The Cold War's Impact On Boxing Training, SZKOŁA BOKSU nauka boksu od podstaw

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Iron Game History
Volume 7 Numbers2&3
THE COLD WARÔS IMPACT
ON THE EVOLUTION OF
TRAINING
THEORY IN BOXING
Nicholas Bourne, Jan Todd, & Terry Todd
After World War II the Soviet Union was left as
the sole military and political force capable of matching
the United States. A forty-six year Cold War then ensued
between the United States and the Soviet Union in the
battle for global power and ideological supremacy. The
Cold War was fought on many fronts, including the
sporting arena. The former Soviet Union was highly
successful in its pursuit of sporting dominance. During
the Cold War era, in fact, the Soviet Union was by far the
most successful nation in the Olympic “team” competi-
tion. The success of the “Big Red Machine” has been
attributed to a number of factors, but the most significant
was the allocation of enormous financial and scientific
resources for sports development.
1
The availability of
such resources meant that the Soviet Union conducted a
wide variety of studies related to sport performance and
training methodologies at a time when the United States
and other free-world nations were still in their “infancy”
in terms of sport science. Some of the Soviet research
concentrated on applied aspects of training that would
ultimately be incorporated into professional boxing in
America from 1985 onwards. The areas of research
included: periodization — the division of an athlete’s
training program into specific cycles of time with the
specific objective of peaking for major competitions;
plyometrics — exercises that involve a rapid stretch of
the muscle followed by a shortening of the muscle as
seen in jumping;
strength and power development,
including weight training;
optimal work-to-rest ratios;
optimal means of recovery; the optimal training stimulus
to facilitate adaptation; contribution of different energy
systems in sport and optimal nutrition practices; and, of
course, ergogenic drugs.
One example of Soviet research that specifically
relates to boxing is V.I. Filiminov’s “Means of Increas-
ing the Strength of the Punch” that appeared in the Jan-
uary 1986
National Strength and Conditioning Associa-
tion Journal.
The authors used tensiometric dynamome-
ters and observation to discover that the use of the legs
when pushing off was responsible for producing 38.46%
(the greatest percentage) of the power of the punch.
Trunk rotation was second greatest at 37.42% followed
by arm extension at 24.12%.
2
Filiminov’s research con-
firmed the importance of the legs in the transfer of force
from the ground, through the trunk to the arm. Anyone
not convinced of the effects of ground reaction force
should try jumping up in the air and throwing a ball to
see how far it goes. Then throw the ball with both feet
on the ground and the importance of ground reaction
force in the production of power becomes clear. This
research validated the importance of incorporating low-
er extremity exercises such as squats, lunges, and in par-
ticular, Olympic lifts into the training program of boxers.
In 1984, L.P. Getke and I.P. Digtyraev examined
the “Fundamental Means of Strength Training for Box-
ers of Different Ages and Qualifications.” They divided
strength into maximum strength (the maximal amount of
weight you can lift), explosive or reactive strength, and
starting strength (the ability to overcome inertia) to see
if there were any specific strength deficits. They con-
cluded that it was “easiest to increase explosive strength
by increasing maximal strength.”
3
G.V. Kurguzov and
V.Y. Rusanov, examined the use of “Interval Training for
Increased Work Capacity for Boxers.” They rccom-
mended the development of an aerobic base during the
general physical preparatory stage. This allowed suffi-
cient recovery for anaerobic interval training during the
specialized preparation stage.
4
In 1983 B.A. Solovey
investigated the effects of exercises with weights as a
means of improving hitting speed in young boxers and
26
July 2002
Iron Game History
concluded that the use of weights significantly increased be very prevalent today. “Too many coaches coach like
the speed of a single punch thrown by either arm.
5
they’re back in the Stone Age,” said Nortiz.
11
There are a number of reasons for this, with the
primary one being a lack of education. In April 2001 the
Nevada State Athletic Commission published a 174-
page booklet entitled
Ringside and Training Principles
to address this issue.
12
The aim of the booklet was to
dispense scientifically-sound advice to boxers from
some of the sports more knowledgeable trainers. Dr.
