Tuesday, 23 August 2011

The Secret To Becoming A Street Boxing Great

Every trade under the sun has secrets; and in this blog, several important and very
effective street boxing secrets have been revealed. They have been used secretly by both boxers and fighters and have been continually used for their effectiveness. If followed religiously, the secrets
divulged in this boxing for the street tips blog will produce extraordinary fighting skills in you.

However, this is not all. Most importantly, you will have a life perspective that will not
only make you a boxing champion but a life champion. Top fighters are champions because
they are real champions in life. Temporary champions will workout hard for a season and then sit
down the rest of their lives to celebrate the victory and keep memories of their wins. Top fighters
train constantly to always improve themselves. They are likened to top businessmen who will
not close shop just because they hit break-even after selling hard for a month. They will sell and
sell until the last breath of their lives, and will even pass their life of selling and selling
techniques to their sons and daughters to make a niche for their family or company in the
business world.

Aside from the regular heavy boxing workouts, strict diets, and health habits that we all know
about, top fighting is not all about training and techniques. It is a lifestyle of doing
everything in consonance with your goal of great fighting skills.

If you decide on starting your trek to boxing greatness after reading this blog, keep at it and
never stop to look back. Go look for a worthy trainer and go with him for life. Have a one-track
mind - never to stop mid-way and rethink what you are doing. Just do it, without desiring to win
or fearing to lose. By the way, by being great, there is nothing to lose.

Increasing Your Street Boxing Stamina


A heavy street boxing workout usually keeps you puffing and gasping for breath. Expanding the lungs
will help ease your air gasps and make you extend your endurance without easily running out of
breath.

To expand your lungs when you feel you are running out of breath due to a boxing workout (like
a long distance run or sprint), inhale deeply and then blow forcefully through your mouth but
inhibit your exhale by limiting the exit of the air. Do this by opening your lips just a bit, then
draw your lower lip a bit farther inside your mouth, creating a small gap between your lower and
upper lips. Through this gap, blow your exhale as hard as you can, narrowing the opening
further, so that your exhale creates a ballooning effect on your cheeks and upper lip. Do this
often to expand your lungs whenever you run out of breath in your boxing for the street workouts.

This fight training secret is a terrific technique by which you can hone your boxing abilities
to perfection. They are simple and require no special equipment—anyone aiming to be a great fighter
can do them.

Improving Power For Street Boxing


Training in water

Go into neck or chest deep water and try to kick, jab, and swing your arms repeatedly.
Try to “run” while submerged in water. This will strengthen your limbs for greater street boxing
performance.

Foothold

Most sports employ the legs, boxing for the street especially as strong legs are required for strong punches and it will do you good to learn how to have real leg power.

Boxers uses leg twists and firmness. In general, it is important to learn how to stand properly.
The foothold is a simple leg exercise that will make you stand like a wall of steel if
practiced for a long time. Stand erect, keep your legs apart, about 2 and a half feet wide. Bend
them slightly at the knees so that you look like you are riding an invisible horse. Make sure your
butt is out, back is straight, and your shoulders are relaxed and drooping evenly. Look straight
ahead and try to meditate. Put your hands on your waist. Your body weight must be evenly
distributed to both feet, and mostly carried by your heels. Don’t put too much weight on your
toes—if you do, it means you are leaning forward, which is bad posture. Do this stance for a
minute, then increase the time as long as you can tolerate it.

Strengthening Your Street Boxing Spirit


A free spirit can command the body and soul. As earlier explained here, in exhausted
moments, your mind and body can still do excellently if your spirit is strong. Defeat is sure once
the opposite becomes true—the spirit being controlled by what the body and mind feels and
wants.

How do you strengthen the spirit? How do you feed it to nourish it?

Western fighters can be very scientific and systematic in street boxing. Yet, many Western boxers feel a
lack of something. And they believe they found the answer in Eastern mysticism, because their
science cannot tell them how to feed the spirit. It cannot give information on something that it
cannot explain.

As earlier mentioned here, spirit is where courage and the other great virtues are deep seated.

A free spirit, therefore, will be able to release these virtues especially in critical times.

One way of strengthening and freeing the spirit is through meditation.

a. Eye meditation - Stand in a quiet place, preferably early in the morning, and focus on
small details—a bird in flight or standing, a walking ant, things in a leaf, bees at work, the grass,
or the slow breaking of dawn. Just watch. Lessen your mental activity. If you can, try your best
not to think of anything. Don’t let your mind wander. Enjoy what is unfolding before you. Do
this for 10 to 15 minutes.

b. Breathing meditation – With open or half-closed eyes, look afar and slowly do deep
breathing. As you inhale through your nose, imagine that you are inhaling all the pure oxygen in
the atmosphere, and imagine it to be going into your nose, your brain, your lungs, and down to
every limb, and finally to your feet, turning them into steel. Hold your breath for a short while,
and then release it slowly, imagining that every carbon dioxide in your body is being taken out.
Repeat the cycle 40 times.

Eastern monks of long ago were said to have very strong spirits due to these prolonged
meditations. One legendary figure, Bodhidharma, was said to have traveled on foot from India to
China through the Himalayas (almost impossible even today), and overcame the difficulty by
meditation—making his spirit strong to overcome the weakness of his body. In China, he was
said to be champion in all fighting challenges he was dared with. This may just be a legend, but
Buddhist monks in Chinese and Japanese monasteries were known for their perseverance,
courage, and stamina in doing athletic feats that made them also invincible in actual battles great lesson when boxing for the street.

Mind Training For Street Boxing


Eye sharpness is vital to street boxing, except when you compete in a sports festival for the
blind. It is important to see the main object and the backdrop simultaneously. In sports like boxing,
basketball, football, and hockey, assaults can come from any direction. Hence, it is important to
see the opponents both near and far, while at the same time knowing where your teammates are,
and where the ring or goal is.

But we only have two eyes. Both cannot take opposite directions. How can you see
everything in front of you while keeping them focused at what’s directly under your nose?

An ancient secret of keeping your sight glued to nowhere yet seeing everything is a must
for ace athletes. The principle of the training is reflected in the writings of Lao Tzu, a legendary
philosopher in ancient China who said that a finger pointing to the moon would tend to fool you
into focusing at the finger and losing all the glory of the heavens. The finger is telling you to
look at the moon, not to itself. He also urged that one must be like the still lake that reflects
everything in the sky clearly yet does not focus on anything specific. He wrote, “The spirit is
everywhere yet clings to nowhere.” The training goes this way:
Stand erect and relaxed in a quiet place. Try to focus on a single, stationary object, like a
leaf, a pebble, or a dot on the wall. As you focus on the object, try to move your eyesight to your
extreme left without moving your eyeballs. Then move your eyesight to your extreme right, then
to your extreme top, then to your extreme bottom. Then, try to “throw” your eyesight in every
direction, at the same time still seeing your center object, all without moving your eyeballs. Do
this for long periods several times a day. You can do this anywhere you are, even while
commuting. At first, you may find it hard to maintain and at the same time separate your visions.
But with practice, you will be able to reflect everything as a clear lake. Thus, in competition, you
will have both a photographic mind and a natural yet accurate surveillance system monitoring
everything in front of you. How can you miss being top fighter with that edge over the others?

See your boxing for the street training improve with this skills.

Street Boxing Accuracy Training


Put a rubber ball the size of your fist in a sock or net and tie it with a long string. Tie the
string firmly to the ceiling and let it swing freely. Try hitting the ball with a bat or tennis racket,
or with your kicks or punches. Hit it while it swings wildly. This will sharpen your accuracy.
Sports that can use this training include street boxing, the martial arts, and sports that hit balls.

4. Shadow Boxing

a. A “Makiwara” is a padded wood designed for hitting with the hands and feet.
This is especially used in practicing martial arts. Another effective procedure is
tying a piece of paper on one of its side near the corners with two long strings that
are then tied to the ceiling. As it is suspended, try to tear it by hitting the bottom
part with your punches or kicks. Don’t cheat by hitting it on its top side.

b. Light a candle and try to extinguish the fire with the wind that comes from the
force of your punches and kicks. Don’t cheat by touching the wick to put off the
light.

When you are able to tear the paper or extinguish the fire with just the wind from the
force of your arms and legs, you develop good arm and leg power. Hence, this is also applicable
to boxing for the street and other sports that require arm and leg power.

Street Boxing Training Tip


Use a broomstick, or any stick will do. These exercises will strengthen your arms, back
muscles, and shoulders (even develop canon-ball shoulders for you) great for street boxing training. The fingers will also be strengthened for strong grips.

a. Stand while holding the stick with two hands behind you. Put a distance of 2
feet between your feet. Then, bend your back forward as far as you can (try to
touch your knees with your forehead) without bending your knees, and raise the
stick behind you with your two hands still behind you. Freeze in this position for
one minute, trying to pull your hands farther back.

b. Stand straight and hold the stick with one hand. Stretch that hand to your side,
and with only your fingers moving, move the stick up and down for several times.

