• That right hook wasn't a mistake โ€” it was a setup to draw him inside for the elbow

    That right hook was not a mistake. He deliberately gave up the outside space to draw the opponent inside, then caught him with the elbow. This was engineered.

    Watch the southpaw-to-orthodox switch frame by frame: his weight transfer is deliberately 15-20 degrees wider than standard form โ€” baiting the opponent to misread the distance. The look on the opponent's face when the elbow landed was someone who didn't see it coming.

    This level of setup requires precise distance management and timing. Not something a casual viewer catches on first watch. I watched seven times.

  • That right hook setup analysis is exactly how fighters' coaches plan for opponents. You're reading the fight the way a coach would.

  • The conditioning from repeated jab-feint exposure is one of the most underappreciated elements of combat sports strategy. Most spectators don't see it unless they know what to look for.

  • 200% return any month is a result worth documenting. Keep posting the methods โ€” win or lose, the transparency helps everyone get better.

  • I'll be honest: I'm skeptical of any month that feels this good. But I've had those months too. Enjoy it and keep records. The accountability is what separates good gamblers from bad ones.

  • That right hook was not a mistake. He deliberately gave up the outside space to draw the opponent inside, then caught him with the elbow. This was engineered.

    Watch the southpaw-to-orthodox switch frame by frame: his weight transfer is deliberately 15-20 degrees wider than standard form โ€” baiting the opponent to misread the distance. The look on the opponent's face when the elbow landed was someone who didn't see it coming.

    This level of setup requires precise distance management and timing. Not something a casual viewer catches on first watch. I watched seven times.