Margaret Goodman, the commission’s ringside physi-
cian who spearheaded the project, and Flip Homansky,
her colleague, explain various medical issues from prop-
er weight loss and dehydration to chronic head injuries
and concussions. In the rest of the text, reputable train-
ers like Teddy Atlas. Emmanuel Steward and Felix
Trinidad discuss such topics as the three most dangerous
practices that occur in the training gym, their criteria for
stopping a fight, the use of headgear. the replacement
fluids to give a fighter, the wrapping of the hands. and
the post-weigh-in and pre-fight nutrition of the fighter.
In the same book, strength and conditioning experts Tim
Hallmark, Dave Honig, and Mackie Shilstone explain
their philosophies in preparing a fighter to peak in opti-
mal fighting condition. They also discuss what to eat,
how much to run, how much to rest, and conditioning
fallacies and myths. The booklet is the “first time any
commission or professional boxing regulatory body has
produced such a compilation of information.”
13
The booklet represents a significant step in the
right direction but as Royce Feour notes it probably
should have been done years ago.
14
Martin Nortiz
observes that unlike amateur boxing, professional box-
ing trainers do not have a certification program to test
their knowledge, particularly on the medical aspects of
training. This is one area where there is room for signif-
icant improvement.
The Spread of Soviet Training Theory
to the United States
Soviet research slowly filtered into America via
track and field journals such as
Track Technique, Track
and Field Quarterly Review,
the
Yessis Soviet Sports
Review
and the
National Strength and Conditioning
Association Journal.
It was not until the late 1970s and
1980s that carefully planned periodization and Soviet-
training methods began to appear as part of consistent
training structures in the United States.
6
However, due
to the unique nature of boxing it would take even longer
before these training methods would become incorporat-
ed and then accepted as routine training methodologies,
Examples of articles that extolled the benefits of
the new training methods included Kelly Corde’s 1991
article that outlined the “Reasons to Strength Train for
Amateur Boxing.” The benefits of training Corde includ-
ed were: increased anaerobic energy, injury prevention,
increased contraction speed and increased force and
power production.
7
Mackie Shilstone (the conditioning
coach of Michael Spinks) and Gerald Secor Couzes
devoted a whole chapter to the “Physical Conditioning
for Professional Boxing,” in the 1993
Medical Aspects of
Boxing.
The chapter covers the concepts of training, car-
diovascular conditioning, strength training, endurance
training, overtraining. nutrition and the structure of indi-
vidual workouts.
8
In the same book Stephen Fleck and
Jay T. Kearney outline the “Physical Conditioning
Required for Amateur Boxing.” The authors advocated
a periodized approach to training dividing the year into
a) a base period, b) a preparatory period, c) a pre-com-
petition period and d) a peaking period. The authors rec-
ommend the use of Olympic weightlifting motions (such
as the clean and jerk and snatch) for power production,
the use of interval training, and upper and lower body
plyometrics.
9
The culmination of these approaches is
seen in USA Boxing’s 1995 247-page publication,
Olympic Style Boxing,
that includes chapters on interval
training, plyometrics,
cardiovascular training and
weights.
10
Another reason for the persistence of “old
school” methods has been a resistance to change. Nor-
tiz refers to the old “If it ain’t broke don’t try to fix it”
attitude that controls the behavior of many coaches.
15
Trainers use their methods of success from the past or
they copy fighters who have achieved success to train
future athletes. They are reluctant to change or even be
open-minded about new training innovations. It is also
important to note that boxing is not included as a main-
stream sport in major educational institutions. Conse-
quently it does not benefit from immediate access to
sport science departments and shared training facilities
that enhance the growth of training knowledge.
The growth of sport science and in particular the
Despite advances in training theory the use of
so-called “old-school” training methods such as long
distance running and the avoidance of weight training
still persist in boxing today. Tim Hallmark (Evander
Holyfield’s strength coach) and trainer Martin Nortiz
both consider the use of these “old-school” methods to
27
Iron Game History
Volume 7 Numbers2&3
strength and conditioning profession has been signifi-
cant in the last twenty years. Previously, as Angelo
Dundee highlights, cornermen or trainers “were capable
of doing every facet of the training regimen . . . every-
thing that had to be done with the fighter.” Today the
roles of cornermen have tended to be more specialized,
which has annoyed Dundee. “They should be trainers.