Do the same with the other hand for increasing your boxing for the street abilities.

Any sport that needs special hand and swinging abilities like throwing darts, ping pong,
baseball or softball, boxing, boat rowing, basketball, etc. can benefit from this.

SECRET WAYS OF HONING STREET BOXING SKILLS


Here are some non-traditional and rarely heard of techniques by which street boxing skills
could be improved considerably. Some are taken from ancient secrets of masters who used them
not only for training, but also for warfare.

1. The Secret Power of Your Achilles Tendon
Jumping sports like basketball, volleyball, high jump, diving, etc., and sports that need
your toes to have a firm grip of the ground, like sprints, boxing, relay runs, gymnastics, and the
likes, all require training that strengthens the legs and forelegs. These are views held
traditionally. Yet, experts have found out through modern kinetics that what need strengthening
– more than legs and forelegs do – are our Achilles tendons. These are the ligaments found
directly behind our ankles. When you make a jump, the link between the take off from your heels
and toes, and your forelegs and legs, is that narrow, vertical tendon behind your ankles. It is
between your heel and your calf muscles. That is what really needs strengthening more than
anything else, especially if you want to jump really high or get a real firm grip of the ground
through your feet for increasing your punching power which is essential training for boxing for the street. Mere leg and foreleg exercises, like squatting with weights or running, will not develop your high jump and firm foot grip. They will make you stand firmly and give you shapely legs, but not the needed athletic prowess. Here are some ways to strengthen the Achilles tendons:

a. Do squats with your barbell by standing on tiptoe or on the balls of your feet.
Better yet, do these squats by standing on a firm edge (of a stair, for instance) on
tiptoe, with your heels suspended or off the stair. Be sure to have a weight spotter
(one who assists you in your weight training).

b. Stand, feet apart just right. Then jog sideways in place, on tiptoe (always),
putting your whole weight on the sole of your foot on the ground. When you are
on the sole of your left foot, tilt your body slightly to your right and raise your
right leg behind you. Then swiftly shift to the sole of your right foot, careful never to let your heel touch the ground, and tilt your body a little to the opposite direction. Your left leg raised behind you. Do this motion smoothly and try to gain speed and increase the distance between where your feet land and the tilt of your body. Keep your arms steady to your sides and your hands clipped in front your chest—like in a running position. At first, try this for a minute or two without stopping. Then increase span of time. This is also an excellent boxing exercise.

c. Rotate your ankles. While standing, keep your left foot on tiptoe (Or raise your
left heel. Keep the ball of your left foot on the floor), and from that center, rotate
your ankle and heel. This action will make your heel go round in circles, up and
down. As you lower and raise your heel (without touching the ground), press the
left portion of your body weight against the ball of your left foot. Do the same
with your right foot.

d. Jog and sprint on tiptoe.
Other sports that can benefit from this are Karate, Tae Kwon Do, Judo, wrestling, boxing,
football, soccer, and baseball or softball (especially in pitching).

Social Needs For Street Boxing Success


A street boxing champion must always be in touch with reality. If he is confined to his cocoon of
training programs, schedules, and gym practices, exposed only to his coach and teammates, he
will tend to form a false image of himself and his team. He might deceive himself into thinking
he or his team is the best without any basis for it. When competition day comes, he might get the
shock of his life when faced with the decisive moment.

The rigors of boxing for the street training often makes the fighter miss the necessity of stopping a while to
look around and see what others are up to lately. It pays a lot to watch other players in a
competition, see how well or bad they play, see them in training, meet them and befriend them
(this can later ease tensions when you face each other in a game), meet their coach, and learn lots
from all of them. These things are necessary gauges you can use to form a realistic image of
yourself and your team. Then you can determine where your weaknesses and strengths really are.

Muhammad Ali, a champion boxer in the late 1900s, studied the fights of his would-be foes in
person and in films. You can even collect clippings from magazines and newspapers about
events and other facts about your sport and broaden your view. This will keep you broad-minded
and updated in your boxing training.

This chapter ought to have given you an idea that top fighter does not only mean
rigorous workouts. It is much more than that. In fact, it is a life to be lived. It has many needs
that must be looked after—some of which are non-athletic, but also important. Many fighters
often overlook these things and pay a painful price.

Emotional Skills Required For Street Boxing


Emotions can make or break any street boxing men. It is best for them to settle whatever emotional
burden they have before training and competition. On the other hand, emotions that fire up
inspiration to win or conquer are essential.

A coach can do a good job at firing up a fighters emotions, but what is often
overlooked is the explicit encouragement from the boxers loved ones. While training for a
competition, an fighter will have a better emotional bearing if his loved ones (family members
and close friends) would be physically present to show support, more so during the fight.
Cheers from the audience can do some wonders to fighters in the ring, but this is just
supplemental to the foundational inspiration, which is given by loved ones. Audience applause
can do little compared to visible support from special people.

But the other emotional need boxers must have, and which must be dealt with
effectively, is the need to control emotions. Negative or positive, emotions run high during
boxing for the street fights. And whether positive or negative, too much emotion can have adverse effects on an fighters performance. Too much inspiration from loved ones and the audience may tend to
produce a strong and uncontrollable desire to win in the players and ruin everything. Inspiration
or positive emotion must be maintained to a manageable level and must be seen to it that such do
not transpose into an uncontrollable obsession. Inspiration should merely inspire, and
encouragement should merely encourage; when these things get out of hand and explode into an
obsession (to please the inspiration giver), objectivity is lost and judgment is impaired because
everything becomes a personal obsession, a mere strong emotion. The only thing you will have
in mind is to win. Then, the fear of defeat sets in and becomes a wrong motivation. Two things
can happen here:

1. If the boxer wins, he embraces his present win so much that he would opt to stop and
enjoy the victory and applause and make it a lasting memory. He might not compete
again for fear of losing his hard-earned pedestal—he is afraid of losing the admiration
of his inspiration givers.

2. If the boxer loses, humiliation drags him further down because everything has been
founded on emotions. He might not train again or compete again for a second try
because he could not afford a second round of humiliation.

Emotions of whatever kind, if not kept to a tolerable degree, will eventually result to a
fighters gross drawback.

Spiritual Training For Street Boxing


This need is somewhat similar to mental needs, but spiritual needs go deeper. The spirit is
where courage and stamina, among others, are deep-seated. The mind and body may be
weakened by exhaustion, but if the spirit is strong, it can command both the mind and body to
gather some more strength for the last stretch of action, which is often the decisive round in a street boxing fight.

There is a phenomenal influx of Westerners since the 1990s into Eastern mysticism or
spirituality; and most of this is mainly connected with either having a philosophy of life or a
philosophy of boxing. Many people, among them top fighters, are beginning to see their need
to “feed” their spirits, and see Eastern philosophies as the answer.

A determined and undying resolve for conquest is a mark of a strong and unwavering
spirit. It does not think twice about what it takes to conquer—even if the task demands life itself.
It shocked the world in the Second World War when Japanese “Kamikaze” pilots plunged their
damaged planes directly into enemy targets. They could not bear to live defeated lives and would
rather sacrifice themselves for the cause.

But of course, war is different from boxing (where actual dying is definitely out of the
question), though the same selfless, self-denying, and self-sacrificing attitude or spirit that never
gives in to defeat is important.

Though most boxing for the street fighters train hard to win, many still lack the zeal or fire to do whatever it
takes, not just to win a round or an event for the present season, but to conquer the game, his
weaknesses, and life itself. This undying resolve to overcome everything is the mark of genuine
champion boxer. Their spirits are such that nothing can discourage them or quench the flame of
excellence in their hearts.

Top boxers excel because they work very hard to find meaning in life. Thus, they have
the head-on drive to conquer their weaknesses, pains, and desires in life. Fighters  just
want to win and get the medal.

Many boxers became champions one time but never have the passion to excel
further. Moreover, many fighters are losing simply because they lack the strength to give
it all they got. They see how strong and good the opponent is, and simply buckle down in spirit
and settle for second place or the silver medal, or worse, simply be a contestant in the prestigious
event. They give up on the competition or the boxing altogether and never go back to the gym to
redress or weed out bad points to face up the challenge a second time and return to the arena.

Their shame for losing once or twice (or even 10 times) is stronger than their spirit to excel and
conquer. They lack real courage. They have a weak spirit. Such are often mere stage fighters—
they are all show but have no inner resolve to be better. On the other hand, great boxers work
hard even when there are no competitions.

