How to Win a Street Fight – Only 1 Punch

How to Win a Street Fight - Only 1 Punch
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How to win a street fight with this realistic 1 punch self-defense tutorial. The most common punch in a street fight is a big swinging overhand right, and in this video, I will share how you can see a punch coming and how you can throw the most powerful counter-punch to win the street fight in seconds.

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Chapters:
0:00 How to Win a Street Fight – Only 1 Punch
0:41 How to Counter the Most Common punch in Street fight
2:12 What to do if you cannot Throw a Punch
2:43 How to Block Punches in a Street fight
4:45 Drills on how to Block a punch
5:45 How to End Fight in Seconds

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My name is Tony Jeffries, Olympic Bronze medallist & former undefeated pro boxer.
I’m the owner of Master Boxing where I take your boxing to the next level.

#boxing #fight #selfdefense

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31 Comments

  1. Sir , im from India and as you know boxing is not popular in india thats why I get a lot of confusion in this sport, can you make a video on explaining proper form of basic defence in boxing- block, parry,slip,roll, bob and weave etc.
    Hope you will note ignore your small brother like subscriber !

  2. Once you step back away from a punch come back with atleast a one two combo, but I’ve learned to keep the heavy punches coming until a drop my opponent. It’s my go to plan and I’ve dropped nearly every man with this strategy

  3. thanks for the dm MATE .. love your content. i wish you get millions of views for creating amazing content. love your Instagram grid as well. may god bless you 🙏🏼. thank you again

  4. Cool video! I'm a Mom in my 20s lookng for boxing videos to get into for at-home fitness. I came across your channel and am having a lot of fun. I sent this video to my teenage brother just in case ☺️

  5. You are a really good Teacher. But this smells like WT. A fight ist often more dynamic. (Excuse my bad english)
    The opponent often throw a punch and skip the distance, to throw another or get into clinch. The Theory is good. But not practicable.

  6. Hey tony my dominant hand is my right but my dominant foot is left. At 1:23 you mentioned that i need to step back with my dominant foot but that puts me into a southpaw postition. Is this an oversight in the video and should i step back with the foot on the same side of my dominant hand or should i actually punch with my weaker hand?

  7. Mr. Jeffries, as usual, great advice. It's great that you also insist on the need to train these drills. Obviously, someone that has never done them might understand them, but would probably not be able to deliver in a real life situation. You have treated this subject before. Maybe, when you will approach it again, you could go into a little more detail. For the first method, I suspect that some people might be able to step back, but that most of us would have little chance of throwing the right hand if we have no fighting experience (even if we practice it, as you have said). We would probably avoid the first punch, just to be caught by the second one. For the second method, blocking a heavy right hand with our left hand, without gloves seems too risky. The right hand has too many chances of going through the block. Even if it hits our left hand, it will stil do lots of damage. The third method seems the most realistic one for a person with no experience. But it would be usefull if you could talk about two things here: 1. the legal aspects (because you would be the one throwing the first blow and hopefully the only one to throw) and 2. the psichological aspect: when a bigger person comes foreward as you described, the intimidation factor is huge. It might work for you (you are not intimidated because, in fact, even thow you might be the smaller one, you are an elite boxer, so you are way more dangerous than him). For someone with no experience, a thousand thoughts go through our head: "maybe I shouldn't throw because I won't be able to do damage, but I would provoke him more / give him real reason to attack me".

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