
Don’t just throw punches at the bag, learn how to hit a heavy the proper way. Here are 10 heavy bag training tips to develop your boxing technique as well your punching power.
10 Heavy Bag Training Tips
1. Pay Attention
The number one problem of heavybag training is that it builds bad eye habits. The two common problems I see are fighters staring too hard at the bag or not looking at the bag.
Too Much Staring
This kind of intense eye contact is pretty cool since you feel like a hunter keeping his eye on the target. In the ring, staring at a target telegraphs to your opponent where you are going to punch next. Whatever you do, do NOT look down when you throw a body punch. This makes the punch so much easier to defend and so much easier to counter. You especially don’t want to telegraph a body punch because your head is wide open.
Don’t stare too much at one spot that you can’t see anything else.
The correct way to look at the bag is to just look forward. Imagine the bag as opponent in front of you and try to keep the entire bag in your field of vision. You want to keep an eye on his head and body movements at the same time. You aim your punches but you’re not staring so much into one spot that you can’t see anything else.
Lazy Eyes
This is when the fighter is not even looking at the bag. Believe it or not, some fighters can’t answer when I ask them, “What are you looking at when you punch?” I’ve caught new boxers staring at the ground or just looking to the side when they throw big punches. It’s amazing how often boxers punch blind when they get tired.
Don’t just let your eyes roam all over the place. Lazy eyes leave you vulnerable in the ring! Stay focused and pay attention to the bag. This increases your accuracy and more importantly, so you can see counter-punches coming your way. Best way to cure lazy eyes: put little squares of duct tape around the bag to give the eyes something to look at…or just spend more time using other equipment like the double-end bag which keeps your eyes alert.
Ultimately you want to keep your eyes on the bag without staring into it. You want to have a general awareness of the entire heavybag. Keep the bag in view and also be aware of how far the bag is from you at all times.
2. Keep Your Balance
Throw punches at the bag but don’t throw yourself at the bag. Stand on your own two feet and don’t fall into the bag. Keeping your balance makes for better punching power and better footwork around the heavybag.
Don’t use the bag to hold you up. Don’t push with your shoulders; this bad habit allows skilled fighters to keep you off-balance by moving when they feel you leaning into them. Worst of all, do not push the bag around with your head; that’s just a great way to leave yourself open for uppercuts.
3. Punch, Don’t Push
Don’t push the bag, hit it. Don’t make the bag swing all over the place, give it a seizure. There’s an old saying that goes, “If you want to know who’s hitting the bag correctly, just ask the blind man.” This is because you can tell if you’re punching correctly just by listening to the sound of your punches hitting the bag. What you want a snapping SMACK sound when you punch it and not a dull THUD sound. In case you don’t know, I wrote guide a while back: How to Throw a Snapping Punch
A push punch will only push the bag around as your arms get tired. A fast snap punch will jolt the bag in place with a big smack sound. Relax your arms and throw quick snapping punches. Commit some power but don’t have your fist making contact with the bag for too long. As soon as you make contact, return that fist and throw the next punch. You can always tell if you’re pushing if your arms are getting tired quickly. Again, limit the amount of time your fist makes contact with the bag.
4. Ground Your Feet When You Punch
Plant those feet when you punch. Being grounded means more balance, more power, more control, more mobility to move away after the punch, more everything! You can move around all you want but when it comes time to punch, ground your feet! If you find it hard to keep your feet on the ground, just take smaller steps when you move around. The pros punch so much harder because their feet are always on the ground even as they move around the ring.
5. Move Your Feet When You’re Not Punching
Move your hands or move your feet.
As my trainer use to say, “Move your hands or move your feet or move your head.” If you’re not making an offensive move, you’re making a defensive move. Because a heavy bag isn’t punching you, we won’t worry about head movement but we can definitely work on foot movement. Always move when you finish punching.
Keep Your Distance
Maintain a proper distance at all times. Move with the bag and keep it at arms reach at all times. Don’t let the bag get too far or too close. Don’t be lazy with your legs. Move with the bag instead of standing there and waiting for it to come to you. Back up when it comes at you and follow it if it swings away. If you can’t move your feet as swiftly as the bag swings, you need to lighten up the punches or get a heavier bag…or develop better footwork.
