i heard the commentators saying khan was circling to judahs left which was the wrong way to circle against a southpaw. but after the fight khan said he was circling to the left in order to take judahs back hand away...... whats the usual direction to circle against a southpaw and why?
You have to circle to your own left against a southpaw, because you can avoid his (left) powerpunch that way by circling away from it.
You circle to your left to keep them off balance and make them reach with there power hand circling to your right would be walking right into their power hand I dont know what the commentators were talking about Khan pretty much fought perfectly that night.
Circle away from their back hand (in this case circle to your left), thus putting your front foot outside of his, making him extend himself to reach you (IE him off balance). This is exactly what JMM did to Manny Pacquiao, effectively.
right ok thanks guys. i couldn't figure which would be the best way to move because if you move to your left against judah i thought you would be in the area where judah can rotate into the uppercut. but i guess it wouldnt. its hard to imagine unless your in the ring. i'll just take your word for it guys. thanks.
i suppose you have to take each opponent as it comes. good point about the lead hook though. that just emphasises the importance of being a two fisted fighter like pacqiauo and martinez rather than just having a jab and lead hand. much harder to defend against.
Hooks are easier to see coming and easier to guard against the brain doesn't notice a straight punch as quick as a hook were you flail your elbow and turn your body as odd as that might sound.
khan utilised his left hook well against judah. don't think judah was expecting it. he had his hands down circling the ring doing his usual ....sit and wait for the opponent to dive in sso he can throw the counter upper cut.
To your own left, away from the power hand and so you can keep your left foot outside their right. I don't know why Khan was circling right, but he must have had his reasons. Maybe he was more concerned with Judah's right hook than backhand.
Indeed, but the thing that has traditionally the case is that, unlike orthodox fighters, southpaws almost without exception are heavily relient on their power hand, the left hand. That's what makes southpaws such a strange bunch: they're not just mirror images of orthodox fighters, who can generally have a left hook or a straight right as the hand that does the damage. Overwhelmingly, the back hand with southpaws is the hand that does the damage. The fact that this is true with the vast majority of southpaws is the reason why a southpaw fighter that has another weapon in his lead hand, such as the right hook that Pac developed, is such a formidable opponent. Traditionally southpaws are one-handed fighters: they have a pawing jab which works as a range finder, sledge-hammer left hands and good left uppercuts and left body-shots. Add a right hook to that arsenal and they're hard to beat.
you have pacqiauo........ yeah because southpaws are more rare than conventional fighters its a challenge anyway but with pacqiauo he throws the lead right hand from such an unusual angle its impossible to avoid through out the whole fight. thats why hatton was really smart squaring up and diving in against pac, right in line for that shot.