Tag Archives: Boxing strength and conditioning program

Boxing training the 4 unspoken steps


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The 4 Phases of Boxing Training (The System That Makes You a Better Puncher & Boxer)

If you’ve ever wondered how to structure your boxing training so you actually get better—not just tired—this is the blueprint.

This is the Boxing Coach Juan Curriculum Framework, the same framework you use with beginners, everyday people, elite amateurs, and pros. It’s the roadmap that connects:

  • Technique →
  • Strength →
  • Explosiveness →
  • Conditioning

Most people mix everything together, burn themselves out, or train explosiveness before building strength or skill. This system fixes that.


Phase 1 — General Physical Preparation (GPP)

Goal: Build the foundation—strength endurance, aerobic base, and clean technique.

This is where EVERYONE starts. Beginners may stay here for months. A pro may stay here for a couple of weeks after a layoff.

Main components:

  • Technique work / skill learning (always first)
  • 1×20–30 strength endurance to build joints, tendons, and total-body durability
  • Aerobic conditioning (running mechanics + easy runs)
  • Shadowboxing with slow, clean mechanics
  • Bag work at low intensity (focus on alignment, weight shift, hip turn)

This is the “build the engine” phase. No explosive work yet. No max conditioning. You’re laying the foundation that EVERYTHING else depends on.


Phase 2 — Specialized Physical Preparation (SPP)

Goal: Transition into explosiveness, speed, and boxing-specific strength.

Once the movement is clean and the body is strong enough, this phase turns the technique into speed and power.

Main components:

  • Technique → then speed/explosive work (medicine ball punches, plyo pushups, cord punches)
  • Specialized strength (movements that increase punching force)
  • General strength after specialized work
  • Harder bag work with snap and speed
  • More specific footwork patterns

This is where you START to feel dangerous. Speed picks up, punches get sharper, and your conditioning begins to reflect real boxing demands.


Phase 3 — Competitive Phase

Goal: Peak without burning out.

This is where fighters get it wrong—they keep trying to “get stronger” or “get in shape” during fight prep. That’s a mistake.

In this phase the heavy work is DONE.

Main components:

  • Stay fresh
  • Maintain explosiveness (short, ATP-based sets)
  • Maintain speed
  • Sharpen timing, rhythm, reactions
  • Controlled sparring + tactical work

You’re not trying to build new qualities. You’re expressing what you already built in Phase 1 and Phase 2.


Phase 4 — Deload / Post-Competition

Goal: Heal, recover, reset.

Your body just went through weeks (or months) of work. This phase protects your longevity.

Main components:

  • Technique only
  • Light aerobic work
  • Active recovery (other sports, light movement)
  • Returning back to Phase 1 when ready

This phase prevents burnout and keeps you healthy for long-term progress.


The 5-Step Session Structure (What Makes This System Different)

No matter what phase you’re in, every training day follows this order:

  1. Technique
  2. Speed / explosive work (Phase 2–3 only)
  3. Specialized strength
  4. General strength
  5. Conditioning

This order is what transforms people—beginners, parents, amateurs, pros—into strong, explosive, skilled boxers without burning them out.


Conclusion

This 4-phase system is the reason your clients change fast.
It gives clarity. It gives structure. It gives RESULTS.

Show up Monday–Friday…
Follow the phase you belong in…
And your technique, conditioning, and speed grow together—no chaos, no guesswork.


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Boxing Strength Training

Phase 1 — General Physical Preparation (GPP): The Foundation of Real Boxing Strength

If you want to hit harder, last longer, move better, and develop true boxing athleticism — it starts right here. Phase 1, also known as GPP, is the beginning of the Boxing Coach Juan Curriculum Framework. This is where beginners build their base and where experienced fighters rebuild their structure after a long season or a fight.

GPP is simple but powerful: you are strengthening joints, building aerobic capacity, fixing mechanics, and preparing the body for the real work that comes later.


What Phase 1 Actually Is

Phase 1 is NOT about intensity or explosiveness. It’s about building the engine — slowly, correctly, and consistently.

