Boxing Combinations

written by admin
14

Boxing Combinations

While one punch can be effective, when they are delivered in vollies of two, three, four, five or six or more they become devastating.  Anyone can dodge or slip one punch, but it is a lot more difficult to get out of the way of five incoming, well thrown punches in sequence.  That is the theory behind combinations.

Combinations take skill and stamina, both to deal with, and to deliver.  This section will mainly focus on your delivery, but one quick note.  If someone is unleashing combinations on you, you have to counter attack and disrupt their flow, optimally with a combination of your own.  You cannot possibly hope to slip every punch, unless you are incredibly fast or your opponent is super slow. 

You can theoretically throw hundred punch boxing combinations over and over if you had perfect form and perfect conditioning.  Combinations require that you complete each punch correctly so that it sets you up for the next one.  This includes your recovery from every punch you throw.  Your technical form from beginning to end of your punch has to be perfect so so that your weight is placed in the best position for the next punch in the sequence.  This is where attention to detail and your level of conditioning becomes very important.  Boxing combinations require you to expend a lot of energy punching away and only through conditioning will you be able to last a whole fight whether it is one round or twelve.

Boxing combinations flow. They are never awkward to perform as long as all the punches are performed in sequence and with technical precision.  Boxing combinations feel right when you deliver them correctly, and it is because your weight is shifting and setting you up for every punch in the combination.  For instance, picture a jab.  You throw out the jab and your left hand is far forward hitting your target.  At the same time you thrust your left hip forward to give you some extra power.  The position you are in at that moment sets you up perfectly to throw a hard straight right because as you bring you hips and jab arm back into your guard, you've already started the movement required to throw the straight right.  Letting momentum carry you, you just complete that motion and you have your first combination - the 1-2.

Taking that further, the way your weight and body is setup when the straight right hits the target puts you in a perfect position to throw a left hook.  Ideally, when throwing combinations you shouldn't have to move your feet.  Your weight and forces and flowing to different parts of your legs in such a manner that allows you to shift it back the other way with another punch.  If you have to take a step, you did something wrong, because your weight ended up shifting too far or not far enough to allow you to deliver the next punch.

That's not to say you will never have to take step while delivering combinations.  It is highly unlikely your opponent will just stand there and let you beat on him.  If he does, I'd like his name so I can arrange a meeting...  In reality, it's about keeping your balance while throwing as many punches as you can.  Especially in amateur matches, winners are chosen because of the number of punches they land.  Obviously throwing combinations will help out in that goal.

So where's the list of boxing combinations?

Well, there are many, but you will want to master the basics (again, see Fighting Fit by Doug Werner and Alan Lachica for illustrations of these combination as well as over 450 other photos).  Start with the four below and then move on from there.  At some point, the essence behind boxing combinations will hopefully click in your head and you will understand why one punch follows the one before it.  Before long, you should be able to make up your own combinations.

Once you have identified a combination you want to learn, you have to drill it into your head.  It's all fine and good to start off thinking to yourself, 1-2, 1-2-3, 2-3-2, but everytime you think about it, you lose that split second.  You need to be able to react to an open target and if you have taken the time to drill these boxing combinations into your head, they will instantly flow out when you need them.

So, when trying to learn new combinations I recommend keeping these two things in mind:

  1. Don't try to learn too many at one time:  Stick to two or three a week and once you've learned them, you have to practice them frequently otherwise skill fade creeps in and soon you are back to square one and learning them all over again.
  2. Drill:  Dedicate entire rounds to one combination.  Throw it over and over and over and over and over and over again.  Get the picture.  Do not mix other combinations in with it.  You have to teach your muscles to work in a certain order for each combination.

Remember on the punches page, each punch had a number beside it, well here is where they will come in handy. To recap (again reverse for southpaws):

  • 1-Jab
  • 2-Straight Right
  • 3-Left Hook
  • 4-Right Hook
  • 5-Left Uppercut
  • 6-Right Uppercut

The Basic Boxing Combinations

  • 1-1 or 1-1-1

So, a 1-1 is two jabs, a 1-1-1 is three jabs.

