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Southpaw stance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al McCoy, world champion in the 1910s, displaying southpaw stance with right hand and right foot to the fore
Ruslan Chagaev in southpaw stance

In boxing and some other sports, a southpaw stance is where the boxer has the right hand and the right foot forward, leading with right jabs, and following with a left cross right hook. It is the normal stance for a left-handed boxer. The corresponding boxing designation for a right-handed boxer is the orthodox stance, which is generally a mirror-image of the southpaw stance. In American English, "southpaw" generally refers to a person who is left-handed.

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Transcription

Strategy

Left-handed boxers are usually taught to fight in a southpaw stance, but right-handed fighters can also fight in the southpaw stance for many reasons such as tricking the opponent into a false sense of safety. Fighting in a southpaw stance is believed to give the fighter a strategic advantage because of the tactical and cognitive difficulties of coping with a fighter who moves in a mirror-reverse of the norm. Left-handed fighters are often taught to fight in orthodox stance despite their dominant side being their left, either because of the overriding need to best counter a fighter who uses an orthodox stance, or because of the (real or perceived) limited number of trainers who specialize in training the southpaw stance. Moreover, the southpaw stance may leave fighters more vulnerable to blows to the liver.

A skilled right-hander, such as Roy Jones Jr.,Terence Crawford or Stephen Thompson may switch to the southpaw stance to take advantage of the fact that most fighters lack experience against left handed opponents. In addition, a right-hander in southpaw with a powerful left cross obtains an explosively different combination. The converted southpaw may use a right jab followed by a left cross, with the intention of making opponents slip to the outside of their left side. Then the converted right-hander can simply turn one's body left and face the opponent, placing the opponent in orthodox, and follow up with an unexpected right cross. If the southpaw fighter is right-hand dominant with a strong left cross, this puts the opponent in danger of knockout from each punch in the combination, as jabs with the power hand can stun or knock out (KO) in heavier weight classes.

While rare, the reverse is also true for left-handers; left-hand dominant fighters like Oscar De La Hoya and Miguel Cotto who fight from an orthodox stance give up the so-called "southpaw advantage" strategically, but are gifted with heavier lead hands. Consequently, in MMA if one stands in a southpaw stance (strongside forward), one must train one's cross and left low kick to make them fast, hard and dangerous.

While rare, cross-dominant MMA fighters and kickboxers could also benefit from fighting from a southpaw stance.

Previous uses of the term southpaw

The "American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language" cites the conventional wisdom that the word "southpaw" originated "from the practice in baseball of arranging the diamond with the batter facing east to avoid the afternoon sun."[1] Though many claim that the term originated due to the orientation of baseball playing fields in order to keep the sun out of the players' eyes and the resulting alignment of a left-handed pitcher's throwing arm causing the pitcher to have his left hand on the south side of his body,[2][3] the term had been used decades prior to that to indicate "not-usual".[4]

Notable southpaw fighters

Boxing

Muay Thai/Kickboxing/K-1

MMA

Jeet Kune Do

See also

References

  1. ^ Why are left-handers called "southpaws"?, History.com, Aug 12, 2015
  2. ^ "I read somewhere that all major league baseball stadiums must point in the same direction (3rd base line north). Is this true?". Info Please.
  3. ^ "Southpaw". Free Dictionary.
  4. ^ Wilton, Dave (July 5, 2012), Southpaw, Word Origins
This page was last edited on 3 April 2024, at 15:20
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