Training

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Victor*KC
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Training

Post by Victor*KC »

How did some of the old fighters im talking about like 1920's How did they train besides Running?
JC
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Post by JC »

Pretty similar to now I would guess skipping rope, pad and bag work, shadow boxing, sparring and calasthetics. I know a few of them used to do hard physical labour to get in shape too, such as chopping wood or digging ditches.
zojo
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Post by zojo »

I have a feeling they did a lot more sparing back then as well.

Plus, since most fighters fought much more often back then than today, I would say that they were never really "out" of shape. Constantly fighting rounds keeps you in better shape than taking three months off, getting fat, then training to get the fat off AND training for a fight at the same time.
Alex
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Post by Alex »

A LOT more sparring - by far the best form of training.

It find it astounding when you hear some fighters nowadays say they don't do much sparring.

Plus, many old time fighters fought so often that they were kept constantly in peak condition by the bouts themselves. The downside to this was that many were burnt out very young.
robert.snell1
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the park

Post by robert.snell1 »

*Alex* wrote:A LOT more sparring - by far the best form of training.

It find it astounding when you hear some fighters nowadays say they don't do much sparring.

Plus, many old time fighters fought so often that they were kept constantly in peak condition by the bouts themselves. The downside to this was that many were burnt out very young.

all very true alex.my dad - as with you grand dad -did a lot of gym work which included a lot of sparring.my dad was lucky as our home is a few mins walk from the main park in Birkenhead and he would do all his running there.its a large place with a road all around it.this was after he had finished work or at the weekend
Alex
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Post by Alex »

Hi Rob, My grandfather did a lot of his running in Hyde Park, which was also near-by and pretty handy. When preparing for a fight he'd sometimes spar with three or four different fighters in a single session.
adspath
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Post by adspath »

it is really enjoyable to read about the older fighters and what they used to do. thank you keep it up
Victor*KC
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Post by Victor*KC »

Thanks for the help guy's :box:
BoxBuzz
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Post by BoxBuzz »

one thing to consider...in days gone by there were no where near the amount of readily available distractions for the training fighter.
zojo
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Post by zojo »

BoxBuzz wrote:one thing to consider...in days gone by there were no where near the amount of readily available distractions for the training fighter.
You mean there were no booze and women back then?
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Post by BoxBuzz »

zojo, wrote:
BoxBuzz wrote:one thing to consider...in days gone by there were no where near the amount of readily available distractions for the training fighter.
You mean there were no booze and women back then?
well i know that's all you need...but that used to be all there was.
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Post by Seamus »

One of my favorite training stories is from modern times. Lou Duva said that when Pernell Whitaker failed to show up at the gym one Monday, he tried calling him all day, before finally reaching him late at night. Wondering where the hell he had been, Whitaker simply said he was tired, and just decided to sleep the whole day. But Whitaker didn't show up the following day either, once again Duva reached him late, and this time Whitaker told him that he decided to play video games with his son all day. Finally on Wednesday, Whitaker showed up and pushed his training partners till they were ready to drop from exhaustion. Gotta like a guy like that.
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