boxing_rocks wrote: ↑03 Jan 2019, 15:52
Jacopodb wrote: ↑03 Jan 2019, 10:45
boxing_rocks wrote: ↑02 Jan 2019, 19:22
Heavier bones with the same muscle mass put you in a higher weight class. It can't possibly be beneficial.
Ask amazing powerpuncher Tommy Hearns if he didn't feel Hagler's heavier hands... I could guess that technique also helps you developing punching power, but Tyson, also thanks to his heavy bone-calibre, could punch harder than taller guys. Same went for Marciano, I reckon.
adislav123 wrote: ↑01 Jan 2019, 06:19
[...] i'm to tired to explain your nonsense to you. The "thicker boned/harder puncher" poo you utter is just that.
Nothing in your "a heavier skeleton....", your last post makes sense... you are terribly wrong.
[...]
J say eff you! You will never get it... there are no boxers with the same skill level & reach & height & mass & what ever eff you criteria you wanna pull out of ur ass ... where then the one with wider wrists... whatever! eff you! Moron!
[...]
Now, some narcissistic spoiled brats might avoid running their mouths over this godd*mn bone-related issue.
https://www.expertboxing.com/boxing-tec ... hing-power
A few examples don't prove a statement. What about heavy handed Andy Lee who doesn't have thick bones? Hearns you mentioned was heavy handed too. His chin was just isn't as good as Hagler's.
Here: you're obviously mistaking
a fighter who can throw a punch with a
heavy-handed boxer.
Andy Lee (who has he beaten, by the way..?) can throw a punch: he exploits his legs, his shoulders... he's a good puncher: that doesn't make him
heavy-handed.
Now, that
Quillin is one heavy-handed fighter: most probably, Lee has more skill in throwing a punch, but Quillin is more naturally-gifted in that sense (if he could learn to throw shots like Lee, there arguably would be no match...): they're balanced.
So, we've set this straight for now.
Pretty much the same goes for Hearns: he could throw a punch like no other, but his bone-structure wasn't Hagler's one: it's like being hit by a heavier club, or by a lighter club: if the one beating you with both clubs is the same guy, the heavier club will hurt you more than the lighter one: same goes for bone-structure, it's the very same principle.
Now, Hearns' chin wasn't exactly the shakiest: Tommy took on supermiddleweights, light-heavyweights, and cruiserweights, successfully. Couldn't last 3 rounds with Hagler, even being able to connect, but without hurting him seriously; 2+2=4: Hagler hit hard.
Huge bones might not be
the only thing that matters in boxing, but it certainly adds a
whole lot: in my boxing days, I noticed that, even being taller than most of my opponents and sparring-partners, I had less-punching power than even shorter, but stockier guys: by testing their punches on my chin, and
vice versa, I've found out what I described above. Simple as this.