
This guide will train you on the most important weapon in boxing – THE JAB! All great boxers like Muhammad Ali and Oscar De La Hoya can win an entire fight with the jab alone. If you want to be even just a good boxer, you WILL need a good jab.
BOXING JAB THEORY
What makes a jab special and what does the jab do?
The jab is quick, fast, and sets up your shots. People with excellent jabs have calm relaxed jabs that hit like a small spark of power and hit very accurately. Jabs can be made stronger by stepping forward, proper timing, and using footwork and angles. Your jab should be strong enough to stop your opponent in the middle of a combination, no more, no less. From there, your jab should be able to set you up to throw your power punches. When use defensively, a jab can make space, keep your opponents away and distract your opponent while you slide off the ropes.
TYPES OF JABS
There are many different types of jabs and many ways to use the jab in boxing. Below are a few ideas to get you started but it’s best to use what works best.
Regular – The regular jab or the standard jab is just that – a jab. You throw the jab from the basic position and step forward with your lead foot as your extend your arm out towards your opponent. As you recover your lead arm, the rear foot moves forward to return you to your basic stance.
Tapper - This is a light punch that is used just to make your opponent put up his defenses to give you room to make a bigger punch or to skip out of harm’s way. A tapper jab can be repeated multiple times. The main point is to use the tapper jab to get your opponent’s defenses up; in the meanwhile, you’re holding all your energy back for your big right hand since you’re not committing too much to the jab. You can even tap his glove, and then right-hand to his face. Or tap his face and right-hand to his body. (Often used by Bernard Hopkins and Joe Calzaghe)
Space-Maker – This is the same as the tapper jab except that you leave your arm almost fully extended and so your jab is quicker but weaker since it’s not traveling such a far distance. You leave your left arm almost extended and throw small jabs and push as you make space and keep your opponent at bay. The space maker can be thrown multiple times as your circle around to your opponent’s right side. (Left handers will do the opposite) An important thing to notice about the space-maker jab is that it’s there to just distract the opponent. It’s very quick and flashy, not strong so you have to make sure not to pull your arm all the way back. If you’re throwing multiple tapper jabs, leave arm almost fully extending as you throw multiple jabs to keep your opponent busy. It is VERY important to keep an eye out for your opponent’s right hand since extending your left arm leaves you vulnerable to punches no that side of your head. Also, ALWAYS be moving around when you use the space-maker; if you stand still and stretch your arm you will get hit with the hard right counter. (often used by Kostya Tszyu)
Power Jab – This can sometimes be more of a left cross than a jab. A power jab gets its power from your legs, your body rotation, and your angle on your opponent. For the legs to generate power into the jab, you have to step forward. You have to step swiftly and powerfully without lunging. At times, a lunging jab might be the perfect weapon to catch your opponent off guard but don’t do it too much or else you’ll get countered. The success of lunging punches requires perfect timing, NOT speed. For your body to power the jab, it has to rotate a bit. The easiest way to rotate your body as you jab is to circle to your opponent’s right side, which is your left side. As your circle, your upper body will have to spin a bit to give you a straight angle shot at your opponent. The movement alone will set your body to move out to the side and throw the punch at your opponent at an angle. Using this angle makes the jab even more devastating. The most important thing to remember through all this is not to cock your jab and send out a signal that you’re going to throw a big jab. (Often used by Floyd Mayweather and Miguel Cotto)
The Double Jab – The double jab is exactly what it sounds like – one good jab followed by another. The effectiveness of this punch relies on your opponent anticipating a one-two combination. He’s look for your right hand after your jab but instead you catch him off guard with another jab. The double jab works well when followed by a straight right to the head or body. Another way to use the double jab is when you find yourself in a jab contest where both of you are trading jabs and trying to through 1-2 combinations. If your opponent is throwing a 1-2 (jab followed by right-hand), your double jab should counter effectively. Your first jab will trade or nullify with his jab, and your second jab will intercept the right hand and score the point. If he throws a left hook afterwards, your right-hand follow-up should be able to intercept that and score as well. A double jab can be used while moving forward backwards, or sideways. It’s also important that you make it a hard enough punch so that it has the power to stun your opponent if he tries to throw a straight right. (Often used by Oscar De La Hoya and Marco Antonio Barrera)
Body-Jab – This jab is thrown to the body. While it may not be strong enough to do damage to the body, it can distract your opponent and force him to drop his guard while you punch to his head with your right hand. (Often used by Shane Mosley and Arturo Gatti)
The Counter Jab – The move is done with slick timing and works best when you are swift and relaxed. If you tense up or act like you have a counter, it won’t work as well. Here’s how it works: when your opponent throws a jab, you immediately, WITHOUT flinching your head back, stop his jab with your right glove, and then step forward and hit him directly in the face with a hard jab. Make sure your head is leaning to the rear a little or else you risk getting hit by his hard right hand if he follows up with it. If he lunges with his jab, you can also take a step back as you block his jab, and then come back forward to strike him with your own. Sometimes, people don’t expect you to go back and forward right away. (Often used by Erik Morales)
WAYS TO COUNTER AGAINST THE JAB
Unfortunately, a very good jab will be very hard to defend against. A jabber can be very difficult to get inside against, and at times downright annoying. It’s also very frustrating in amateur bouts since points can be scored even for ‘weak’ punches like the jab. Listed below are a variety of multiple ways to counter a good jab.
