While its certainly true that large muscles can slow a boxer down and can make punches weaker due to less speed/acceleration, theres also lots of boxers who have huge muscles, and also punch extremely hard, e.g. Tyson, Foreman, Joshua I guess too much bulk would not be good, but functional strength and power while remaining lean could aid a lot in punching harder. Technique is obviously more important, but which muscle groups do you think when developed, can lead to stronger punches? I was thinking, shoulders (can lead to more pop and shoulder snap when punching), and legs (power is generated from the legs), and also a strong torso for a quick rotation.
Dude, what the ****ing ****? So many muscles go into punches and with different punches you get drastically different involvement. To list them would be an absolute mother****er. Boys have penises and girls have vaginas.
The Great Fighters over the Years were born with that gift...It's Genetic thing Just like Great Chin's.!!!
Hell yeah!!! When I started full body weight training I noticed a huge difference in my punching power
I think it depends on the fighter. From my own experience putting on muscle made me slower and punch with less momentum, then again, maybe I had more power but less snap, I certainly didnt feel as explosive. I guess it depends how you generate power.
Technique trumps all for punching power muscles mean little, look at Timothy Bradley, then look at Nasim Hamed
My muscles and strength have declined getting older, my punching power massively too... I guess that speaks for itself.
If you want to develop punching power, train like a male gymnast. Those guys have insane flexibility and strength in their upperbodies, especially the shoulders/traps/forearms areas.
I would suspect Hafnor Bjornsson would wreck a punch machine with or without any technique. Rip it from its hinges anyway, lol.
Measuring punching power is really no different to measuring power. You’re literally talking physics. Force/Weight/Speed and all that jazz. Stick them into an equation. the best way to talk about muscle in this regard is to compare it to a car. By adding muscle you’re adding bhp, giving it more power. However, as a result you’ve also given it more weight, which has now reduced the acceleration. In boxing you’d call this ‘pop’. This doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re weaker one way or the other, because it all depends on what you’re trying to hit. Or in science terms, where you’re trying to transfer that energy that you’ve generated. Wilder’s seen as the biggest puncher today. However, because of his lack of weight/muscle I’d wager that he’s not even in the top 10 for generating power punches to the body.