How To Not Freeze Up When Street Boxing


The mind is often clogged by many needs and concerns; and a clogged mind is the last
thing you will ever need in street boxing. Fighters mostly ignore this need, not knowing that
often this could make or break a performance. An boxer needs to learn how to free his mind
from worries, especially during fights.

Setting the mind free takes some getting used to, but the real need is how to have a free
mind at the spur of the moment—or better yet, how to have it always. A free mind frees the body
also to perform an artwork, not a program. This means, such mind desires nothing—specifically,
it doesn’t think about winning or losing. A desire automatically assigns the spirit to a particular
bias or leaning, and there it becomes bound, consciously or otherwise. Once a desire to win (or a
fear to lose) is present, the mind is bothered by options, and a mental shackle keeps it narrow and
mechanical.

It’s something like a mind that wants to spell “ACKNOWLEDGE” but then is too rigid
and mechanically puts an “A” always with a “B” and thinks a “C” cannot come after an “A,”
more so a “K.” Thus, it takes too long to finally spell the word correctly.

But a free mind can write the word almost without even thinking of it. So what if it was
misspelled a bit? There’s always an eraser. With such a mind, the whole task of writing becomes
smooth and free flowing. It ceases to be a spelling job and becomes a composition. Likewise, the
competition ceases to be a win or lose situation, but the athlete takes part in a drama where he
actually gets to write the script and the plot, if he chooses to. An internationally acclaimed,
undefeated fighter and superb actor, Bruce Lee once wrote in his book that a state of
“nothingness” (desiring nothing) can give the athlete full authority on the whole play or drama
that the competition has become, and actually write the script and even decide the plot.
Storywriters assign roles to characters. They don’t think about winning or losing.
In boxing for the street we should learn how to let their minds and bodies just flow with the present
situation in a game, after a good training. Such freedom from the desire to win or fear to lose will
give his whole person leeway to compose rather than compete.
We will discuss more on the topic of freeing the mind in Chapter Six.

Improving Your Street Boxing Mind


Most people think street boxing men, especially good ones, are dumb. Yes, some fighters may have
dropped out of school to pursue full-time boxing training. But many boxers manage to finish
schooling and even end up as professionals, aside from being professional fighters. Some of
them even end up being champions, giving great honors to their institutions.

Some all-out boxing for the street fighters try to compensate for their prejudiced schooling by shifting to
Education, major on Physical Education. However, at times, this does not solve their image of
being dumb. Not many people see P.E. professors as smart or intellectual, though many really
are.

Boxers will be better off by finishing their formal education. There is no other solution
to this chronic problem than to have their father-trainer (FT) in on it. The FT must include in his
checklist for his son-trainee (ST) his academic standing. The FT should personally see to it that
his ST is studying, and should really give him enough time for this. It will greatly help if the FT
himself is a college graduate. Therefore, he will be in a position to demand from the ST the same
or even coach or tutor him a little on this.

Some may react and say that this is too much work for coaches. Imagine the coach doing
this to all his fighters. We are not talking of traditional coaches here, but of FTs. Father-trainers
are different from your traditional coaches who train players only for a win. Father-trainers
choose sons (and that means only a handful, at most 5) to train to be champions for life.

Great boxers must pursue their intellectual training. If school has really become out of
reach, there are other means such as books, short courses, teaching tapes and CDs, and home
schooling through the internet. Intellectual training is very much a part of being an ace athlete.

Needs Of A Boxing For The Street Fighting Champion


Street boxing champions are often well taken cared of especially when preparing for a
fight. However, there are still some blind spots that are mostly overlooked or neglected,
but are very necessary to achieve peak fight performance. Good coaches and trainers see these
things and carefully check them out, but others often miss them. Here is a checklist of some of
those other frequently unchecked needs.

A. PHYSICAL

1. Breakfast. Boxers, and in fact everybody, need a good breakfast to start the day. It is
definitely wrong to be in training and skip breakfast. Some think that skipping meals
is a good idea for reducing weight. Experts have found that skipping meals has little
to do with weight loss and may actually even do the reverse. They say eating 3 meals
a day in moderation (minus in-between meals or snacks) is the answer to effective
weight loss, and that moderation means not too much on carbohydrates and fats
(macro nutrients), and more on veggies, fruits, and nuts (micro nutrients). Other
nutrition experts think that supper could be skipped now and then, or could be limited
to vegetables or fruit salad. However, breakfast is the most important meal and must
include a balanced diet.

2. Rest and recreation. All work, and no play makes everybody (not just Jack) a dull boy
or girl. Rigid training is good, but equally important are rest days to let the body
recover from muscle sprains or injuries, and to let the mind and soul recuperate from
pressures. In fact, some athletes say doing some artwork helps ease the mind. (Even if
you are not good at drawing or painting, just scribble away!) Treat yourself out for a
vacation trip occasionally. See a comedy show. Go boating with friends. Better yet,
read good books. It will sharpen your mind some more.

3. Sense of humor. Hard boxing for the street training is needed and can be enjoyable, but it’s different when
nobody’s laughing anymore. It has been reported that some boxers actually die while
training, not because of any ailment, but because of intense pressure that became too
much for their hearts. Laughing can ease pressures, put sense again into winning, and
make you human again. Too much training turns you into a robot and degenerates
into nothing more than input and output. It pays for trainers and trainees to have good
laughs together while training now and then.

4. Cross train. Not only can other sports help you do better in boxing (which is
often done today), but other activities also can help tremendously.
Some traditional cross-training activities:

a) Mountain climbing or hiking. No matter what your sport is (Tae kwon
do, boxing, skiing, football, swimming, polo, or even chess, billiards,
or golf), you should try mountain climbing or hiking on the
countryside or forest every now and then. Taking up different
challenges will enrich your spirit and imagination. It can also help
your stamina.

b) Tai chi. Most training programs teach your muscles to flex and be
rigid. Very few teach them to relax and rest. A long time ago, Chinese
kinetics discovered that agility is really perfected once you have
mastered the combination of muscle tension and relaxation, among
other things. Tai chi teaches you to masterfully combine the hard and
the soft, the fast and the slow, working out and at the same time
relaxing. Athletes in any sports will find tai chi very helpful in
controlling breathing, in concentration, in conserving energy, and in
adding speed. Tai chi is getting popular as a cross training tool.

c) Swimming. Not only swimmers should swim, but also any athlete who
wants a complete workout of all his muscles without sustaining muscle
injury. Swimming is an excellent cross training tool for chess, table
tennis, and billiards players, and also for car racers and horseback
riders, among others. It keeps them fit without getting too tired or
muscular.

d) Running. Like weightlifting and gymnastics, running is one of the
most common cross training sports for all athletes.
Some non-traditional cross-training methods:

a) Ballet dancing. Helps firm up muscles and makes them flexible.
Martial artists will find this activity very beneficial to their form,
balance, grace, and leg and hand reach. Pole vault players, high
jumpers, divers, gymnasts, and hurdle runners will similarly benefit
from this.

b) Hang gliding. A view from high above affording a panoramic scene
always clears the mind and improves perspectives, aside from getting
fresh air. Climbing mountain peaks gives peculiar self-elation, but
flying high above gives you a strong feeling of conquest. Hang gliders
often say, “It seems everything is possible when you’re up there.”
c) Cooking. Now, this is a real eyebrow raiser. Expertly cooking
elaborate dishes (the more foreign they are, the better) helps your
accuracy, timing, organization, focus, and judgment while in the
“arena” that is the kitchen, says athletes who have tried making
cooking a part of their routine. It also improves logic and good taste,
of course.

d) Carpentry and making crafts. These activities help your mind and hand
coordination in trying to figure things out. It’s a kind of problem
solving that uses acumen and hand skills. Ancient civilizations usually
had warriors who were also metal or wood artisans. Carpentry in itself
teaches teamwork and cooperation. The two also strengthen the will
and patience
.
e) Fishing. Either by the deep sea or by the river (fresh water fishing),
fishing affords relaxation but keeps you still at work, nonetheless.
While relaxing, it sharpens your senses and judgment. It is a gentle
workout too.

Physical needs of a street boxer are not addressed in rigid training alone. Some needs are met
outside the gym and training schedules. They are met in non boxing venues. Some needs, on the
other hand, are met partially in rigid training, and still need follow up through other vehicles.
These needs are better met if done with your father-trainer.

