. Most of his career he was the guy brought in to lose. He was robbed more than a few times. Jimmy Young.
@yestersongsАй бұрын
Great analysis! Any chance you can record it a bit louder? Sound seems real low on a few of these.
@InaimboxingАй бұрын
@@yestersongs thank you for letting me know , didn’t know the volume was bad I will fix it for the next ones
@alejandroriverojr6661Ай бұрын
His reach was insane for his height
@rdk7712Ай бұрын
Can you also make a film study of modern fighters?
@seancidy6008Ай бұрын
PASTRANO was perhaps the least aggressive boxer ever to win a world title
@jaffa74Ай бұрын
So true I guess Marvellous and Roy Jones Jr aren’t of recent times…
@darthspidey1930Ай бұрын
Trinidad is putting power in to both hooks whilst Jones is only putting hard power into the body hook. Jones’ hook to the head here is just to distract from the next shot.
@lordburlap4514Ай бұрын
Jimmy Young was impossible to hit cleanly…a VERY talented fighter who soured on the fight game after questionable decisions that went against him….he beat Foreman, Lyle, and probably should have gotten the decision against Ali and Norton….
@tloustratsАй бұрын
Young hitting the canvas with his gloves at 0:49 is not talked about. Referee was terrible
@seancidy6008Ай бұрын
Undersized Young was very good. if he had been just a little bigger he would have been a world beater. Then again, Ken Norton gave boxers like Ali and Young fits, though Foreman crushed him. I have read Foreman trained in an airconditioned room for Zaire (knda crazy and he was talking crazy too wanting to fight Bugner and Ali on the same night) and had an extended time training in the cool room due to a cut in sparring that put the bout back. Consequently on the night he could not cope with the heat against Ali. Subsequently he had become obsessed with the heavy bag and his punches hitting it sounded like bombs but he got so ponderous.he got beaten by Young who he ought to have beaten. The partisans of Ali don't talk much about Foreman almost getting KOed by Lyle (who was _much_ older than Foreman at the time) and being beaten by little Jimmy. Although Foreman wonthe title a second time watching this display of sticking an running makes one realise how much Michael Moorer stood right in front of Foreman.
@elisabattle8456Ай бұрын
I used to spar with Jimmy when training at the 23rd PAL in Philadelphia. I was an amateur boxer and student at Temple University and was a light heavyweight. He was very tricky and fast.--Mike
@InaimboxingАй бұрын
@@elisabattle8456 thank you very much Mike, Young did appear to be very tricky. Anything that stood out to you while sparring him? Certain moves and things of that nature
@elisabattle8456Ай бұрын
@@Inaimboxing Mostly his jab--it was always in my face and disrupted any momentum I could muster. Another problem was that my trainer thought it was a good idea to change my style from a natural southpaw to orthodox because I had a very strong left hand punch. That left me VERY confused during in fighting and I could not handle Jimmy's tricks and movements. My eyelids were constantly black and blue and rumors went around campus that "Battle is wearing mascara"!--mike
@denros5445Ай бұрын
Very nice channel man. Keep up the good work!
@geraldholmes7679Ай бұрын
Yes I remember Jimmy Young he was mediocre at best.
@akhnatenra6603Ай бұрын
And yet he beat another Mediocre Over Rated fighter, George Foreman.
@elisabattle8456Ай бұрын
I disagree--see above-Mike
@lordburlap4514Ай бұрын
This “mediocre” fighter beat Foreman, Lyle, and was robbed against Ali and Norton…
@Bankai_Musashi1Ай бұрын
@@akhnatenra6603beat a lazy george only by being dirty, Lol
@Bankai_Musashi1Ай бұрын
@@lordburlap4514wasn't robbed against Ali, he legit got knocked down multiple times by definition because he leaned out of the ring
@jesuscampos8136Ай бұрын
I think Ron Lyle made him realize he wasn't all that
@seancidy6008Ай бұрын
Lyle was much older than Foreman. Slightly older than Ali.