Change Distance – One way to defend against the jab is to keep moving in and out of distance. Boxers who use the jab often are usually very aware of the distance between themselves and their opponents.
Right-Hook – This counter is effective against tall boxers or boxers who leave their head standing upright when they throw the jab. You can easily beat the jab by coming straight in with your body, bringing your head to the inside of the jab and throwing a high right hook to your opponent’s head. It’s a devastating counter and one that leads to many knockouts since the other fighter usually doesn’t see the right hand coming. Again, the right-hand over the jab is one of the most devastating punches in boxing because of the opponent’s vulnerability to the blind angle.
Parry to Straight-Right – This counter works against boxers who throw a lazy jab or like to punch a jab and leave it hanging out there for too long before recovering. This counter-punch also works well when the other boxer is getting tired and leaves his arms out. All you have to do is tap down on the opponent’s hand and parry it slightly down as you quickly come forward and throw your straight-right hand right over it. This counter requires you to be on your toes and have your body leaning slightly forward as you see the jab coming.
Never Flinch – It is important that you never ever try flinch when the opponent’s jab is thrown. If you do that, it would be very easy for him to time your flinch movement, fake you out, and land a big punch later on.
WAYS TO SETUP THE JAB
There are many theories to properly using the jab aside from the methods I’ve listed above.
End with a Jab – Most fighters like to end their combo’s with a big right hand. The problem is that if you miss, your opponent could easily counter you. There’s an easy fix for this, end with a backstep jab. As you finish your combo, see if he’s gonna lunge after you. If he does, pop him with a jab as your step back with your rear foot and leap away. The jab scores an extra point for you but also defends you from his counter right hand should he come after you.
Jab Up and Down – That’s right. Jab to head, throw to body. Jab to the body and throw to the head.
Light-Hard – Throw a light jab to his gloves and throw a hard jab through it. Throw a light jab to the body and hard jab to the face. Or throw a hard jab to the face and follow it with a quick light jab to keep his defenses up while you throw a hard right hand to the body. You don’t always have to throw a light jab, you could just fake a jab instead.
Jab-right fake-jab – Throw a jab, fake a right-hand, and jab again.
Jab- step back-jab – Throw a jab, step back out of range as he misses his counter, and quickly come forward and throw another jab. Sometimes, you can be so fast that he doesn’t expect it. Other times you can time it. Follow-up with hard shots if he’s vulnerable.
FINAL THOUGHTS
The jab clearly is the best weapon in boxing. It can hurt your opponent, defend you from a right hand, create space for you, push your opponents away, and even tear flesh off your opponent’s face. Practice it and use it. A good method to train would be to put little pieces of tape on your punching bag and to jab at it to improve accuracy. As always, I welcome other great jab tips and will be adding to this page in the future.





















45 Comments
Southpaws
What about southpaws? How should an orthodox fighter use a jab effectively against a southpaw? And how should he defend a southpaw jab?
jabbing southpaws
When you jab a southpaw, there are several different “attitudes” or frames of mind you can use.
- You can put yourself in a battle of reach. Many southpaw fighters do this to orthodox fighters so it does work if you do it back to them. What you do is stand sideways so that your left shoulder is in front of your head and you get a very long jab. Use this long jab to tag them from far away. This works well if have longer arms or superior timing.
- Step right and jab.
- When he jabs you, bend at the waist and jab to his right ribs. If the throws the left hand at your lowered head, quickly straighten your back (pulling your head out of the way) and whack him with your right hand.
- You can also throw quick little left hooks that aren’t meant to land and then push out to a jab immediately after. If he’s not paying attention, he’ll go lazy once he sees that the left hook won’t reach, that’s when your jab immediately follows and pops him.
how can i increase the angles at which i throw the jab.
increasing jab angles for punching
To find new angles to jab you do the following:
- aim at a different part of the body. You have the forehead, the chin, the chest, the stomach, the ribs, the ear. If you want to just distract him, you can throw your jab at the air, his gloves, his shoulder, his elbow.
- move your own body before you jab. Step to the side, or dip at the waist, or pivot yourself at bit.
Thanks Johnny
Very Interesting article on the jab Johnny, It gives a trainer or coach many different concepts for utilizing the jab. You have obviously had a lot of experience in the finer points of technical boxing and have really thought out the finer nuances of how to employ the jab in many different facets. I really enjoy insights.
