Problems with effective aggression

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by boxer101, May 4, 2014.


  1. boxer101

    boxer101 Member Full Member

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    Feb 16, 2006
    I noticed a lot of people saying mayweather clearly beat maidana on clean punches. They say that maidana missed a lot of shots and had no effective aggression. But his aggression WAS effective, in so far as it prevented floyd from punching him back for a large amount of time. Sure mayweather landed the cleaner shots BUT can some body explain the mathematical formula which states how many punched to the arms, shoulders and body equals one clean punch to the head?

    If a guy spends the majority of the round punching you while you block the shots (note, blocked shots are not equal to a miss, you still landed those shots but they do less damage) how many clean shots do you need to land in return to win the round? this question is crucial and is at the heart of so many controversial fight.
     
  2. loughlan

    loughlan Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Feb 9, 2010
    Spoiling is also an effective way to stop your opponent from landing but it doesn't win you rounds.
     
  3. tennis

    tennis Boxing Addict Full Member

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    May 5, 2013
    If spoiling tactics keep mayweather on the ropes

    And in every ten blocked shot you get one clean hit

    Mayweather does nothing

    How can anyone but a giant f@ggot give that round to Floyd

    That was the story of the fight for the first 6 rounds

    And where was Floyd's ring genership?

    He got backed up and he got tagged

    And unlike cotto who backed him up but didn't have the work rate to justify stealing a round

    Maidana justified the rounds going to him

    Upto round 9 maidana had dominated

    Floyd worked him out at the end, sure

    But for this fight it was definitely maidan as night