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#47 | |
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ESB 2002 Club
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Join Date: Jul 2004
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No one's saying body build or lift weight like a strong man.I just cannot fathom why people cannot differentiate between the two. |
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#49 | |
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Belt holder
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because coaches view weights as evil and they are the ignorant ones... |
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#50 | ||
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Belt holder
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#51 | |
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Belt holder
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even more so to make a thread about weight training with out specifying exactly what you mean by weight training is nothing but an attempt to troll. |
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#52 | |
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Belt holder
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#53 | |
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Belt holder
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im not saying that your trying to troll or that any one whos posted in this thread are trolls. just that any, why do boxers hate weight training or any why do boxers run long distances threads are nothing but attempts to troll. |
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#54 | |
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Belt holder
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I don't think all the people starting these threads want to troll, they just want to know why their coach despises weights. There was a guy that started a thread asking why his coach refused to train him if he trained with weights. You think he wanted to cause trouble or just understand what the issue is with weight training and boxing? |
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#55 | |
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Belt holder
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it might not have been an attempt to troll but if that was the case he probly would have been specific in the lifting he was doing, stuck to talking about the weight lifting he did and not mid thread try to argue that because plyos use weights plyos=weightlifting and plyos = good for boxing Thus...... weightlifting(plyos)= good for boxing = coachs dont know shit. if they want to know why they should just use the search function and read through any one of the tens if not hundreds of troll threads already created. |
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#56 |
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at my old gym the coach offered us a weight routine to follow if we wanted to do so out of the boxing gym , i think it consisted of thing like lunges dumbell rows erm i didnt use it so i couldnt say , but unfortunatley he knew more about weights than the actual boxing side of things , i guess you dont often find coaches who can mentor your boxing and also know there way around the weights room
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#57 |
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Journeyman
ESB Jr Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 199
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hey what do you guys think about putting weights in a backpack ,going for a walk,doing pull ups,push ups,squats,going up stairs and other things,have you done anything like that?
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#58 |
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Belt holder
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We had a PTI who made us 80lb packs and then we hiked with them and did all sorts of weight PT with them. Swings, lifts, sprints, bunch of other stuff.
It sucked. And I gained 15lb of muscle that semester. I wouldn't do it for boxing training, but it works for what it's designed for I guess. |
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#59 |
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I'm going to post my personal experience with it, but keep in mind this is just me. I was a fast little kid, running a few miles a week would easily have kept me down near 115 lbs or less if I didn't make an effort to keep muscle on by eating/ cheating on cardio at that time. figting at 118 I was always fast, but I didn't feel that strong or impact resistant. So I took some time off, lifted, gained a little muscle to about 125-128 lbs, and still felt quick, felt more punch resistant, had endurance, and felt stronger than most of the guys at the weight. At that weight I was lifting regularly, just stopping two weeks before any competition.
Fought that way (ams only) for a few years. Then I was training in the gym with a good workout partner without really competing, and I felt very strong, was doing so much weight stuff, never felt limited, and my weight never really got above 130. Then I left all that when I had a travelling job with my wife's family, couldn't work out in the gym, couldn't lift, but I had a fresh supply of blue collar illegal mexicans to spar with on our set up crew for three years. there was no lifting, but I was so much faster than those guys, I felt like lightning. then I quit, visited my old sparring partner and destroyed him with my speed, he said I seemed faster than ever. At that time I had gotten fatter and was about 136 lbs, but felt just as quick. I went back to lifting, and about four months after that I saw one of the guys I had sparred from my old job, who I had outsped so easily even though he was young and pretty fast. When we squared up, I realized two things: I wasn't quicker than him anymore after just three or four months of lifting. I saw the openings, I had my foot speed to control range, but my upperbody mechanics were simply not responding as well. I know for a fact it wasn't years off, I had an easier time with my old experienced boxing sparring partner with three years away from lifting or serious training than I ever did when we were working out together, and then just a few months later struggled to out-time a guy I had always been faster than, because the lifting really had bound me up, and I needed to use timing and strength in the session to dominate. So you can still be fast with lifting, but I do think it can SIGNIFICANTLY decrease reaction time and increases oxygen requirements, especially if you are a guy who relies on his speed. |
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#60 |
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newbie
Join Date: May 2011
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Assuming a correctly structured program is used, Lifting weights and/or odd objects (for example, sandbags) works and using boyweight training works. And everything in between i.e a mixture/blend of the two.
This is the problem with boxing and indeed most combat sports these days. The purists who swear by good old bodyweight work swear blind weights will hinder the athlete, at the same time as the guy who swears by lifting weights or odd objects gasps at the thought of only doing bodyweight work claiming the athletes it produces will be inferior to those using the iron. Bodyweight...weights/odd objects.....both are just TOOLS. Concern yourself with the end result instead of worrying about the modality your using to get there. Me?? I like both bodyweight training, either bodyweight alone AND/OR using power bands (i get mine from ironwoodyfitness.com), weighted vests etc AND using weights whether that be kettlebells, dumbells, barbells or sandbags etc etc. Structure your program to suit your sport (in my, or indeed your case i assume, that'll be boxing), implement it, monitor and adjust accordingly. To re-cap. Focus on the goal not the tool used to get there. |
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