What Exactly Is Boxercise And The Benefits - 6 minutes read
For the past couple of decades, boxing training has come in two flavours: proper gyms where proper men properly hit each other; and fancy gyms where (mostly) women throw air punches with wrist weights. Many guys are understandably wary of rubbing sweaty shoulders with real fighters, but boxercise offers none of its visceral thrill. But there’s now a third way: gyms that cater to men who want to learn how to fight, but don’t want to get hit in the face (at least, not yet). Rightly so. The boxer’s transformation, detailed in innumerable montages, is only achievable if you actually train like a boxer. It’s about the explosive power and coordination of hitting something. Not that you need a butcher’s fridge or set of museum steps. Your gym’s probably already stocked with everything you need for a heavyweight workout.
The Benefits Of Boxercise
Still Unconvinced? Here’s how boxing will punch up your normal routine.
Total-Body Muscle
Unlike your bench press PB, boxing is functional. It’s great for total body strength and power as it uses the body from head to foot. That means you’ll build that all-over muscle that makes boxers’ physiques so enviable. And feel the burn in muscles you never knew you had.
Burn Fat
Boxers fight for three minutes, then rest for one. It’s high-intensity training. This spikes your metabolism for huge calorie burn while you’re training, then increased burn even when you’re out of the gym. You’ll knock out body fat even while you’re asleep.
Mental Stimulation
Boxing is tough, but an hour in the ring disappears quicker than the same time spent on a treadmill. It’s fully absorbing, so the mind won’t go wandering too often. It’s also perfect stress relief; you can’t hit your boss, but you can take out your full in-tray frustration on a punch bag.
Coordination
Boxing isn’t about punching. It’s about everything you do before you throw a punch. Think footwork, mobility and the ability to picture your shot while ducking a fist. Even if you never hit anything not wrapped in foam rubber, you’ll be faster and more nimble everywhere, from the football pitch to the squat rack.
How To Train Like A Boxer
So you wanna be a contender? Before you step into the golden ring, these are the techniques to master.
Footwork
You can’t sting like a bee until you can move like a butterfly. Moving properly is the difference between hitting your opponent and being hit. Make this your warm-up before every session, to build quick feet that can get you into range – and out of trouble.
Round 1
Place two cones around 10 feet apart. Get in a boxing stance – left foot forward, right foot back at 45 degrees, eyes over your left shoulder, and fists by your chin (reverse if you’re left-handed).
Keeping your feet around shoulder-width apart, move between the cones. You should bounce lightly from foot-to-foot, with your weight on your toes. Never look down at your feet. In the ring, you’d get hit; out of it, do penance with two burpees.
At random intervals, stop moving and throw a one-two – that’s a jab then a right cross. Make sure you rotate your torso, that’s where the power comes from. Get back into your guard and keep moving. Repeat for three minutes, then take a minute’s breather.
Round 2
Stand side-on, fists up, looking straight ahead. This time, move sideways between the cones. Make sure you don’t bring your feet together. Otherwise, you’re too easy to knock over.
Again, throw random one-twos. But this time, before you punch, you need to pivot 90 degrees off your back foot, as if you were stepping into your opponent. Step back and keep moving.
Next, pivot off your back foot, as if you were stepping away. Throw your combo, then start moving.
Gym Work
A boxer’s body is built by boxing. But your conditioning comes outside the ring. You need to run, a lot. If you can’t last into the closing rounds, your opponent just needs to wait you out. And there’s no alternative to putting the miles in. For boxing sessions, a skipping rope is still your best friend. You’ll build stamina, shoulder strength, foot speed and coordination. Plus you can always have one in your bag, if you fancy a workout and don’t have a gym to hand. As for weights, your body is your best friend. Boxers do some leg work – squats and deadlifts – to build lower body strength but mostly it’s about explosive, bodyweight exercises: plyometric press-ups, box jumps, pull-ups. A great punch is about speed more than strength and mirror muscle only slows you down.
Punch Bag
Hitting a heavy bag works every muscle in your body. At least, it does if you do it properly. It’s particularly good for developing the body’s core through rotational training. That helps with achieving a six-pack, but is also brilliant for preventing injuries in the outside world, which are often caused by twisting. Unlike pad word, in which you move around with a partner and throw combinations at their hands, you can get a full-body bag workout without a training buddy.
For the below workout, punch for three-minute rounds, with a minute’s rest. Work for 12 rounds as your cardio day, or finish a gym session with four-to-six rounds.
Range: move around the bag and pick your shots. Work on your body position and footwork.
Southpaw: switch stances and throw combinations. This helps your coordination and means you don’t only work in one plane of rotation.
Move your head: after every punch, move your head. Use your feet and body to dodge punches and get in position to throw your own.
Fight pace: keep moving, keep punching. If you aren’t throwing your hands, you should be stepping out of range.
Fight pace.
Fight pace.
Fight pace.
Fight pace.
Fast hands: where you hit doesn’t matter, but your hands should be flying. Try to keep your fists landing at head height.
Do damage: throw every punch as hard as possible. Make every one a knockout.
Slip punches: dodge and weave. Throw the occasional counter but this all about keeping out of the way. Make sure your head and shoulders are always moving.
On the inside: your legs should be heavy by now, so step up against the bag and throw punches from close range.