There shouldn’t be a cut man, bucket man, second man,
third man, fourth man. You’ve got to be a complete man
to help a fighter. You’ve gotta be able to do it all.”
16
However, this is increasingly unrealistic with
the tremendous expansion of training knowledge over
the last twenty years or so. This is one of the reasons that
strength and conditioning specialists such as Tim Hall-
mark (Evander Holyfield), Mackie Shilstone (Michael
Spinks) and Courtney Shand (Lennox Lewis) have been
increasingly consulted for their knowledge of boxing.
Weight training, once considered taboo in box-
ing, is much more prevalent today and as Austin boxing
trainer Richard Lord notes, it is “just starting to get a
hold.”
17
One reason for weight training’s slow inception
into boxing training has been its association with mus-
cular hypertrophy (enlargement), which may or may not
be desirable for a fighter. In weight-specific categories
it could be extremely detrimental to add more muscle
bulk if a trainer and a fighter felt that an individual had
a better chance at a lower weight. Much of the contro-
versy regarding weight training stems from trainers’ fail-
ure to understand that different types of weight training
have very different effects on the body. Sets of ten rep-
etitions with a one-minute rest between sets have been
found to have a significant hypertrophic effect.
18
This
hypertrophy would be ideal for a light heavyweight mak-
ing the transition to heavyweight, but not for a fighter in
a lighter weight category.
On the other hand, sets of
two-to-three repetitions with heavier weights and, in par-
ticular, explosive movements such as the Olympic lifts
(snatch and clean and jerk) have been shown to have a
great effect on the activation of the nervous system (the
ability to recruit a greater percentage of motor units and
muscle fibers) with a minimal effect on muscle hyper-
trophy.
19
field of boxing are strong proponents of modern training
methods.
The changes that have occurred in boxing train-
ing over the last century have been remarkable. The con-
trast of Mike Donovan preparing for a training session
by drinking a glass of sherry with an egg yolk and walk-
ing at least eight miles per day with occasional hundred-
yard runs to Evander Holyfield’s highly scientific pro-
gram of physiological monitoring, weights, plyometrics,
sport specific drills and the use of nutritional supple-
ments, vitamins and minerals illustrates how far training
has come in the last century. In the desire for improved
performance, the future of training in boxing is, as Tim
Hallmark remarks, likely to get “more and more innova-
tive.”
20
The Revolutionary Training Techniques of
Evander Holyfield
In 1986, shortly after Leon Spinks took the title
from Larry Holmes, a young up-and-coming boxer by
the name of Evander Holyfield teamed up with Tim
Hallmark, a strength and conditioning specialist from
Texas. Their relationship would prove to be extremely
rewarding and play a significant role in Evander the
“Real Deal” Holyfield’s outstanding success.
Holyfield was born in Atmore, Alabama on 19
October 1962. He began his boxing career at age eight
when he entered a “pee-wee” tournament. He later went
on to compile an amateur record of 160-14 with 75
knockouts.
21
On 12 July 1986 in only his twelfth pro-
fessional fight Holyfield upset the two-time world cham-
pion Dwight Muhammad Qawi in a fifteen round split
decision to win the World Boxing Association (WBA)
Cruiserweight (190 lb.) title. In October 1990 Holyfield
made the transition to heavyweight with a stunning
third-round knockout of James “Buster” Douglas (who
had dethroned “Iron” Mike Tyson earlier that year) for
the undisputed heavyweight title. Holyfield lost his first
professional bout (and his title) in November of 1992 to
Riddick Bowe but regained it a year later in a rematch.
After a spell of over a year out of the ring due to a con-
troversial “hole in the heart,” for which he was eventu-
ally medically cleared, Holyfield made an unspectacular
comeback. It was enough, however, to earn him a long-
awaited title shot against Mike Tyson. On 9 November
1996, Holyfield, a 25-1 underdog, dominated the fight
with his supreme conditioning and knocked Tyson out in
the eleventh round to regain the heavyweight title for the
third time. This tight was one of the biggest upsets in
boxing history. Holyfield proved that it was no fluke by
repeating the performance in June of 1997, in what was
It appears that boxers’ training practices are
slowly catching up with the rest of the athletic world,
although the universal acceptance of modern training
methods may still be some way off. Testimony to pro-
gression is provided by trainers such as Richard Lord
and Martin Nortiz, both of whom incorporate the use of
weight training, plyometrics, interval training, and sound
nutritional principles in the training of their fighters.