Do Street Boxing Men Need Recognition


Most people live on men’s recognition. They do not do anything that
society will not approve of. Nevertheless, remember that many well-approved things
today used to be taboos before. Lifting the ball when dribbling used to be a no-no in
most basketball tournaments. Using barbells was believed to hinder your performance
in other sports like weightlifting because the extra muscles were said to restrict the
free movement of your limbs. Cross training in other sports activities was never heard
of until kinetics experts discovered the value of the benefits some sports have to other
sports. And a long time ago, science had no place in street boxing. Sportsmen in ancient
Greco-Roman fighting just did anything to have a semblance of training—they even
lifted and punched cows—and they ate anything that gave them bulk. But once in a
while, top fighters would show up in the scene and introduce new and better ways
that most people would mock or reject. There is a record (in Nebuchadnezzar’s reign)
of Jewish young men who bested all of Babylon’s best scholars and fighters by
having a diet different from what the rest were having; they only had vegetables and
water, while the rest had the king’s food and wine. No matter how the Babylonian
diet officials opposed their food preference, they persisted and proved them all
wrong. Boxing for the street champions do not care if the majorities do not see things as they do. They
will always try new ways of doing things.

A lot more incorrect motivations in life may hinder boxers from being top fighters. Right
life motivations governing a fighters (in training and in life) are vital to sustain a boxerss ace
skills. Motivations that are part of your life principles (practiced everyday) become
automatically applied in every situation. This enables you to do things smoothly without
stopping to think whether this or that is right. Often, that minute delay spells win or lose.

Does A Lack Of Funds Prevent Someone From Learning Street Boxing


Does A Lack Of Funds Prevent Someone From Learning Street Boxing

Most people let money control them or decide things for them. No
matter how important a task is, they shelve it away for lack of funds. Street boxing training may
cost you some (not to mention the high cost of the latest boxing equipment in the market),
but this ought not to be the deciding factor why you cannot go on having quality
boxing for the street training. Top fighters refuse to let lack of money hinder their goals. If they can’t
improvise on training equipment, they tap sponsors. In addition, they doggedly save
funds even if slowly. Street boxers always save money of their own as a life principle.
You cannot be ace in anything and go on being very dependent, especially in money
matters.

Moreover, most fighting teams or individuals find tapping sponsors easy
because the latter would only be too happy to support talented fighters, besides getting a
good promotion. They want to be identified with the winners. This is one of the
benefits of being ace in boxing. Just look at the awesome pays UFC fighter get each
year.

Do Street Boxing Fighters Believe In Luck?


Do Street Boxing Fighters Believe In Luck?

Good luck, street boxing men do not believe in luck or in accidents. They believe in
choosing their own destinies. If you want to win, you must train to win. If you train to
win and yet lose, you train again, and again, and again to win. And in life, they
believe that nothing happens by chance or accident. Everything is a consequence.

You are overweight because you eat too much. Being chubby may be due to genes,
but top fighters do not succumb to such explanation. You still decide your fate, and
you can aim to at least decrease considerably your weight, if not have your ideal
weight. You aren’t promoted or are jobless not because you’re a loser; you just have
to try and try again until you get what you want. Alternatively, probably try another
direction. It is all in the timing, not luck.

A fighting man is good at boxing for the street because his grandfather and father were good in sports. This idea sometimes can serve you somewhat, but it can also make you drop your guard. If you rely on your genes to help you win your games, and you go easy on your training, you might end up losing everything; and worse,
you might even blame it all on your family.

Alternatively, this genes idea might make a big quitter out of you because your great grandfather was a weakling, so was your grandfather and father, and even your uncles and aunts; until you think you are also
destined to be one. Thus, you believe that no amount of training or trying hard would
make a positive change in your life.

Street boxers do not let anything get in their way to success, not even their family
genes, and not even a crippling disability. They know that genes have a lot to do with
ability, but they insist that in the end, it’s how hard you trained that really counts.
They like the idea that the only thing permanent in life is change.

Different Types of Street Boxing Minds


Self-conceit. To go out there and prove you are superior is one of the worst
motivations. Street boxing can sometimes be a venue for racism and sexism. Nationalism is
different from the previously mentioned beliefs; so is the love or honor accorded on
one’s family, company, school, or sponsor. Nationalism is simply love of country. It
is not going out and proving to everyone that other countries are inferior to yours and
you aim to humiliate them. This is called extreme nationalism. Racism and sexism
have the same intent: to treat others as inferior and humiliate them. Boxing for the street champions do
not compete to prove anything except that they train harder than others do. They also
understand the fact that others may someday be able to do better than they do if they
train much harder. At times, ace athletes compete to prove their style or technique is
better, but this does not make them better persons than others, or that their race or sex
is better. How a fighter trains decides whether he wins or loses an event, not his race
or gender. Hence, a street boxer also knows that in life, everybody has a chance to
win, depending on how hard one tries. He lives the truth that he does not belong to a
supreme race or gender—he only trains and tries harder.

Street Boxing Limiting Beliefs


Fear of challenging the status quo. Street Boxing men are radical. They spearhead the intro
of revolutionary ideas in whatever they are doing. Once they enter the scene, top fighters turn tables so that boxing is never the same. Most people just accept things
as they are and are prepared to live with how things have always been. Imagine how
the world would be if there are no new challengers to dare the existing order?

Billiards used to be dominated by Western players, until a new crop of Asian players
stole the scene. Basketball used to be a man’s sport, until women hopped in the
bandwagon and gained wide support.

Just because a team has been champion for
years doesn’t mean they are unbeatable. Most newcomers won’t dare come against
the veterans. But great boxers find more thrills and they are more inspired when they
are up against stronger opponents, more so “undisputed” champions. They want to
prove that no one person or race has the monopoly of power. Someone else is bound
to have more imagination, perseverance, and guts to outdo the present titleholder.

Thus, always try to come up with a new style or boxing for the street technique that is better than the latest
one, but make sure it is effective.

Motivations of Street Boxing Fighter


Motivations of Street Boxing Fighter

What runs your life? What wets your life appetites? What can move you to do something
out of the ordinary?

If you are not into street boxing, either selfish motive or fear would likely manipulate you.

Here are samples of wrong life motivations (the opposite of which are the right motivations top boxing for the street fighters have):

1. Fear of making errors. This is among the top wrong motivators of people. Many of
them are determined to do their best because they dread making a mistake. Often,
they think they can protect their image and dignity by avoiding errors. Ace athletes
also do their best and even aim for perfection, but they do not fear mistakes; they
readily accept them and are determined to do better next time. Many who fear errors
never get to discover their full potentials because they stay within their comfort zone
or they stop when they have won, fearing that they may forfeit their achievements
once they continue aiming higher. Top boxers are not afraid to “lose” any title or
award; they are not out to win seasonal or momentary awards but go on beyond mere
winning and seek other means to conquer weaknesses, and pass on their strengths and
victories to others.

2. Fear of losing. Another reason for staying in their comfort zone is people’s dread to
lose. Top fighters strive hard to win, not just for themselves, but for others in the team
or the sponsor or school or company or the next generation of players. Yet, they are
also fearless in defeat. Defeat is a revelation of other hidden weaknesses that would
not have surfaced had it not for the defeat.

Defeat, though painful, is another chance for a major breakthrough for ace players. Mostly, ace players are distinguished by their selfless attitude in a fight: They do not desire winning or dread losing; they just
want to face the battle the best they can. Ace boxers, kendo players, Wu Shu
performers, and other ace participants of meditative sports are often disciplined to
desire nothing except bravely face the event with all they have.

This selfless attitude
eliminates all pressures and is a good cushion against frustration. Ace players not
only apply this selflessness in sports but in every life situation. They aim for
perfection, not really to win or not because they fear defeat, but because they want to
give their best in any task they do.

Life regimen of Street Boxing Fighter


Life regimen of Street Boxing Fighter


The life of a street boxing champion has a routine. Daily, he completes his training schedule. This is
his priority. Other things take the back seat in his daily life. Once the routine is done, then other
things may be considered.

Although hectic, the rigid routine has breaks. He provides himself periods of rests. He
takes leisure walks or trips with loved ones. He meditates to relax his mind and body. Often, he
uses his breaks to watch movies or documentaries that enrich his sports knowledge, or read
books on the same topic. But after the limited and calculated breaks, he diligently resumes his
boxing for the street training.

Top boxers train and keep up their schedules rain or shine. Only an injury or ailment will
stop them for a while. Yet, even in confinement, their sport is still ingrained in their mind and
heart.

A black belt champion who is recognized by the hall of fame in California, Di Shao Lung
was once confined to bed due to a serious spine injury in the middle 1960s. His physicians told
him he ought to quit his sport for life if he wanted his spine to heal. For six months, confined in
his bed with spine correction apparatus, he wrote his book, drew sketches of his techniques and
moves, and even conceptualized films about his sport. As soon as he felt comfortable, he started
training again (against his doctors’ advice), and soon was back to the arena answering challenges
from contenders. Nothing could stop this fighter from fulfilling his fighting call.

