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Best Boxing YouTube Channels For Learning and Improving

6 min read
Best Boxing YouTube Channels For Learning and Improving

YouTube has transformed boxing education. Techniques that once required years of gym access or expensive coaching are now freely available. You can study world-class instruction, watch professional breakdowns, and learn from experienced fighters - all from your phone.

But the quality varies massively. For every legitimate coach sharing real knowledge, there are ten channels pushing nonsense. Finding the good stuff matters.

Here are the boxing YouTube channels actually worth your time - for learning technique, understanding the sport, and supplementing your gym training.

Best Channels for Learning Technique

Person watching boxing tutorials on computer in mid-century modern illustration style

Tony Jeffries

  • Why it's good. Tony Jeffries is a former Olympic bronze medallist from the 2008 Beijing Games. He fought professionally before transitioning to coaching and content creation. His channel combines legitimate credentials with clear, accessible instruction.
  • What you'll find. Beginner tutorials, technique breakdowns, common mistakes to avoid, and training tips. Tony explains concepts simply without dumbing them down. His videos on fundamental punches and defensive movements are particularly useful for newer boxers.
  • Best for. Beginners and intermediate boxers wanting solid fundamentals from someone who has actually competed at the highest amateur level.

Precision Striking

  • Why it's good. Jason Van Veldhuysen runs this channel with a focus on practical boxing technique that works in real situations. His approach is methodical and detail-oriented, breaking down exactly why certain techniques work.
  • What you'll find. Technical tutorials, combination work, defensive techniques, and strategy discussions. Jason often addresses specific questions and common problems. His content goes deeper than most into the "why" behind techniques.
  • Best for. People who want to understand boxing theory and mechanics, not just copy movements.

fightTIPS

  • Why it's good. Shane Fazen created one of the most popular martial arts channels on YouTube. While fightTIPS covers multiple fighting styles, the boxing content is solid and accessible. Shane trains and tests what he teaches.
  • What you'll find. Technique tutorials, training advice, gear reviews, and how-to content for beginners. The production quality is high and explanations are clear. Content covers both technique and conditioning.
  • Best for. Beginners wanting accessible instruction across boxing and other martial arts. Good entry point for those completely new to combat sports.

World Class Boxing Channel

  • Why it's good. Tom Yankello has trained fighters for decades. His channel offers old-school boxing wisdom from a genuine expert. Less polished than some channels but the knowledge is authentic.
  • What you'll find. Detailed technique instruction, training philosophy, and insights from years of coaching. Tom focuses on fundamentals that actually work rather than flashy techniques. Strong emphasis on proper form.
  • Best for. Those who appreciate traditional boxing instruction and want depth over entertainment value.

Fran Sands Boxing

  • Why it's good. Fran Sands is a UK-based boxing coach whose channel focuses purely on boxing (unlike channels that mix in MMA or street fighting). His instruction is detailed and clearly comes from extensive coaching experience.
  • What you'll find. Technical breakdowns, pad work demonstrations, and coaching insights. Good content on combinations and flow. Particularly strong on showing how techniques connect together in realistic scenarios.
  • Best for. UK-based boxers and those wanting pure boxing content without mixed martial arts crossover.

Best Channels for Fight Analysis

Fight analysis on screen in mid-century modern illustration style

The Modern Martial Artist

  • Why it's good. Lee Wylie created some of the most celebrated boxing analysis content on YouTube. His breakdowns of legendary fighters - Roy Jones Jr., Pernell Whitaker, Mike Tyson - reveal techniques invisible to casual viewers.
  • What you'll find. In-depth analysis of professional fighters' styles, highlighting what makes great boxers effective. These videos help you see boxing at a deeper level and understand what separates elite fighters.
  • Best for. Anyone who wants to truly understand boxing at a strategic and technical level. Essential viewing for serious students of the sport.

ProperBoxing

  • Why it's good. Another analysis-focused channel that breaks down professional fighters and their techniques. Good production values and insightful commentary.
  • What you'll find. Fighter breakdowns, technique analysis, and educational content about what makes elite boxers effective. Helps translate what you see in professional fights into concepts you can apply.
  • Best for. Fans who want to watch boxing more intelligently and learn from professionals.