6. Don’t Wait
This is what seperates the men from the boys. Watch any professional fighter work the heavybag and you’ll see that they’re ALWAYS throwing punches. Even when they rest, they only rest for maybe 2 seconds at most.
The beginners are always waiting around in between combinations. They’ll throw big punches and then just walk around for 5-10 seconds to catch their breath. These long periods of inactivity will kill you. Real fights don’t have 10-second breaks for you to catch your breath.
The moment you stop punching, your opponent starts punching.
So what’s the moral of the story? –NEVER STOP PUNCHING! You don’t always have to punch hard, but you have to keep throwing. Put in some light punches and jab as you move around the bag to catch your breath. When you’re ready to throw the big shots again, step in and fire away.
7. Less Power, More Breathing
Hitting the heavy bag is a lot like running–it’s all about the breathing! Don’t worry so much about trying to hit hard. Focus on explosive breathing, not explosive punches. Stay relaxed and work on your breathing so you don’t get tired.
Power comes from good technique,
endurance comes from good breathing.
Power and endurance has very little to do with how much effort you put into your punches. The pros throw hundreds of power punches using nothing but good technique and breathing. Good breathing allows you to stay relaxed and throw many punches without tiring out. Good technique allows you to deliver maximum power without wasting any of the energy you put into the punch.
Don’t let the bag wear you out. A bag works at your rhythm which is only when you want to punch. Learn how to conserve your energy for more challenging workouts like the double-end bag or sparring. If you’re still getting tired against a heavy bag, you’re not ready for competition.
8. Throw 3-6 Punches
Throwing 3 to 6 punches at a time is the sweet spot. Not 1, not 2, and NOT 10. It’s enough to do damage, yet short enough for you to get out before your opponent fires back. Combo all your punches together. Try some normal combos (1-2-1-2, 1-2-3, etc) as well as some unorthodox combos (1-3-2, 3-1-2-3-3, etc). Fights are fought in combinations, not single punches. Keep throwing combinations and keep up that rhythm.
Aim your punches high for the head and low for the body. The biggest problem I see is people who don’t punch high enough for the head. Come time to fight, their shoulders get tired because they’re not use to punching high.
9. Be Active When You Rest
Everybody gets tired.
The important thing is that you’re always doing something.
Don’t just stand there when you get tired. Keep moving! If you’re going to rest, do it as you’re moving around and throwing light punches. Do NOT rest by leaning on the bag or doing your Mike Tyson slip choreography. Worst of all, do not rest by standing still like a punching bag.
10. Keep Your Hands Up
You have to be careful not to get carried away with your power.
It’s easy to be lazy on defense when the bag isn’t punching back.
You THINK your hands are up but you don’t really know until you get punched. You could be racking up hundreds of hours on the heavy bag developing a bad habit and not find out how open you are until you step into the ring. Don’t drop your right hand when you throw the jab and especially do not drop your right hand when you throw the left hook. Don’t just cover your head; keep your elbows down to protect the body as well. The most helpful tip I can recommend is to have a trainer or friend watch you and yell at you every time you drop your hands.
Heavy Bag Training
The heavy bag training is for developing efficient power, not absolute power. You’re not breaking bricks with a single punch. You need power punches you can sustain throughout an entire fight, not just for one round. Keep your hands up, move around the bag, and make sure you’re always throwing fast punches. Pay attention, stay balance, and work that bag! If you do it right, it gets easy. The heavy bag becomes a warm-up for the real workout, which is in the ring.
(VIDEO COMING SOON!)





















47 Comments
THANK YOU
really hekpfull technics, in my case, the best i learned, is to never stop punching, don’t wait that 5-10 seconds before you star the next combination!