Here is an example of a daily regimen of a known ace boxer in the U.S. when he’s NOT
due for a competition. He wakes up at 4 in the morning and runs for 2 hours - sideways,
backward, and in swift zigzags. He throws jabs and hooks in different directions while running.

Then, back in the gym, he lifts weights and does abdominal exercises. He shadow boxes, plays
with the speed ball, and works out on the punching bag, and then spars with 4 partners for a
couple of rounds each. The whole workout takes almost half the day. This rigid daily training is
necessary, he once said, so that in actual combat your body can flow fluidly and obey every
command of your will. Your will judges and concludes situations. At the split second, when it
sees, decides, and gives the command, the body must be able to respond.

The fighter must take on different challengers regularly, and even study the
moves of popular players in previous bouts. While mastering superb moves, he must also learn to
control or hide his temper, excitement, irritation, impatience, and nervousness; revealing these to
the opponent during the contest may be to his disadvantage. If the foe learns what things irritate
you, for example, he may capitalize on that to worsen your irritation and ruin your focus.

Mastery of moves and self-control (and learning to assume a poker face) takes long, long
periods of daily practice and the right workouts to keep yourself healthy and free from the
weakening effects of ailments.

10 Rules of a Street Boxing Champion


Life rules of a Street Boxing Champion

Each one of us has life rules we impose on ourselves. At times we extend these to people
really close to us. Life rules are made to protect a valuable thing that is reflected in the rule itself.
For instance, we tell our kids not to play with fire. We tell them this because:

1. We don’t want them to get hurt with fire.
2. We protect our properties from fire.

Here are the life rules of some top street boxing men, in addition to the usual “don’t smoke” and
“don’t drink liquor”:

1. Be extra careful with your eyes, ears, wrists, and ankles. Abstain from activities
where these will be jeopardized.
2. Drive carefully. You don’t want serious injuries to your neck, arms, legs, and other
vital limbs due to an accident.
3. Never wet your eyes, arms, hands, fingers, feet, legs, and other limbs when they are
tired to avoid rheumatism.
4. Avoid illegitimate sex. Sexual intercourse can give you deadly blood infections.
Thus, the safest sex is legitimate sex.
5. Avoid living a sedentary life. Always move around; take the stairs, walk, do things
your self, and take a hike after a full meal. Remain standing for at least 30 minutes
after every meal. These are all to avoid a protruding belly.
32
6. Keep your tummy in most of the time, and even exert abdominal muscle tension as
you do so. This is to firm up abdominal muscles, aside from your abdominal exercises
during workouts.
7. Keep a good posture. This helps for a proportioned body, and burns some cholesterol
in the body when coupled with keeping your tummy in.
8. Don’t wear tight shirts and pants during most of the day, especially when traveling
keeps you from moving around, like in a plane. This prevents a good blood
circulation.
9. Don’t restrain a sneeze or a cough. These are natural ways your body gets rid of
unwanted foreign elements like dust, viruses, etc. If you do sneeze or cough, use a
hanky or small towel to cover your mouth.
10. Learn to say no to unnecessary social invitations. Never be busy with things that do
not help you achieve your goals in ace sportsmanship, especially the nightlife. Your
main preoccupations are training, researching, and keeping healthy.

If you want to have great boxing for the street then follow these rules and apply them to your life.

Philosophy Of A Street Boxing Champion


Philosophy Of A Street Boxing Champion

Philosophy is your concept of truth about life. We all have our philosophies, often in
almost every aspect of our lives. We have our ways of seeing finances, religion, family, work,
leisure, and hobbies like street boxing. But champion boxers do not treat fighting as an aspect of life. It is life.

Viewing life as a sport is a commitment—you commit everything into it. In childhood,
where it usually starts, you begin to have a strong leaning to the game. People around you begin
to realize your “call” to the boxing for the street.

When fighting, they easily see your natural knack for it. In
junior high, the calling intensifies, and finally, the thing sinks down deep and all of life starts to
revolve around it. Your college course, future job, future wife and family, future business, future
office, future house and property, etc. must all fall under this boxing-career heading.

Every decision and direction in life begins to be based on street boxing. Even your
rights and privileges (and even opinions and ideologies) as a citizen begin to be shaped by this
outlook. You choose electoral candidates who have boxing included in
their political agenda, you are sensitive to issues that have a bearing on fighting, and you
watch how your sport is being promoted by your local government, and so on.

You also begin to envision your family in the same way—how you should have an
athletic wife and kids, a house with a mini but impressive boxing gym,
and an office where a number of your trophies and medals will be displayed, along with handy
gym devices. Even your family wardrobe will be stocked with the latest in boxing gear and
accessories.

Then there’s your diet. Real fighters stick to a healthy diet, not really because of
health per se, but they want to be exceptional at boxing. They form health principles in
preparing their food - in what to eat and what not to eat.

You gather around people of similar boxing leaning and make them your friends or
associates. You may even join clubs to this end. You may also befriend the shop owners where
you frequently buy accessories.

Your library will be stocked with books and CDs on every fight related to boxing,
among others. You will keep abreast with the latest news on your game here and abroad, and
probably keep clippings from dailies and magazines and make elaborate albums of them.

This kind of living instills in you the very heart of boxing. Figuratively, the
sport will become you, and you will become the sport. When people around you come across the
topic in their talks, they will mention your name for sure.

The above may sound far out, but that is what aficionados really do. A world-renowned
champion and grandmaster of Japanese kendo, Karate, Judo, and Arnis GM Ernesto Presas, runs
his hectares-big training resort and is finishing on the drawing table the blueprint of his worldclass
museum of martial arts. He pours millions of dollars to promote his pet sports and to train
ace fighters to be champions. His sons and daughter have likewise followed his example. Real
boxers (and masters) like Presas are not only undefeated champions for countless years, they
have become living legends—real ace fighters for life.

You can feel the passion of an aficionado: real book lovers will have books all over their
places, as will real wine lovers and real stamp and antique collectors, and real animal lovers.
This outlook is essential to lead the life of an ace athlete.

Living The Life of Street Boxing


Living The Life of Street Boxing

This may come as a surprise for many street boxing practitioners. Top fighters not only train for a
competition; but more importantly, they live a life fit for being great boxers. Their lives are ran
by certain philosophies, rules, regimen, and motivations aimed at remaining as champion boxers.

In ancient Greece, during its peak as a world civilization, there were fighting competitions
held in the city of Olympia in honor of their gods. Participants from various city-states of Greece
joined the event, and the Spartans were noteworthy for their strict adherence to rigid discipline.

They were both dedicated fighters and fierce warriors. They started training for war in their
childhood, and started with a strict training in sports. Sports then took the forms of running,
jumping, boxing, wrestling, weight lifting, and all other activities that may be helpful to a
warrior.

Soon, the whole of Sparta (then a city of Laconia) became practically a training camp.
Citizens were professional warriors. According to Greek History, children were taken from their
families at the age of 7 and were put in strict training under state control. They were raised up in
barracks in both the hardest and simplest way possible.

There was even an oval for racecourse, the Dromos, which was converted into a kind of
gym where Spartans took part in strenuous foot races and other athletic competitions.
Thus, the earliest record on fighters are traced back in the ancient Greek civilization
when it was a federation of city-states. The Spartan fighters made life a sports training, and
sports training a life. They started out in childhood and ended up, not just winning honors in
contests, but as battle-hardened warriors. This kind of life became a state law and employed the
“father” and “son” system of tutoring ace athletes to perfection. They were so serious that
children who fell short of the needed physical capabilities were said to be brought to the woods
and left there to die.

Today, boxing for the street men need not train for war, nor leave incapable children in the woods to
die, but they can draw out some positive traits from the Spartans—they lived a life aimed at
being champions for life.

More Boxing For The Street Training Regimes


More Boxing For The Street Training Regimes


As already said, general workouts are for everybody, athletes or non-athletes, ace or nonace
fighters. For street boxing, a regular workout is as good as a car that is always in use.

Stop using the car for a long while and everything gets bogged down. The list below is necessary
for top fighter.

1. Run regularly. To sharpen body mobility and mind, running regularly is a must. It
keeps muscles worked out especially for very abrupt body maneuvers, and keeps the
mind alert due to the good oxygen supply brought about by running.

WARNING: Be sure to fix running schedules according to what your body can
tolerate. Never overwork your body to exhaustion. Exhaustion damages rather than
improves skills and health. Make sure you use shoes that are very comfortable to your
feet, ankles, and forelegs. Replenish your body fluids with clean and healthy water
each time you thirst in a workout. Run where fresh air is abundant. Never run where
traffic is congested or where there is industrial pollution.