Recent publications such as
Ringside and Training Prin-
ciples
that feature successful conditioning experts in the
28
July 2002
Iron Game History
later called the
“Bite of the Centu-
ry.” Holyfield was
well ahead on
points, when Tyson
bit part of his left
ear off. Tyson was
later disqualified
w-hen he attempted
to bite Holyfield’s
ear again. In
November of 1999,
Evander lost his
title to the present
WBC, IBF and IBO
champion, Lennox
Lewis, in their sec-
ond match. Most
recently Holyfield
made boxing histo-
ry on 12 August
2000 when he out-
lasted John Ruiz to
win the vacant
WBA title and
become the first
boxer to win a
Tim Hallmark, of Wimberly, Texas, works with former heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield
on stretching after a recent workout. Hallmark is part of a new breed of boxing trainers who
incorporate scientific weight training methods along with ring and roadwork.
heavyweight cham-
pionship on four occasions.
--Courtesy Tim Hallmark
the “stuff of which revolutions are made.”
24
Hallmark’s
conditioning had an immediate impact. Alluding to the
Qawi fight Holyfield remarked that Hallmark “put me
into that tight so good that I could work fifteen rounds
and throw 1,290 punches.”
25
This is over twice the num-
ber of punches thrown by Spinks, whose work output at
the time was considered high.
Evander Holyfield and Tim Hallmark
In 1986 Evander Holyfield approached Tim
Hallmark for assistance with his fight preparation.
22
After an analysis of the sport of boxing Hallmark aban-
doned the traditional miles of roadwork and hours of
sparring and replaced them with a comprehensive weight
training program, sprints, and specific conditioning
drills such as plyometrics (i.e. box jumps). Hallmark’s
approach was methodical and incorporated the latest
advances in training theory and sport science. During
conditioning drills Hallmark monitored Holyfield’s heart
rate to assess workrate and recovery. With this condi-
tioning Holyfield’s heart rate would drop from maximal
to 130 beats per minute at the end of one minute’s rest,
just like the period between rounds. “When he first start-
ed,” Hallmark said, “he could only drop to 175 or 180
beats per minute but now every round he goes out 66%
more recovered.”
23
In a 1987
Sports Illustrated
article, Clive Gam-
mon remarked that the combination of Hallmark’s mod-
ern training techniques and Holyfield’s dedication was
Other innovative training techniques included
the use of what Hallmark termed the “shadow vest.”
First bungee cords were used to tie Holyfield’s lower
body down to the floor to provide downward resistance.
Then he had Holyfield put on a heavy vest so that his
upper body also had resistance. Hallmark explained the
training involved,
“We have him start throwing punches
. .
He’s up to the point where he does 160 to 180 con-
tractions in two minutes compared to the 60 to 80 punch-
es that he will normally throw in a three-minute
round.”
26
Holyfield also followed Hallmark’s comprehen-
sive weight training program, which is generally credit-
ed for Holyfield’s increase in size from 185 pounds to
210 pounds with no gain in body fat. The greater size
allowed him to move up to the heavyweight division and
compete for much greater prize money. In an interview
29
Iron Game History
Volume 7 Numbers2&3
last November, Hallmark outlined his philosophy on
weight training and the program he used in preparation
for the Mike Tyson fight.
27
It consisted of sixteen sets of
weights done on a Monday, Wednesday and Friday, in
what Hallmark calls a “high intensity” workout. For
each set, Holyfield performs eight to twelve repetitions
not quite to the level of complete failure. Hallmark’s rea-
soning was to simulate the same physiological and men-
tal feeling of tiredness that Holyfield would experience
when competing in the ring. Hallmark explained, “So
you’re getting a good cardiovascular workout because
you’re going anaerobic every so often, you’re getting
good endurance and strength because you get to the
point where you really have to work hard to keep the
same speed . . . It makes you mentally suck it up and do
the next set even though you feel like you’re not quite
ready to.”