Johnny, never loose the strengh for teaching
Greatings from Portugal
Great Article
Man, you sure know your stuff. I set up a heavy bag up at my house that hangs from a tree outside. The limb it hangs off of is about 40 feet in the air so when the bag moves, it moves as much as a real guy would in the ring. You can cut the bag off, stalk the bag, keep it at your range as you move and pivot out when comes at you. One of my best inventions yet… Got the idea from a basketball gymnasium that had a haevy bag hanging from the cieling. Now if I could just invent something that would punch at back at me…;-)
thanks like alway your number 1!
thanks for the tips!
i’ve been reading your articles for some time now. All your articles are really helpful. As for current instructions the “always punch” tip was the best. I have a bag at home and my rests are quite big thinking what i’ve read right now. I’ll try everything from what you’re writting.
Yukon Boxing
Another great article with solid tips!
@DKL – I always had a fantasy that I could do something like that! I hate when a bag swings back at me too quickly!
@everyone else – THANK YOU! Stay tuned, guys. I have some really really good stuff coming. I just need some pictures and video.
khanmuneeb16@gmail.com
i will be thankful to you for dat info. i hope i will start my boxing career with dat and i hope i will succeed.
@muneeb – GOOD LUCK!
Great article!
Awesome tips which I have followed to improve my boxing. It would be great if you could link to a video with some great examples of bagwork.
Also, you didn’t mention to keep your chin DOWN!
Keep up the good work!
Thanks MuayThaiViper, I’ll have to put a video together. And oh yeah, better keep that chin down EVERYONE!
Wouahh
Now i throw punches like Muhamed Ali
Thanks
Thanks. it’s awesome and usefull. I’m going to Use this types to develop my boxing.
on the breathing part do u inhale as hard as when ur punching exhale out hope I didnt confuse you or would u say breathe in as normal as possible exhale hard as u punch?
@uso – usually, you inhale in one deep breath but exhale in short tiny breaths. With each short exhale, you throw one sharp punch. Don’t try to waste all your air into one punch.
Hello Johnny N,
Would you please teach us the proper technique to hit a double end bag. By the way, I train at Eddie Herredia Boxing Club in East Los Angeles, California. I am 5’8 and weight 135 lbs. And, I have sparred with 1997 National Golden Gloves Light welterweight champion Adam “Bomb” Reyes, and former WBC Light middle weight champion Sergio “Latin Snake” Mora. So, If you need a sparring partner for any of your students, you have a rooster right here.
Thank you,
Gonzo
Hector Gil
Thanks for being available, Gonzo. I might be able to learn a lot of things from you. The proper way to hit the double-end bag is to try to touch it. Treat it like a speed bag, just try to touch it at first and consistently touch it for a whole round. Then slowly put a little more power until you can hit it non-stop without missing. I have a guide coming out, just need pictures and video.
Do you think a freestanding bag is as good as a hanging bag, right now i can only access a freestanding bag.
No way, not at all Joe…but if it’s all you got, then you’ll have to make do with it.
what are the advantages of a hanging bag?
It moves around forcing you to use your feet to move with it. Also because it moves, you have to be a little more alert and accurate.
Thanks for the advice johnny, it seems I can get a hanging bag after all i found one that I can afford.
Hey Johnny,
My coach told me when I hit the heavy bag I’m too close to it and should take more advantage of my longer reach. When I do step back though I feel like my punches have no pep to them and occasionally locking my joints with nothing to hit hurts. Any tips on finding my range better or faster with a heavy bag?
Winnie, learn to stand so that your punch connects within the last 3 inches of full arm extension. Your elbows are hurting because of hyper-extension. It happens to me too sometimes — very painful. Make sure you warm-up your joints with lots of soft shadowboxing before you throw hard punches.
Thanks Johnny! Gonna try it out.
Exelente articulo!!!! now my heavy bag will know whos is the boss. thanks coach!!
Make a video of you destroying the bag and post it!
I’ve been training boxers for decades and these are some great tips. Realistic, clear, nuanced. I especially liked the one about the lazy eye. I always find boxers looking down at the ground in front of them. And I’m always telling them to relax their face — their eyes.
But thanks again. I learned a lot from your post.