2. Lift some weights. Either by barbells or by lifting your own weight through push ups,
pull-ups, or squats, regular weight lifting is essential. It tremendously tones up the
needed muscle for strength and endurance. If you have the right muscle proportion for
the needed performance, and such muscles are well stretched and firmed up, your
body will function as your will commands it.

WARNING: Don’t over-train with weights, nor should you under-train with them.
Lifting weights too heavy for you might damage your bones, especially your spine.
Lifting weights too light for you, on the other hand, will not produce the needed
muscle bulk to support a demanding athletic performance. Often, the weight you can
lift safely is based on your body weight. Bench press, squats with weights, and dead
lifts are usually done with a weight equal to your body weight, or half of it. Make
sure you are supervised by a sport professional.

3. Muscle stretching. This not only prepares your muscles for a major workout (like in
warm-ups and calisthenics), but also keeps your ligaments flexible and obedient to
how your mind pictures yourself while doing a performance. An imaginative mind is
not enough in sports. What good would it do for you if you understand what needs to
be done, but your body refuses to comply with the needed performance? Flexible
muscles and tendons ensure completion and perfection of any athletic performance.

Finally, muscle stretching eliminates painful strains in the muscles. In some cases, too
much excessive pulls and twists may result to permanent damage.

WARNING: Don’t try to stretch your muscles all the way overnight. Over stretching
too soon causes muscle and back pains that may result to sleepless nights. Stretch
your muscles slowly but surely. Don’t try to produce your desired results in one
session.

The above general list can be improved to include other general workouts but the point
here is that running, lifting weights, and muscle stretching must be included in any workout
program, be it for a very physically strenuous sport or a mere board game.

A good workout program done for life will ensure that the body stays in tip-top shape in
and out of boxing for the street competitions, and ready to take on any challenges, any time.

Street Boxing Specific Training Routines


Street Boxing Specific Training Routines
Light workouts are workouts you engage in when no street boxing event is anticipated.
Intensity of training is decreased. Weights and repetitions, or lengths of time, or distance
covered, are lessened. This is aimed primarily to just continue limbering up the muscles
and conditioning the body to avoid abrupt changes when the time comes to prepare for a
tournament. The absence of a regular light work out will cause trauma to the body once
you start to work out again. A long period of dormancy after fighting is a big minus
factor when you prepare again for an upcoming boxing event.

Specific boxing for the street workouts are geared towards body sculpturing or the weeding out of certain
weaknesses that impede total performance and skill perfection. Specific fight workouts are
done in addition to general workouts when boxers are preparing for a competition.

Fighters cannot afford to do away with either. They must have a rigid schedule for
both, for life, even when there is no impending fight event to be prepared for. There will
only be variations in intensity when undertaking light workouts.

Specific workouts, to be truly beneficial, must be under the tutorship of a genuine
professional, a real father-coach or father-trainer. They may want to improve the limbs or
muscles involved in pitching a baseball, or make that twitch in the toes or ankles snappier
to gain an edge at the start of a sprint, or make that regulated pulse better when releasing
a dart from the hand. Improvement of a sport performance doesn’t happen by chance or
with age. Improvement will only come after hard, repetitious, and specific or specialized
training.

Every street boxer engages in general training. It is in specific workouts that top fighters are
separated from mere athletic players. It is mostly in specific or specialized workouts that “trade
secrets” are used or passed on by father-trainers to their son-trainees as secret weapons, and these
may decide the fate of the competition.

Street Boxing Workouts


Street Boxing Workouts

In Street Boxing you have to workout to be an a champion fighter. Even if you don’t really need those well-defined or bulky muscles, if you aim to be the best, you need to workout.
The workouts below can serve as checklist for everyone striving to be top boxer.
Street boxing workouts are either general or specific.

A. General boxing workouts

General workouts may vary in intensity, depending on the urgency and type of fighting you
are in. They may be heavy or light

1. Heavy workouts include all the works - weights, aerobics, and sparring. They are
often used in preparation for an upcoming boxing for the street event.

a. Weights lifted by both hands must be about half your total body weight to be
effective. This of course depends on how physical your sport is. For boxing
mostly mental, like chess and billiards, it would do the player a lot of good to
regularly engage in bench presses and squats using about one-fourth to onehalf
the bodyweight. Say, you weigh 70 kilos, use 15 to 30 kilos. For
dumbbell training, use 5 to 25 kilos each hand. Concentrate on repetitions. If
your sport is mainly physical, you may have to use heavier weights. As an ace
athlete, you will have to do these things under the supervision of a competent
physician. The above-mentioned are mere suggestions to give you an idea.

The point is you must have regular weight training.

b. Push-ups and pull-ups are part of a street boxers workouts. Gymnasts use these for
calisthenics. But these can also be considered part of weight training. Such
exercises are ideal for both physical and mental sports.

They offer enough strain to your muscles without overworking them unnecessarily. Like weight
training, these “up” exercises are also done in 4 sets with a number of
repetitions each set. Say, you do 30 push-ups. Rest for one minute after that.
Then do another 30. Increase the number of sets as your endurance increases.

Many top fighters do 120 push-ups with a one-minute rest each 30 repetitions.
c. Aerobics is an excellent way of improving blood circulation. Be it physical or
mental sport, air and blood circulation is vital. Aerobics strengthens the heart
and lungs. Strong heart and lungs make breathing control easy, which is a big
plus in handling emotionally stressful events.

The Body Of A Champion Street Boxer


The Body Of A Champion Street Boxer

Majority of street boxing requires superb physical ability, but even board games need you to have a
healthy body. The human mind functions much better when uninterrupted by body functions
gone haywire. An unfit body can give you the proverbial “headache.”
Hence, great boxers know well the importance of a body fit for fighting.

Different sports need different body forms and conditionings. The muscle group to be used
varies with the kind of sport you are engaged in. Thus, a fit body in boxing does not always mean
a lean, pure-muscle-no-fat body built. Many times, it also depends on the weight division you
belong to in boxing for the street.

Your bulky muscle mass may be perfect for wrestling, but you will be in real trouble
if you use the same in a boxing. Your fat proportions may be perfect for Sumo wrestling, but
imagine what it will do for you in gymnastics or boxing. Your lean, well defined, and all-muscle
figure may help you in boxing, but not in weightlifting.

So what’s the perfect body for a champion boxer?

Earlier on, we have discussed that to most people, an “fighter” guy is one who has a trim
and muscular body. This may be so, but for a more apt definition, the top fightingc body we’re
talking about is one that fits the athlete into the kind of sport he is playing in. To be an great fighter, you don’t have to be particularly muscular or slim. It really depends on what game you
are playing.

It will be funny to see a guy in serious weight training to build bulky muscles because he
is a chess or tennis player. It is pointless to aim to run fast because you are a billiards player.

Thus, you must know your boxing well and know the body mechanics involved in it so you can
define the fit body you need, and design your workout accordingly.

Achieving Your True Street Boxing Potential


Achieving Your True Street Boxing Potential

The last foundational component of street boxing philosophy is that the fighter
believes he is an asset to the team and boxing as a whole. He intently believes that there are
potentials in him waiting to be drawn out through training. His potentials are like the seeds of a
fruit covered by husks and skin that must be peeled off. The thick, ugly husks make it look like
no edible fruit can be found inside it. You have to pull off fiber after fiber and peel off the skin
until the very fruit, which is the real essence of it boxing for the street all, finally appears. Inside the fruit are seeds that have the potential to reproduce bountiful harvests.

An street boxer knows that inside him is a champion. Through training, he sculptures his
body to get rid of hindrances that delay the perfection of his skills until gradually, the champion fighter
in him emerges. Being a champion, he can then reproduce himself in others by helping others
draw out their potentials.

A mere desire to win in any fight may enable you to be champion for a while. This
makes you a temporary champion. However, this does not necessarily mean the immeasurable
potentials in you have been uncovered and released.

The more latent potentials will only surface once you aim to be a champion for life—always aim to be better with or without competition.

There are boxers obsessed about being champions because they want to prove to
everybody that they are the best. They will even compete against teammates to prove that they
alone are responsible for the win. They want to show that without them, the victory would not
have been possible.

Obsession with winning to prove oneself is not a quality of an street boxer. It is purely
obsession – selfish, destructive, and greedy obsession. It goes against teamwork because its sole
motive is to prove “I’m the best!” Obsession can produce champions and win the over-all
championship for the team. But the champion it produces is often the kind that people hate.