Motivedia - Boxing

  • Why it's good. While partly entertainment-focused, Motivedia produces high-quality documentaries and analysis of boxing legends. The historical content is excellent.
  • What you'll find. Mini-documentaries on legendary fighters, historical analysis, and inspiring content about boxing greats. Well-produced and engaging.
  • Best for. Boxing fans wanting to learn about the sport's history and legendary figures.

Channels for Training Motivation

NateBowerFitness

  • Why it's good. Nate Bower combines boxing content with broader fitness. His energy is infectious and he makes training look fun. Good balance of instruction and motivation.
  • What you'll find. Boxing workouts you can follow along, technique tips, and training motivation. Higher energy than pure instructional channels.
  • Best for. People wanting guided boxing workouts and training motivation.

JT Van V

  • Why it's good. JT creates content about boxing training, technique, and the journey of learning the sport. His approach is accessible and encouraging.
  • What you'll find. Training advice, technique tips, and content about the experience of learning boxing. Relatable for beginners finding their way.
  • Best for. Newer boxers who want relatable content from someone who understands the learning journey.

News and Discussion Channels

Boxing World Weekly

  • Why it's good. Covers current boxing news, upcoming fights, and professional boxing discussion. Good for staying connected to the sport.
  • What you'll find. News updates, fight predictions, and discussion of professional boxing. Regular content keeping you up to date.
  • Best for. Fans wanting to follow professional boxing and upcoming fights.

IFL TV

  • Why it's good. UK-focused boxing media outlet with interviews, news, and fight coverage. Good access to British fighters and promoters.
  • What you'll find. Interviews with fighters and trainers, fight week content, and UK boxing news. Gives insight into the professional side of the sport.
  • Best for. UK boxing fans wanting to follow the British scene.

How to Actually Learn from YouTube

Having access to good channels is one thing. Using them effectively is another.

Focus on fundamentals first. Watch videos on the basic punches - jab, cross, hook, uppercut - before moving to advanced combinations. Make sure your stance and guard are correct before worrying about fancy techniques.

Watch, then practice. Do not just binge content. Watch a video about a specific technique, then shadow box that technique. Return to the video, watch again, practice again. The learning happens in the repetition.

Use video as supplement, not replacement. YouTube cannot give you feedback. It cannot correct your mistakes. It cannot hold pads for you. Online content supplements proper coaching - it does not replace it.

Be selective. Every channel pushes their "secret technique" or "one trick that changes everything." Most of this is clickbait. Good boxing is built on fundamentals executed well, not obscure tricks.

Return to basics repeatedly. Even experienced boxers benefit from revisiting fundamental instruction. Your understanding deepens with experience. A video on the jab means different things after six months of training than it did on day one.

The Limitations of Learning Online

Be honest about what YouTube can and cannot do.

  • Understanding concepts before or after gym sessions
  • Learning what good technique looks like
  • Studying professional fighters
  • Finding workouts and drills to practice
  • Staying motivated and connected to the sport
  • Give you real-time feedback on your form
  • Correct the mistakes you cannot see
  • Develop your timing and reflexes
  • Create the pressure of pads or sparring
  • Replace the experienced eye of a good coach

Many people watch hours of boxing content but never actually get coached. They develop habits - often bad ones - that YouTube cannot fix because YouTube cannot see what they are doing wrong.

Use online content to enhance your training, not avoid it. The best use of boxing YouTube is reviewing techniques your coach has taught, drilling what you learned in class, and developing your understanding of the sport.

Getting Started

If you are new to boxing and want to begin learning:

  1. Watch basic stance and guard tutorials
  2. Learn the fundamental punches (jab, cross, hook, uppercut)
  3. Study basic footwork (stepping, pivoting)
  4. Practice shadow boxing at home
  5. Find a proper boxing gym for real coaching

YouTube can start you on this journey and support you along the way. But there is no substitute for working with a real coach who can see what you are doing and correct your mistakes in real time.

H

H&G Team

The coaching and community team at Honour & Glory Boxing Club, a community boxing gym in Kidbrooke, South East London.

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