Mikey Capp
Thanks, Mikey
I have some more great technical articles to come on boxing fighting.
What about Ike Quartey?
what about Ike Quartey?
Sorry, I didn’t understand your question.
I just mean his jab isn’t mentioned in the article. He had a great jab.
thanks for the tips there very good
jabs
Khalaf, Quartey definitely had a great jab. Very powerful very powerful.
Peter, thank you.
thanks for the information…..n those techniques r working so far
JABS
Thanks Rado
great tips!
ive been trying so hard to get the jab down and its been very frustrating. everyone says i do it good but im a perfectionist haha. i really like that last tip you said about jabbing, stepping out, then jabbing again. it almost always seems to work against agressive fighters and people who try to counter. Great tips!
@Devon – the step jab is king! I’m glad it worked for you. And you’re definitely a step ahead of the game in knowing that there’s always room for improvement.
brilliant coach. wish i knew all this stuff back in my time. i read your `how to beat taller guys’ article, i could have a few points there you missed but this totally schooled me man
wow you guys on the site youre so damn lucky. the 6 years i boxed must have talked to 20 plus trainers and NO ONE pointed out the stuff you did
???
what about flicker jabs and othr specific jab?
@amari
the flicker is a jab with the hand at the hip, thrown with the arm twisting so it sometimes lands with the normal clockwise turn from your viewpoint sometimes lands almost like a backhand on the speedbag. normal jabs spin one way.
it needs 1. a left hand hand down stance (not normal) 2. really fast speed 3. really fast reflexive sense of when an opponent is open to a punch and in range. roy jones used it, and its a very good move to use if u wanna psych out an opinion but obviously if ure not a hands down or at least left hand down guy its useless
contrary to what some ppl think this is NOT just showboating it actually does cut, and it is harder to counter, because a guy can combine that punch with the feint and go to the body or throw a body shot instead. it has some snap behind it, and the worst thing it does is it cuts, and makes you look more dominant in front of judges.
how to do it:
1. put your left hand on your hip really loose.
2. find the split second where you can tattoo your opponent with it
3. throw the punch like youre whipping a tiny handkerchief from that hip position
4. make it snappy dont paw or push and throw something else or just go for a combo
it cuts cuz facial skin hates being pulled up but is easier to pull down. thats why everyone suggests you shave with a downward motion rather than upward. this punch in particular is scratching leather across skin down to up (in an upward motion) and i believe that medically that’s the reason it caused cuts its tommy hearns’ opponents. its not a punch you can double up on or anything.
coach has already defined every `conventional jab’. others that arent conventional:
the pivot jab-as you pivot on the left foot you jab to hit a guy going towards your right. you can also use it to deter him moving sideways. left hook specialists love this because ppl are always going to the right away from the left hook and can time the movement. its much faster than modifying the jab or turning the body and jabbing. jabs dont carry power when youre pivoting to your right but amateurs use them.
the jab-cross: it starts with a normal range finding or tap jab, and then on the second jab which follows almost immediately with the arm pulling back say 3 inches you put all the weight onto the front foot. this was called the heavy foot or the leading foot fall by oldtimers. basically practice the foot motion by stepping forward with the left rapidly without moving your right at all. your foot should catch you from falling, and on canvas or even tile it should make a huge sound, thats all the weight of your body falling on that foot. when you can coordinate that foot with the landing of the second punch, it has cross-like power. at the least it can stun fighters and if they dont know u can do this, you can score a flash knock down, getting a 10-8 round. its also kind of confusing to the other fighter whos probably gonna think you have more power than you do.
the twist jab-again unconventional, its the jab but with a huge twist element. a jab twists anyways, but the aim of this jab is to really burn some leather onto the skin. it cuts up fighters and if you watch robinson or ali throwing punches in later rounds once they got a puncher’s eye in trouble they’d close it up by focusing on the turn. the timing’s gotta be right cuz this punch isnt going to send someones head back as much as it will cut them or make a swollen eye close. think of it as the conventional alternative to the flicker jab. twist your forearm on contact real sharp. btw its painful to throw this punch bare knuckle on the heavy bag-try it and see-your own hand will get cut up
theres the run away jab, as you back pedal, you can score a point, get someone chasing you offbalance or go def-off. while backpedaling, when you land the backfoot, instead of continuing backwards push you forward as soon as you land, move the front foot forward from the knee, land the jab, and use the front foot to push you back immediately. floyd uses this, pernell whitaker and pep.
swarmers use a variation jab that comes from below, as they move in. we’re talking tyson or joe frazier style. as the puncher slips the right usually he throws his own jab which coming from below. and it can be followed by a right cross or a right hook upstairs. its quite unconventional, but u can see tyson, frazier, basilio landing this punch. i used this punch for variety, because the natural thing to do after slipping a right as you move in is a hook upstairs. jabbing when slipping the jab is possible i suppose one would only do it for variety. the real punch you want to throw is of course a body shot with your left hand.
jabs arent magic u really need the imp 3-4. no fighter can use all diff types. but i think thats it for boxing and the use of jabs, ive even included the more silly ones.