28
In collaboration with a sports medicine physi-
cian, Holyfield’s blood, urine, and saliva are also ana-
lyzed to give hormonal and metabolic feedback on his
state of health and response to training. Hallmark is also
actively involved in Holyfield’s nutrition program.
Holyfield takes various nutritional supplements, multi-
vitamins and minerals (from Champion Nutrition and
Sports Research) to facilitate optimal energy levels and
recovery between training sessions.
29
Hallmark and a growing number of strength and
conditioning specialists have revolutionized the way
boxers train. As a positive testimony to his methods,
Hallmark has been asked to oversee all aspects of the
strength and conditioning program for USA Boxing at
the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. Hall-
mark is the first to admit that the transition into profes-
sional boxing was not easy. “When I first broke into
boxing they acted like what I was doing was something
from another planet.”
30
1983): 100-102.
6
William Freeman.
Peak When it Counts: Periodization for Ameri-
can Truck and Field
(Mountain View, California : TAF News Press,
1996).
7
Kelly Cordes, “Reasons to Strength Train for Amateur Boxing,”
National Strength and Conditioning Association Journal
13(May
1991): 18-21.
8
Mackie Shilstone and Gerald Secor Couzens, “Physical Condition-
ing for Professional Boxing,” In Barry Jordan, ed.
Medical Aspects of
Boxing
(Boca Raton, Fla: CRC Press, 1993) 93-102.
9
Stephen J. Fleck and Jay T. Kearney, “Physical Conditioning for
Professional Boxing,” In Barry Jordan, ed.
Medical Aspects of Box-
ing
(Boca Raton, Fla: CRC Press, 1993). 51-92.
10
USA Boxing,
Couching Olympic Style Boxing
(Carmel, Indiana:
Cooper Publishing Group, 1995).
11
Martin Nortiz. Taped interview by author, Austin, Texas, 30
November 2001.
12
Steve Kim, “Ringside and Training Principles.” Available at
13
Royce Feour, “Commission Manual to Give Boxers New Line of
14
Ibid.
15
Nortiz interview.
16
Fried, 27.
17
Richard Lord, Taped interview by author, Austin, Texas, 30
November 2001.
18
Steven J. Fleck and William J. Kraemer,
Designing Resistance
Training Programs
(Champaign, Illinois: Human Kinetics, 1997).
161.
19
Carl Johnson. Lecture notes. USA Track and Field Level 3 Coach-
ing Course held at Louisiana State University, July 1999. Johnson is
coach to Johnathon Edwards. world record holder in the triple jump.
Prior to breaking the world record Edwards increased the amount of
weight he was able to lift without adding to his body weight.
20
Tim Hallmark. Taped interview by author, Austin, Texas, 11
November 2001.
21
Biographical information on Evander Holyfield is available at
field.
22
Dave Nightingale, “A New Fighter for a New Age.”
Sporting
News,
211 (15, April 1991): 23-25.
23
Clive Gammon, “Tuning Up for Tyson.”
Sports Illustrated
67(14
December 1987): 48-50; 65.
24
Gammon, “Tuning Up,” 49.
25
Ibid., 50.
26
Nightingale. “New Fighter,” 24.
27
Hallmark interview.
28
Ibid.
29
Showtime presents:
Interview with Evander Holyfield
on 22 July
30
Hallmark interview.
Notes:
1
For information on the rise of Soviet sport see: Yuri Brokhin,
The
Big Red Machine
(New York: Random House, 1978).
2
V.I Filiminov, K.N. Koptsev, Z.M. Husyanov and S.S. Nazarov,
“Means of increasing Strength of the Punch,”
National Strength and
Conditioning Association Journal
7(December/January 1986): 65-
66.
3
L.P. Getke and I.P. Digtyraev, “Fundamental Means of Strength
Training for Boxers,”
Soviet Sports Review
24( December 1989): 192-
194.
4
G.V. Kurguzov and J. Rusanov, “Interval Training for Increasing
Specialized Work Capacity of Boxers,”
Soviet Sports Review
23(March 1988): 13-14.
5
B.A. Solovey, “Exercises With Weights as a Means of Improving
Hitting Speed in Young Boxers,”
Soviet Sports Review
18(June
30
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