@jesuscampos8136Ай бұрын
@@seancidy6008 either way, he gave George the beating of his entire career
@tloustratsАй бұрын
@@jesuscampos8136How it is a beating when Foreman wins at the end. You guys prefer to watch John Ruiz or Jimmy Young than one of the greatest slugest of all time. Very strange
@jesuscampos8136Ай бұрын
@@tloustrats George even admitted that was the toughest fight of his career. Sometimes you can win but you can actually be at the worst beating of your life. Just look at the way he hit the canvas.
@tloustratsАй бұрын
@@jesuscampos8136 he was hurt this is clear but it was not a beating. A beating is when you get battered for 15 round and give nothing. Good to remind also it was his comeback fight after a 15 months inactivity and new coaching team. Foreman before Ali would have finished Lyle in 2 like Norton or Frazier
@kevinalexander2741Ай бұрын
Thank you buddy ! My name is coach D train. My formal introduction and I am glad I found your channel. We have this in common. The eye! 👁 for technical purposes in boxing.
@InaimboxingАй бұрын
@@kevinalexander2741 🫡🫡🫡
@kevinalexander2741Ай бұрын
@@Inaimboxing oh! My Playlist doesn't reflect my knowledge of the sweat science of boxing However my age does. I am 52 years young. I saw the majority of the fights you post as a kid.
@yestersongsАй бұрын
Looking forward to this 2nd part. Great study so far 👍
@thecominglightofgood583Ай бұрын
Foreman on any other day would have eaten him for lunch. Post Zaire he wasn't himself and much low on confidence. By the time this fight happened he was on the brink of mental breakdown which happened after the fight.
@lordburlap4514Ай бұрын
Hardly…Young BEAT him…excuses don’t count.
@thecominglightofgood583Ай бұрын
@@lordburlap4514 What I stated are facts. One swallow doesn't make a summer... Foreman came back nearly 20 years later to win. Young was an accident nothing more than that.
@QtarobrandoАй бұрын
Glad to see Few People still remember about Jimmy✨
@paulmartinson875Ай бұрын
Yeah, I remember him
@lordburlap4514Ай бұрын
Larry hadn’t fought in almost 2 years and Larry was past his prime…Holmes admitted he took this fight for the money, only…
@MarkSchreindАй бұрын
Larry knows exactly how to deal with guys like Mike Tyson. However, a boxer's ring awareness and reflexes need to be spot on to beat a prime Mike Tyson. Larry, in his prime, survived punches much harder than what Tyson can throw. Both are elite level, but I still rate Larry Holmes higher than Tyson.
@Bankai_Musashi1Ай бұрын
Easily, Prime Holmes was one of the best heavyweight I'd ever seen with prime Ali & Prime Lennox
@MarkSchreindАй бұрын
@@Bankai_Musashi1 He was one of the best, without doubt. Larry is gaining a new generation of fans these days. KZbin did more for Larry than the corrupt old school media from the 80s. He wasn't the movie star they wanted. But real fight fans love great fighters. Larry is great.
@Bankai_Musashi1Ай бұрын
@@MarkSchreind yeah, didn't know he made that Cooney fight about race & that comments about Rocky, etc, but either way he was unstoppable in his era until he got old, he was so good time beat him, if only george carried on after that young loss & we'd have seen Foreman vs Holmes
@MarkSchreindАй бұрын
@@Bankai_Musashi1 The press would provoke Larry ... That is why he seemed to have a temper. I can definitely understand his point of view .... Holmes vs Foreman would have been great .... I Just think Larry has too many tricks up his sleeve.
@TJC-zz4zxАй бұрын
Lucky for Tyson Holmes wasn't 28 instead of 38, he would have got his ass whupped!
@Bankai_Musashi1Ай бұрын
Same as the Holmes Ali fight huh? What a coincidence
@TJC-zz4zxАй бұрын
@@Bankai_Musashi1 A prime holmes would beat a prime Ali sorry.
@alemations8479Ай бұрын
Eiji date neck turn
@PeteF.Salinas-md6zdАй бұрын
They said Nelson had 2 weeks to train for that fight. This was definitely a learning experience for Nelson who went on to become a great champion.
@Chuckhoman204Ай бұрын
Looks like the same jab and step back to me?? Please explain how they are different?
@MrDetroit1701Ай бұрын
He had some speed to him!
@troe9161Ай бұрын
Jackson was a beast ya'll! The best to ever do it.