These combinations are an effective way to throw a bunch of punches from a distance. It is imperative you recover completely after each jab so subsequent jabs are delivered effectively and accurately.

  • 1-2

One of the most important and famous of all combinations, the mighty 1-2. In this, you throw a jab which closes the distance and sets up the head for the power punch of the straight right delivered right after.

The objective with the jab is to snap your opponent's head back with your jab which exposes his chin.  You then nail him with a right sending him to the mat. Throughout the whole sequence, you should feel firm on your feet, never off balance. If you do, you're not doing something right. It's one of two things, you are either reaching for the opponent or not recovering completely from your punches, both big no no's.

  • 1-2-3

The other most important combination (good english eh), jab/straight right/left hook. This basically completes the 1-2.

Same objective for the first two punches, jab the head to expose the chin, nail the chin with the straight right. This creates a weight transfer to the left side which automatically sets you up to land a devastating left hook. Your target for the left hook is the right temple of your opponent - clobber it.

Perfecting these two combinations will take some time but make sure you do, they are all natural and like all combinations must flow. You'll have a pretty good indication when you are doing them right because it will feel right, not to mention the power of your punches will increase.

  • 2-3-2 and 3-2-3

The right-left-right and the opposite left-right-left. The goal here is to time the weight shifts correctly. With every punch you throw, it should set you up nicely for the subsequent punch. The right shifts the weight over the left which is perfect for the left hook which subsequently puts the weight back over the right which naturally makes you want to throw the right again.

The challenge here is to ensure you are not just throwing a flurry of arm punches. You must get your body involved because that is where the power comes from. Then you will see true devastation as your opponent receives your offense from two different angles.

That's part of the beauty of combinations. Delivered correctly, punches start hitting you from all different angles. It makes defense that much harder.

The use of combinations while extremely effective, also requires extreme caution. It is easy to forget to recover after each punch when you send out the flock of arms, but every time you don't recover you expose half your head and if your opponent realizes it, kiss a few brain cells bye bye.

Adding uppercuts into the mix: Word of advice, get the four combinations mentioned above perfected first, then worry about putting in the uppercuts.

Uppercuts are used in close and you do need to work them into your combinations but adding them is very hard to do correctly and takes a great deal of time and precision and dedication to master.

The following pages will introduce you to an abundance of other boxing combinations.  I have broken them up into series:  1 Series, 2 Series, 3 Series, 4 Series, 5 Series and so on.  Within each series you can create a virtually unlimited number of combinations based on the sequence you put together.  The difference is that 1 series focuses on one type of punch, 2 series - 2 punches, 3 series - 3 punches and so on.

If you have no interest in learning the reasoning behind these combinations and just prefer to work down the list and memorize them, go ahead.  Personally I learn them better by taking the time to slowly do one and understand exactly why.  Whatever works for you.  If you have any combinations you want to add, just add a comment.

Average: 4 out of 5 (2 votes)


Jorge Flores's picture

Re: Boxing Combinations

I got some nice combos if you want to add in your program. Combo 1: 1-2-3-2-5-2 Combo 2: 1-2-Double Block to head-1-2-3 Combo 3: Jab Block-1-2-3-2 Combo 4: 1-2-3-Shuffle to left-3-2 Try them, they can add some power to your arsenal.
Eduardo Herrera's picture

They work

You know I am bearly starting to box but I like it I wana go all the way wit it. Your combos worked agaist my first opponent. you know i would really want to spar wit u.

