There's many punches in boxing, but I like
to group the short right and the overhand
right together, with regard to the elbow popping.
All right?
If I'm standing in front of Terry, and he's
looking to hit the sweet spot, it's going
to be hard for him to throw a straight right.
So what he's going to throw, is a short right
hand, all right?
Pop in the elbow, catch in the chin.
It's surely a done deal.
All right?
So when Terry throws the short right hand,
it's going to execute just like that, and
it's going to hit the sweet spot, all right?
Short right hand, one more time.
Now, if there's more distance between Terry
and I and for instructional purposes step
back a little bit, Terry.
Give him a little bit of a long stance, and
he throws let's say a right hand at me, but
then he wants to switch the angle, I like
throwing the right hand twice, one after the
other.
It makes for a devastating combination.
If Terry were to throw a straight right hand,
and then he follows that with a different
angle and pops his elbow, that's an overhand
right.
It's very hard to detect, because you have
two different angles coming at you, with the
same hand.
That covers the short right and the overhand
right.