Some fighters would try to make all the scores for the team. They work so hard, but they are
usually very demanding, hot headed, and manipulative. They treat teammates as props for the
show where they get the lead role—in fact, the only role. Obsessed boxers have no loyalty but to
their ego. They approve of anything that will make them stars.

Basketball often is a breeding place for obsessed players. You see players who try to be
forward, center, guard, and even referee and scorer all rolled into one. Some of them want to
play audience too, if they could. An obsession to prove self-worth is one of the dismal signs of
immaturity, and this can be hardly termed as something of an ace.

Great fighters work for a common good. They will pour all for the prestige of their team,
school, or country. They may prove that the style or technique of their father-trainer is better than
the rest, but they will never compete for selfish ends. They cannot claim that “I am the best!”
because they workout hard to beat their weaknesses—and admitting weaknesses is something
non street boxers cannot do.

Hence, the mind of a top fighter never strives to prove they’re anything except athletes
who realize they need to train more and more.

How to Eliminate Street Boxing Weaknesses


How to Eliminate Street Boxing Weaknesses

Drive to conquer street boxing weaknesses – Acknowledging your weaknesses is just one
side of the story. You don’t stop there. It’s no use to be humble and then let it
stay at that. Next step to humility is the practicality to launch forward to turn your boxing for the street
weaknesses into strengths. Some fighters try to hide their weaknesses from
their opponents. This is effective for a time. But it will soon be found out.
Many contenders are hell-bent on defeating you. They will carefully take note
of your preferred moves. These boxing moves are usually your strengths, and moves
you seldom do are usually your weaknesses.

Example: A) Some Chess players are so obvious when they, for instance,
are willing to sacrifice other pieces to save their queen and perhaps a rook or
knight. They play well using these. Some opponents might counter such
strength by devising strategies to trap the queen and other relevant pieces. A
good attitude is to either:

1) Learn strong strategies using different pieces other than the queen.

2) Hide such strength by putting equal emphasis on all pieces to divert
your opponent’s attention. But make sure that you train yourself to be
good with all pieces. Such camouflage tactic is only temporary.

Example: B) It is easy to spot whether you are a forehand or backhand
tennis player. When you often use a right forehand to return a ball, your
opponent will easily concoct a plan to fire all his shots to your left side,
sometimes to your extreme left where your right forehand becomes unusable.
When he sees this, he takes delight in his discovery and gives you a rapid
succession of returns to your weak side. Or say, he tries a super top spin
against you several times, and you fail terribly to return each time. Or, after a
succession of his powerful swings that send the ball far to the back of your
court, he notices that you have become comfortably settled there, just waiting
for a fast ball, and very far from the net. For sure, his next stroke will be a
very slight swing to send the ball just inches beyond the net, and that will send
you scampering in vain to return to the ball.

Example: C) No matter how good you are, if you use only your right or
only your left hand to dribble and shoot the ball, you can’t be a basketball
champion for long. Foes will easily take notice and be able to accurately guess
your next move and intercept or interrupt whatever you are up to with the ball
in hand. The best thing is to train both your right and left hand in handling the
ball.

Thus, a great fighter will never be caught resting on his laurels. He always sees a level
higher than where he is standing, and he will always go for that extra mile.

Improving Your Street Boxing


Improving Your Street Boxing 


Be thankful for your street boxing skills now, but don’t stop there and maintain status quo. Each
morning, go out and train. Try to beat your all-time highest record. Yesterday was yesterday.
Today is a different day. Yesterday’s achievement was good only for the past. Today, you need a
fresh round of achievements to last another 24 hours.

Room for improvement is often said to be the need of poor fighters, but it is not only
for mediocre boxers. This phrase of encouragement is also for top fighters. You may be doing
excellently today, but there’s still room for improvement to do much better tomorrow. This push
to do a bit more each day instills in the top fighter the:

1. Humility to accept his weaknesses – This frame of mind reminds the boxer to
avoid having a swell of pride and thinking too highly of himself—and not
being able to see his other needs and weaknesses. He is lured into believing in
his “perfection.” Pride can often spoil a performance, especially on the Day.

Yes, he needs to boost his confidence; but he must be reminded that, like all
the others, he needs to push himself a little bit more forward to do much
better. Nobody is good enough to ignore more improvement. This also
prevents him from the pitfall of complacency that often attacks many
achievers who tend to rest on their pedestals too long and be side tracked by
blinding accolades. Yes, triumph must be celebrated, but it never equates to
perfection. Victory does not eliminate weaknesses when boxing for the street. After a short party, the
street boxer must go back to fight sculpturing to weed out whatever weakness
needs to be (or could be) discarded.

In the 1970s, world-renowned boxer Muhammad Ali once had a weak jaw
from a smash and fatal jab of Ken Norton. He worked out the weakness, and
soon became invincible once again, especially when contenders found that the
frail jaw was weak no more.

But a more apt example is the boxing champ Manny Pacquiao who, though champion in the super feather weight division, and famous for his south paw (devastating left punch), worked hard on his right punch so that both his left and right punches are explosive like dynamites!

Embracing Street Boxing History


Embracing Street Boxing History


A fighter with great street boxing does not only want to fight according to its rules and regulations.
A top fighter absorbs boxing into himself, as a person. In a sense, the boxer becomes
“it.” He embodies the sport and becomes closely identified with it, not only by being a champion
of boxing for the street but also by learning everything he can about it.

Western players of Asian sports like Karate, Judo, and Tae Kwon do, often behave like
their Asian counterparts. They adopt the same discipline and patience, use the same terms in
their respective languages, same outfits, even the same battle cries and salutes.

But great boxers will go even further in adopting the cultures native to the sports - the
religions, philosophies, arts, and to a certain extreme, even the food and the way of talking.

Some of them even re-design their offices or houses to look like a place where boxing
originated. To most top fighters, excellence in boxing includes getting the “feel” of everything
connected to it. Some top boxers based in California, USA who are winning championships
upon championships, require their students among other things, mastery of the history of fighting country of origin. For a show of deep commitment to boxing and loyalty to their coach father,
they are also required to visit the said country and take pictures of themselves there as
proof of their trip.

Some sports are closely related to their culture and history. You cannot fully appreciate
their beauty and meanings unless you learn their backgrounds. Some fencers study the styles of
historic fencing in Spain, France, and England. They try to know details of how the game was
used in sports and in combat. Some serious baseball and football players even visit the town
where heroes of the sports became popular and where they first made their feats.

You may do similar trips as the aforesaid, which however are not really necessary, but
the main thing here—the working principle—is that great fighters must be so serious as to know
why and how boxing began and developed from a local game to a popular fighting sport.

Valuable secrets may be in store for the diligent researcher as historical backgrounds are uncovered,
contributing significantly in the understanding of the mechanics or technology of boxing—which
cannot be conceived if you merely play the sport by just knowing its rules and regulations.

It is helpful to know that Karate was developed when weaponry was outlawed by the
Japanese, particularly the Satsuma and Shimazu clans, in Okinawa (the Ryukyu islands)
sometime in 1470. The Okinawans secretly developed an imported hand and foot fighting art
from China, making it relevant to the limited space they had and to the common preoccupations
of Okinawans. Thus, a great Karate fighter will train better if he meditates and focuses in thinking
that his body and limbs are to be as effective (and deadly) as real weapons of war. And he will
know, through research, that the real masters cross train in the art of weaponry by sharpening
their skills in Karate. An adage says, “When you’re good with weapons in hand, you’ll be
invincible when empty handed.” Thus, to be a Karate champion, the street boxer is to seriously
consider cross training in weaponry arts.

It will help to have a knockout punch in boxing if you know about a Roman boxing and
wrestling champion during the peak of the Empire. Milo, a contemporary of Theagenes, then the
most noted boxer of his time, lived sometime in the fifth century B.C. He carried calves as a boy
and whole cows as a young man. He was able to punch cows dead with a fist blow to the head.

Of course, in sports boxing, you’re not out there to kill foes with a blow to their heads. But you
will have an idea how to develop a good, single action knockout punch. You have to cross-train
in weight training. Jogging, shadowboxing, and punching bag workouts are not enough.

In ancient Egypt, the earliest sign of street boxing was in 4000 B.C., when gloves were
simply made of thin leather that covered the hands, arms, and elbows. From this, one can obtain
some techniques of blocking using not only the hands, but also the arms and elbows.

Moreover, ancient Greek fighters really gave life and limb to win in boxing events.
Doesn’t this give you a clear picture of dedication and commitment? The earliest record of an
Olympic event in ancient Greece is in the 23rd book of the Iliad. From this, the life and training
of an athlete is seen as nothing falling short of ace sportsmanship.