Matt Jones's picture

Boxing Combinations

Other good combinations are: 1. 1 (move in),2,3-B, 3(Jab,Cross,Left Body Hook, Left Head Hook) 2.[Inside Fighting] 3-B,4,3,2 (Left Body Hook, Right Uppercut, Left Head Hook, Cross/Overhand if you like) 3. 1,2,5,2,3 (Jab, Cross, Left Uppercut, Cross, Left Head Hook) 4. 1-B (move in),1,2,3 (Body Jab, Jab, Cross, Hook) 5.) 1,1,6 (Jab,Jab, Overhand) Remember, when boxing, use head movement with each punch to avoid getting hit, and look for angles to throw at.
jeffery harrison's picture

combo punches

im an actuall fighter my record is 6wins 4 losses and i have a sweet mix of combo punching and deffence. 1: jab then stiff right cross then bob to your right then come around using ur body to turn into an other right cross. 2: shoe shinning throw 1-2-1-2-1-2 to body then without hesitation go to the head with about four more 1-2 combos be sure not to hessitate. one more throw a jab emetitly follwed by a stright right cross(all crosses should be straight as possible) then throw a hook to the head followd by a stright right then sted to the right and go around the aponent. be sure no punch is hesitated if u hesitate in the ring it wont work
psycho's picture

thx all

harrison, jones, and flores i really like the combos i think they r sweet im going to try them thx you all.
jsnstringa's picture

pay attention

Paying attention to combos is just as important as throwing them. Body shots put holes in your opponents game. Combinations are the key to fighting, however don't make the mistake as to stay in one spot and throw. Example: 123 roll to the right 23, this creates an angle in which puts you in a better position and makes the punches harder to defend. Reed Ave. Fight Club
DannyJohn's picture

ok, you got me sold, you

ok, you got me sold, you ever thought about becoming a trainer too? or maybe in your later days.
Guests's picture

combo

when you throw a punch watch where your opponent weaves cause in my first few fights the opponent kept weaving to one side so i set them up with a punch then when they weaved unleashed a series of upercuts and hooks mainly 6.3.4.5. this tiny attention to detail helped me win in the first round sevral times. its good against novice opponents. sorry about spelling.
stevo14's picture

Combos

To go along with the fact that you loose a split second thinking about what to throw next during a combo, is it a problem that when youre throwing a combo that youre only guessing and throwing punches to spot that you believe are open because of the last punch you threw? I could have just sounded like a complete idiot there, but i just want to see what you have to say a bout it. Im only 16 btw so dont think im a complete idiot =)
Tony Eleninovski's picture

Combo 7 Series

From my experience, the most effective (and fluid) way to break open an opponent's defense has been with a 1.1.2 followed by 5.1.6 finished off with a 1.2 combo. When a 1.1.2 breaks through a defensive guard the 5.1.6 sets up a rapid succession, which if it sends the opponent wailing and his guard down, the 1.2 should finish them off. Instincts are important. If the 1.1.2 fails to penetrate, then double block to the head, and try later.
god of thunder's picture

i can figth

i can throw good combos and hard knkocking out punchs but if i dont knock them out in the first 5 or 6 rounds i well have no more power for teh rest of the rounds wat should i do.
boxagirl's picture

ambidextres?

Hi, So I can punch pretty equally with both hands. Would it benefit me to focus on one side, or can it make me a more difficult fighter being able to fight both ways? What do you suggest?
Guests's picture

combos

A good combination that I use when I'm fightin is the 1-2-5. This works because most fighters expect the left hook after a jab and cross lands so by throwing an uppercut you are catching them off guard and with a wide open jaw.

Guests's picture

good combo

this gets em everytime....... jab, overhand right to the body, then a jab with the RIGHT. The jab sets it up. the over hand right takes their wind. When the opponent sees youre right extended they think they have an opening and the always walk right into that right jab. Its bloodied plenty of noses for me!

LukeTheDuke's picture

1-2-3-2-1

Try a 1-2-3-2-1 but when you bring back the first 2, circle fast left and complete the combo use the last jab to keep distance. Thats probably one of my top 3 kickless combos.

Joshua Mouton's picture

Combos

Shadowbox these: 1,1 1,1,2 1,3 1,3,2 2,3 1,1,2,3 3,2 5,2,3 4,3,2 I'm just a peon, but that'll change some day. But trust me with these combos. Peace...

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

It's the boxers who attract the real women, after all, with their raw primeval strength, beautifully toned bodies and just a touch of vulnerability.
— Eamonn Mccabe

Recent Readers

Quick Stats

Total Boxers: 6715
Total Boxing Gyms and Trainers: 242