@amari – I’ve got to update this article. There are so many other jabs I left out. The flicker jab is like a backhand “tapper” jab with the elbows pointed sideways. Commonly used by long-arm fighters that don’t have muscle to really corkscrew each jab.
correct way to connect
in some of your articles you mention hurting of wrists from bad form and something about arthritus if continuous pounding it may sound dumb to experienced guys but how are your wrists supposed to be when you punch and is there a safeway to punch?
Vertical fist jab
I have recently begun training at a gym in Seoul, South Korea. The coaches here have been instructing me to use a vertical fist jab instead of the orthodox, parallel fist jab. Due to language barriers, I haven’t been able to figure out why, but I am curious as to whether this method of instruction is standard for newbies, unique to Korea, or if anyone has encountered this sort of thing before. Thanks for any and all help and input.
@newbie – your wrist should be straight when you punch. Punch light on the bag without handwraps or gloves and you will see what I mean. You have to punch with a perfectly straight wrist or else it hurts.
@ian – I answered your question in the “5 types of jabs” article
You forgot the “Spear Jab” and the “Up Jab”
So many more jabs to add. I’m going to have to update this super old article.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdNSZWq_8eA
May i get your opinion on this article? Good set up with the jab?
It’s a great video of a great fighter, J. Definitely some good strategy, but not the only strategy.
Of course johnny thats what makes the art of boxing so amazing the fact that their is so many different ways to do this or that. making the sport so amazing and beautiful. By everyone having their own way of doing things boxing naturally evolves on its own due to the fact there are very young fighters learning these different strategies and converting them into their own. And for the next generation after that and so on and so forth……
dont you think this needs a little bit of updating? if so just add to or re-exsplain in another light what’s already been said but embracing a new type of learning and sentence structure. just a suggestion, i like this guide it inspired me to look up the top five jabs on youtube with all the heavyweights greats. thanks for the 5 star data again, hope to hear from you soon…………
examples of the spear and up jabs,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAbJNL2Xlv8&feature=related
may i get your opinion if possible johnny?
Those are legitimate boxing techniques, commonly used by many boxers.
Hey Johnny,
what do you think of this one here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uJMP1fU7cI
I’ve heard it called the up-jab or the vertical jab. It’s very commonly used, I wouldn’t make it your default but jab but it’s definitely effective and helpful in different tactical situations.
when i throw a double jab do they have to be just two jabs only? or could i do this EXAMPLE:step jab then pivot jab, step back jab and pivot jab, tapper jab and power jab
You can throw more than two.
ok so they can be different types of jabs?
Yes.
Hello Johnny,
i realy enjoyed this article and it´s great to read, especially your exambles. Iám a tall guy and want to perfect my jab to the “ultimate” weapon:) So this week i will try all the exambles of the jabs you mentioned. This whole page is really amazing and iám happy that i finaly found it. It gives such a fun to read more and more and exercise it every week with a little succes. I bought also diffrent boxing technique books but you directly bring it to the point. Your article about the snap punch combined with the jab exambles will be my future work out for a long time:) Thank you and keep on going…..
Best regards from Germany
Philipp
I’m happy for you Philipp. Snapping punches and mastering the jab is definitely the way to go. Good luck to you.
I never thought of a jab in the context of being a left cross.
Interesting.
I’ll keep that in mind when I work the heavybag next.
I read a tip in one of your other articles that talked about getting your hips into the jab by dropping them right before you jab, then using your legs to power into it as you pivot your lead foot.
I tried it earlier, and it did give my jab more power and snap. Great tip.
Big fan of the website Johhny looking forward to the next tutorial. Need a bit of advice. I am relatively new to sparring and the guy who I sparr against is an experienced amatuer with far superior technical ability to my own. The problem is every time I through my jab he seems to lean back and counter with his own jab, catching me almost every time. Should I automatically slip to the inside when i through my jab in anticipation of his counter or is there something more effective I can do?
If he’s better than you, he will easily counter everything you do no matter what. His takiming will be better every time. There is no rule saying you have to slip this way or that way. The most effective way is to raise your skill level. The answer is not in the movement but rather, in the awareness of what is happening. Once you understand what’s going on: how & when he’s hitting you, you can respond in whatever way you want.
Ok no magic answer then just a case of practicing more, kind of expected that to be honest haha. Cheers anyway
whenever i jab my fist shakes during the end so my accuracy is not that good do u have any tips regarding this problem?
More shadowboxing. Do the movement slow before you speed it up.
45 Comments