Great Street Boxers Need Backup


Great Street Boxers Need Backup

You are not in street boxing, or competing, just to please your ego. It’s not just for some
purpose; it’s for a corporate mission—others are in it with you. The “others” besides you are
your master-father-trainer, his “sons” in training, the trainer who “fathered” your “father,” and
your future “sons” who will be training under you. All of you are keeping up to maintain
excellence and a reputation.

It’s actually a lineage. A founder up the line mastered fighting in a peculiar way. He
became a champion using a style of his own boxing for the street, and he had a secret formula for coming up with such a winning style. He had trained other selected few in this style, who also trained others. These
others did likewise, and so on. You may find yourself somewhere down the line, and soon your
turn to add to this lineage would come. Now, all of you in this lineage all fight for a common
cause: To keep this peculiar style the champion of all boxing styles.
It’s really a battle of fighting styles. Filipinos have a different style of boxing compared
to how the Chinese, Japanese, or Thais do.

However, the style develops and evolves, takes new forms, and comes out better than
before. Due to the philosophy of aiming to be better, the style becomes updated due to the
changing needs of the real arena, the real boxing field “out there.”

Hence, you will see that being an top fighter is really a corporate or joint task done
individually by members of a particular lineage style. You can just watch the difference of how
basketball was played by a team ten years ago, and then by new members of the same team ten
years hence.

You will also hear or read from sports commentators how boxers of a particular
country take on a peculiar style and seem undefeated for a number of seasons, until another
group of boxers from another country develop their style and come out great champion boxers.

You must bear in mind that being an top fighter means:

1. Cooperating with others with a similar goal and;
2. Committing to a peculiar sports culture and outlook

THE MINDSET OF A STREET BOXER


THE MINDSET OF A STREET BOXER

Being great at street boxing requires a mindset. You must believe in your heart and mind that
you are meant to be an top fighter. This mindset will put a fiery enthusiasm in each of your
training sessions and performances. You will not settle for mediocre results; you will aim for the
best results. Armed with this mindset, you are not just aiming to win competitions. You are
aiming for a generation of top fighters.

Champion athletes, especially from nationalistic countries like the U.S. and Russia
(especially the former U.S.S.R.), have been training hard with the prestige of their country in
mind. Olympic bets are out to compete for posterity.

Nationalistic countries often produce a succession of world class champions because they
train not only to be ace athletes and win for their countries, but they also aim to someday
reproduce boxers of higher caliber.

Not all the international fighters are like-minded. Some boxers are near-sighted
and they focus only on their present win. Once the medal is at hand, they go back to their
countries and celebrate, and then retire.

On one hand, many international fighters can be branded as great at boxing for the street. They start out
young and train under a real master of the boxing. They excel and beat their own excellent records,
and finally come out champions. Then they themselves train others.

On the other hand, not all winners in international fighting are great boxers. They train hard
for the present, even under masters, but lack foresight to live the philosophy of great fighters.

A Street Boxers Rules


A Street Boxers Rules

“The kind of champions you raise up is dependent on the kind of champion you are.”

The drive to bring out the champion in street boxing in himself and in others separates the ace athlete
from mere athletic players. The philosophy is that...

This philosophy ought to be in your heart and mind always to bring out the street boxer in
you. You must strive to be the best you can be so that what you produce later in others will be
the same as, if not better than, you. Hence, you must train for life. You must increase your level
of excellence so as not to compromise the quality of the fighters you will train.

You may ask, “How can you excel in boxing for the street and produce quality fighters when you get
old?” You never get old by training others. That’s why many “retired” professional boxers
write books. Or, they start gyms where their “sons” train others, and they assume supervisory
roles. They share their wise counsels in old age. Through these legacies, they are, in a sense, still
in training, still excelling, and still training others. They become legends, living or otherwise.

These are the fighters or boxers who really “die training.” They really contribute
significantly to their chosen field of sports not only in their lifetime, but also beyond.
Without the above philosophy, you will just end up a fruitless, spent, and forgotten usedto-
be in boxing. You are reading this book precisely because you do not want to end up like this.

As long as you live the philosophy of an top fighter, you will not.

How to live out such philosophy is one of the concerns of this book. How can you excel
and outdo your own excellence as time passes? How can you contribute significantly to your
sport? Read on…

How A Street Boxer Is Born

Street Boxers must be “born”

Having a coach to see and guide you through a competition is not enough to be a street boxer. Someone must coach you until you reach mastery. That someone ought to be a real
fighter himself, coached or “fathered” through a long process by a qualified “father” in street boxing fight
training.

A “father” in training is a battle-hardened master armed with a wealth of experience in
fighting. He is not only knowledgeable in it; he can be considered an epitome in the field.
He has seen lots of actions and has been part of them, and he knows every nook and cranny of
the arena. He is so familiar with the “feeling” of being out there where the action is. He knows
that real boxing encounters are alive; meaning anything can happen out there, and no pattern or
formula can compare to live, on-the-spot events. It is only the accurate judgment and experience
of the wise that can cope up with live events. He is also so sensitive to the right and wrong
forms, including the executions of a technique, the timing, and the right effects. All these can
only be available to a real “father” of boxing for the street.

Some coaches are mere sports teachers, or at best, boxing players once upon a time. They
can help some; but at times, they can be more of hindrances than wise guides for fighters. They
will tend to be bookish and stick to “what the book says,” or to what they have learned in school,
or to what they have experienced in amateur contests. Without mastery (through real,
professional fight encounters), they lack the sense to know that aside from mastering basic
forms or moves, you have to be flexible and adaptable to unexpected things that are likely to
happen out there in the actual arena. Only seasoned sports “fathers” will be able to divulge these
details and wisdom to trainee-“sons.”

In his skills and experience, a “father” trainer patiently raises up “sons” to continue his
calling, or pass down his mission to succeeding generations. He knows too well that champions
come from a relay of skills and wisdom, or a technology transfer, and not from those who start
out from scratch.

You cannot train yourself, or train alone, and come out champion. You cannot also have
amateur coaches train you to be champion. You have to feed from the experiences of those who
had been there before, saw real tough actions, and really made it to the top. They may be likened
to a lighthouse that points out what is right and what is wrong, separating fact from myth.

An boxer acquires knowledge and skill mostly from his own experiences. He
may upgrade that by joining competitions and by wearing colorful uniforms, and subjecting
himself periodically to coaches. He occasionally reads books about the game. He may even be
awarded best player. However, he does not make a career out of it. Eventually, he drops out from
the scene and the sport altogether. He will have good stories to tell about how he used to be this
and that, but people may not be able to trace his stories because of his now bloated physique due
to the absence of training.

An top fighter, on the other hand, is a “son.” He has a “father” who raises him up, and
this athlete is aware that he is not just being raised up to win an event or a couple of events; he is
being raised up to be a father to raise up other sons someday. Unlike the boxer who
would point to rusted trophies and medals and photos of victories as his proof of being once in
the sport, real athletes point to actual “fathers” who have trained them and from whom they have
received “trade secrets” for success. They also point to actual athletes and champions they have
personally trained and “fathered” to pass on the heritage for generations to come.
An street boxer not only aims to be a champion, but lives to develop other champions as
well.

The Birth of a Street Boxer


Birth of Street Boxing Fighter

The moment you fall in love with a street boxing activity, the fighter in you is born. It starts in
your mind. You may have read a boxing book or an item in the sports section of a newspaper, or
have watched a fighting event in the TV or movies when you became interested or, at least,
attracted to such boxing. Your admiration may not be contained to just seeing the thing, but it may
have stirred up your imagination and you may have actually began to see yourself doing the feat
and becoming a champion at it. You may have researched more about boxing for the street game, bought
the equipment you need, and started on a journey to carve out a niche for yourself in the hall of
fame.

Some abort their fighting inclination by becoming mere sports fans. They love boxing and
sports heroes, but they seldom practice the game. Some people may call them “fighters” because
of their familiarity with and interest in the subject, but they are nothing more than boxing fans.
A boxing fan who is actually a fighter on the inside will soon work his way out to become the
fighter he admires and even excel at it. He will strive hard to outdo his previously
accomplished feats. This he does for life, with or without formal competitions.
If you decide to engage in a fighting career, start to “grow up” in it, acquire new
and higher levels of skills and agility (swift mind and body coordination), and later become
mature in the boxing game. Hard training separates men from boys (or women from girls), and you will
soon become known as a competent fighter. You will no longer be regarded as an awkward
neophyte in terrible want of speed, form, and accuracy, but you will be able to combine grace,
precision, and lightning pace without much effort. You will be able to judge and decide maturely
in the game. Soon, you will find yourself the chosen bet of a special group, and regular
competition will hone your skills to mastery. That’s when you begin to train other aspirants to be
like you. From being a “newly born,” you become a “father.”