Gordon,
For some reason, I felt like your name was familiar so I looked it up. I read this post before: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/15/boxing-lessons/ and found it to be particularly enlightening. I’ll be sharing it on the ExpertBoxing Facebook later. It’s an honor to have you post here. Thank you.
for the punching bad should i just throw my favorite combinations? im very new to a gym (only a week) since i know i have a long way to go i just try to master one punch at a time for now. proper cross proper hook, i even did the “overhand right/hook” you explained to me, i also like to practice all different types of jabs, eventually i want to get to the point where i can be on the move plant land all in a milli second and keep moving , do i have a good game plan for the bag johnny by doing that?
If you’re new to training, learn the basic combinations from your trainer and practice them. Master those first before experimenting with new ones. Practicing different kinds of jabs is a good idea.
This site provides pretty much all the internet based information I’ll ever need when it comes to boxing. Johnny, thank you for your effort!
thank you johnny. and is it a good idea to train one punch at a time to perfect each punch then slowly adding punches? or should i just do combos?
Do both.
I’ve been hitting the heavy bag for a few months now and noticed that my knuckles have been bruising. I use handwraps and tend to wrap with a bit more cushion around my knuckles and I wear 16 oz gloves, but the bruising still happens. I never dig my punches into the bag either, I try to do faster punches with minimal contact time with the bag. The bruising doesn’t bother me, but my wife complains that it’s not pleasant to look at. I’m 160 lbs so should I consider getting heavier gloves? I can’t seem to find that many 18 oz gloves online. The 3 that I was looking into were:
Fighting Tri-Tech $100
Title Platinum – $80
Title Black – $200
Have you tried any of them? The Title Platinum seems to be my top choice right now, but only because it’s the cheapest of the 3. Dishing out $200 dollars for boxing gloves is a bit much unless they’re absolutely amazing.
You might have bad form Tyrone. I would pick Title Platinum out of the 3 gloves. You also shouldn’t be beaten on the heavy bag for more than 3-5 rounds a day. Start working with the other bags or other equipment. As you already know, too much of anything can be bad.
Thanks for the advice Johnny! I’ll work with the trainer more so he can give me some pointers on my form. Definitely gonna take it easy on the the heavy bag training as well.
Hi Tyrone. I saw Adidas has some 18 oz. gloves for $99 on the Title website.
I put two homemade slip bags about a foot in front of my heavybag. I’ll swing both slip bags and then work the heavybag with both slip bags acting like punches coming at me. I have to slip, bob, weave and duck and counterpunch and it works great for me. Have you ever heard of anyone doing this?
You’re the first person, Micah! So I have to ask: does it work? Is your fighting getting better?
Yeah, I think it has made slipping punches more of an instinct instead of a conscious thing, and it has greatly improved my counterpunching speed (its only a split second to punch back), and it has developed my eye for seeing openings in which i fire a straight right or jab. I start sparring again next month and I can’t wait to see how well my counter right and counter left hook go with my long range jab (drowning style). The new slipping article is awesome by the way.
Nice article.
I often see people at my gym pounding the heavy bag hard and sure they are working their power – but I like to hit the heavy bag at about 50% and concentrate on speedy combinations/movement. Whenever I say to my trainer I’m working my speed he replies that the “bag is for power, the speed bag is for speed”, then tells my to throw 100% at it. I mix up my speedy combos with a few 100% shots here and there, but I’m concentrating more on speed. Would you say I was correct in that the heavy bag is a underutilized tool for developing speedy combos with power because most people just look to throw 100%ers?
Your right Liam. The heavy bag doesn’t have to be for power all the time. It’s a great bag to work speedy combos.
i am a complete beginner to boxing, and i suck at learning things by reading them, i would love to learn to box but i dont want to really compete, maybe spar a little, if i were to join a a gym or something would they take me seriously even though i wouldnt be like a prized fighter…..do they care? im not sure what im asking..srry ……guess what im asking is would they help me even though i suck and its not my main priority?
Trainers will take you seriously if you really want to learn. At some point though, you’ll have to accept that your learning will be limited if you’re unwilling to test your skills at the highest level by sparring. But anyway, everybody starts somewhere. It’s not like everyone walks into the gym thinking they’ll be champion one day. Give it a shot and see if you like it.
Can a narrow heavy bag mess up your technique as far as proper stance (feet position and body angle)?
No. Stand in front of it as if it was a real human being.
47 Comments