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- Jul 22, 2008
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Quoted from the book of bangs lebroticus passage 4/20Just bang, and when they bang right, bang them harder
Quoted from the book of bangs lebroticus passage 4/20Just bang, and when they bang right, bang them harder
By far my most consistent shot is parrying the left jab with my leading right arm and dropping an overhand left in their face. Sounds sort of like what your saying.without a doubt my favourite move to set up any right is what i call the "active" parry. i know i have said it before, but watch rocky marciano when it comes to setting up the overhand. if you step to your right and forward (with your right foot) at the same time as you parry the jab, it sets up all sorts of nastiness with the right hand. this was the main reason people found it very difficult to keep away from marciano. you can't step back when your weight is still traveling forward.
that's why i don't jab southpaws, the villians. but yes it is fairly similar, it takes a bit more practice than performing it against opposite leads though. some people teach it as a parry then throw the right straight off it, but i much prefer to parry then left hook or fake jab then throw the right. (i can throw a harder right like this) the step as you parry is the most important part though.By far my most consistent shot is parrying the left jab with my leading right arm and dropping an overhand left in their face. Sounds sort of like what your saying.
without a doubt my favourite move to set up any right is what i call the "active" parry. i know i have said it before, but watch rocky marciano when it comes to setting up the overhand. if you step to your right and forward (with your right foot) at the same time as you parry the jab, it sets up all sorts of nastiness with the right hand. this was the main reason people found it very difficult to keep away from marciano. you can't step back when your weight is still traveling forward.