Circuit Training for boxing

Circuit Training for Boxing: Build Power, Endurance & Fight-Specific Conditioning

Circuit training is one of the most effective ways to build boxing-specific fitness. It combines strength, power, endurance, agility, and core stability in a high-intensity format that mimics the demands of actual rounds in the ring.

Perform this 2–4 times per week (not on heavy sparring days), with at least 1 rest day between sessions.


πŸ” BASIC STRUCTURE

  • Circuits: 3–5 rounds
  • Exercises per circuit: 5–6
  • Work time per station: 30–60 seconds
  • Rest between stations: 15–30 seconds
  • Rest between circuits: 60–90 seconds
  • Total workout time: ~30–45 minutes

πŸ’‘ Adjust intensity based on your level. Beginners start with 30s work / 30s rest. Advanced fighters go 45–60s work / 15s rest.


πŸ₯Š BOXING CIRCUIT TRAINING WORKOUT

⚑ Circuit 1: Power & Explosiveness

  1. Medicine Ball Slams – Full-body explosive power
    (Slam ball overhead into ground)
  2. Burpees with Push-Up – Cardio + upper body endurance
    (Add a push-up at the bottom for extra burn)
  3. Kettlebell Swings – Hip drive, posterior chain, cardio
    (Keep back straight, explode through hips)
  4. Jump Squats – Leg power and fast-twitch muscle activation
    (Land softly, explode upward)
  5. Shadowboxing (High Intensity) – Technique + cardio under fatigue
    (Throw combos hard and fast β€” 1-2-3, slip, reset)
  6. Plank-to-Push-Up – Core + shoulder stability
    (Alternate between forearm plank and high plank)

β€”

⚑ Circuit 2: Boxing-Specific Conditioning

  1. Heavy Bag Rounds (Non-stop) – Power punching, footwork, rhythm
    (Throw max effort combos β€” don’t stop moving)
  2. Battle Ropes (Alternating Waves) – Shoulder endurance, grip, cardio
    (30s hard waves, keep elbows tight)
  3. Lateral Bounds – Agility, side-to-side explosiveness
    (Mimics cutting angles in the ring)
  4. Mountain Climbers – Core, hip flexors, cardio
    (Drive knees fast, stay on balls of feet)
  5. Speed Bag (or Shadow w/ Speed Focus) – Hand speed, rhythm, timing
    (If no bag, shadowbox focusing on snapping punches)
  6. Russian Twists (Weighted) – Rotational core strength for punching power
    (Sit at 45Β°, twist side to side with medicine ball or plate)

β€”

⚑ Circuit 3: Strength & Stability (Fighter’s Foundation)

  1. Pull-Ups or Inverted Rows – Back & grip strength for clinching/pulling
    (Aim for strict form β€” no kipping unless advanced)
  2. Dumbbell Floor Press – Chest & triceps power (safer than bench for shoulders)
    (Lie on floor, press up β€” protects rotator cuff)
  3. Farmer’s Carry – Grip, core, posture under load
    (Walk 20–30m with heavy dumbbells/kettlebells)
  4. Single-Leg Romanian Deadlifts – Balance, hamstrings, glutes (for stance stability)
    (Light-moderate weight, control the movement)
  5. Hollow Body Hold or V-Ups – Anti-extension core strength (critical for absorbing shots)
    (Hold 30–45s or do 15–20 reps)
  6. Neck Bridges (Isometric or Dynamic) – Neck strength for impact resistance
    (Start gently β€” only if no prior neck injury)

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