  • Stronger joints and connective tissue through the 1×20–30 method
  • Aerobic base building for movement quality and endurance
  • Technique first — slow, clean, correct punches
  • Structural balance: hips, core, feet, shoulders
  • Low stress + high volume to build durability

This phase is where real athletes are made.


The Structure of a Phase 1 Training Session

Every GPP session follows your exact system:

  1. Technique / Skill Learning (always first)
  2. No explosive work yet — technique comes first
  3. No specialized strength yet — that’s Phase 2
  4. General Strength using the 1×20–30 approach
  5. Aerobic conditioning — running & rhythm-based bag work

This order develops a boxer safely and correctly.


How Long Should Phase 1 Last?

  • Beginners: 6–12 months
  • Everyday people training with you: 4–12 weeks
  • Elite fighters: 2–4 weeks after a fight

You don’t exit Phase 1 until your technique, aerobic base, and joint strength are locked in.


Why Phase 1 Matters

If you skip Phase 1, your explosiveness will never reach its full potential and your conditioning won’t stick.

This is the layer that prepares your body for:

  • Specialized strength (Phase 2)
  • Explosive power (Phase 2 & 3)
  • Fight prep (Phase 3)

Without this phase, the rest of the system collapses.


Conclusion

Phase 1 — GPP — is the foundation of the entire Boxing Coach Juan system. If you take it seriously, every phase after this becomes easier, safer, and more productive.

From beginners to world-level fighters, everyone starts here.


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Your Boxing Training Questions Answered

The Boxing Coach Juan Curriculum Framework: The 4 Phases of Real Boxing Training

This is the real system behind elite boxing development.
Not random combinations. Not “workouts.” Not chaos.

The Boxing Coach Juan Curriculum Framework organizes a boxer’s entire year into 4 strategic phases — each with its own purpose, goal, and method. This is how beginners develop correctly and how elite fighters peak at the right time.


Phase 1 — General Physical Preparation (GPP)

This is the foundation. Everything starts here.

  • Strengthen every joint using the 1×20–30 method
  • Build aerobic conditioning for movement quality + endurance
  • Develop clean punching mechanics (slow, controlled, technical)
  • Fix structural weaknesses (hips, core, feet, shoulders)

How long?
Beginners: 6–12 months
Everyday people: 4–12 weeks
Elite fighters: 2–4 weeks after a fight

Skipping Phase 1 destroys technique, explosiveness, and long-term development. This phase is mandatory.


Phase 2 — Specialized Physical Preparation (SPP)

Now the training becomes boxing-specific.

  • Specialized strength focused on joint actions of punching
  • Speed + explosive development begins
  • Footwork mechanics become sharper and more explosive
  • Neuromuscular pathways of punches are reinforced

This is where you start becoming a complete boxer — strong in the right places, explosive in the right patterns, and efficient under movement stress.


Phase 3 — Competitive Period

This phase is one thing only: WINNING.

  • Maintain strength — don’t build it (too much = fatigue)
  • Maximize explosiveness and speed
  • Sharpen the game plan
  • Stay fresh and avoid overtraining

Your technique, explosiveness, and timing must be crisp here. The goal is peak performance, not volume or fatigue.


Phase 4 — Post-Competitive / Deload Period

After the fight, your body and nervous system need recovery.

  • Active rest — low stress, fun activities
  • Light movement to maintain rhythm
  • Rebuild mental clarity and reduce stress
  • 1–4 weeks depending on the season and the athlete

This phase prepares you to re-enter Phase 1 refreshed instead of burnt out.


How These 4 Phases Connect to Your 5-Step Session Structure

All sessions follow the same order:

  1. Technique / Skill Learning
  2. Speed & Explosive Work (Phase 2–3 only)
  3. Specialized Strength (technique-specific strength)
  4. General Strength (1×20–30)
  5. Cardiovascular Work (always last)

This is the exact method used to develop fighters safely, efficiently, and with long-term progression.