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Adult boxers working at close range in a boxing gym
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Fighter study

Fighting Harada

Era Classic
Division Multiple Divisions
Stance Orthodox
Key context Repeatable output without losing shape

Why study this fighter

Fighting Harada is useful for studying lower weight pressure volume pace. Key coaching cues are: repeatable output without losing shape, starting phases on purpose, measured pressure entries. Use the page as a study aid: isolate one visible habit, train it safely, then test whether it improves your own rounds.

Fighting Harada is a high-tempo volume pressure in the H&G style library. It is a classic orthodox profile. The strongest axis scores are volume 96, starter 96 and pressure 88. Study repeatable output without losing shape and starting phases on purpose. A practical cue is to use controlled-output rounds where every combination finishes with shape. The page includes 1 selected video reference for the study notes. The main warning is: do not add pressure or output before stance and guard can recover.

Fighter guide only. This is not a claim about level, ability, or matching a champion. Use the diagnostic to compare how you box, then bring the result into class or PT.

H&G All-Time Index: Fighting Harada is ranked #495 all-time with a 75.30 ranking index. Open the ranking profile

Orthodox Classic Style reference Check with coach

Use this as a practical style guide. Treat the examples as ideas to test, then check the notes before leaning too hard on one pattern.

Fighting Harada fighter photo

Study, do not imitate

The point is to spot patterns: pressure, range, rhythm, risk, and defensive shape. The radar below turns those patterns into a readable coaching map.

Read on Wikipedia

Rating summary - All-Time Index layer - v2.0.0

Fighting Harada

An H&G All-Time Index v2.0.0 summary card for rank context, career context and comparison. Read close ranks with the Data Confidence label beside them.

Rank and score#495Ranked in the H&G All-Time Index v2.0.0 top 1000
H&G All-Time Index75.300-100 ranking index. This is the number that orders the list.
Peak-form Elo rating1,742Best-point rating on a separate scale, not directly comparable with the index. The rating could shift by about ±189. 1966-05-31
Data ConfidenceMediumSolid but wider career evidence. Treat close ranks with extra care. Peak-form band: ±189 Elo.
Active years1960-1970Boxing era: 1946-1979
Primary divisionBantamweightHigher than 41% of ranked fighters in this division
Era standingHigher than 50% of ranked fighters from his eraHigher than 50% of the whole public list
Strength of scheduleLighter schedule signal1,755 schedule score
Career W-L-D55-7-0Professional record summary

Style map

Who is like Fighting Harada?

Compare shape first. Gold is Fighting Harada; blue is the other fighter. Tap a card to put that fighter on the sticky radar, or search the full set below.

Closest in the library

Fighters most like this

These are the nearest 8-axis shapes to Fighting Harada across the 250 public profiles.

Josh Warrington

High-tempo pressure pace

99% alike
Fighting Harada Josh Warrington

Shared areas: Counter, Defence

Open profile

Harry Greb

Pressure volume pace unorthodox

97% alike
Fighting Harada Harry Greb

Shared areas: Counter, Precision

Open profile

Jose Ramirez

Body-head pressure pace

95% alike
Fighting Harada Jose Ramirez

Shared areas: Counter, Defence

Open profile

Leo Santa Cruz

High-tempo volume pressure

93% alike
Fighting Harada Leo Santa Cruz

Shared areas: Counter, Defence

Open profile

Useful contrasts

Fighters least like this

These are the furthest shapes from Fighting Harada. Use them to see what this style is not.

Devin Haney

Defensive outside boxer

Gap 47
Fighting Harada Devin Haney

Biggest split: Volume, Pressure

Open profile

Sunny Edwards

Defensive outside boxer

Gap 46
Fighting Harada Sunny Edwards

Biggest split: Volume, Pressure

Open profile

Floyd Mayweather Jr

Defensive counter range manager

Gap 46
Fighting Harada Floyd Mayweather Jr

Biggest split: Volume, Pressure

Open profile

Stephen Fulton

Defensive outside boxer

Gap 46
Fighting Harada Stephen Fulton

Biggest split: Pressure, Range

Open profile

What to study

  • Repeatable output without losing shape
  • Starting phases on purpose
  • Measured pressure entries

What not to copy

  • Do not add pressure or output before stance and guard can recover
  • Do not rush the first exchange without a reset built in

Training translation

  • Use controlled-output rounds where every combination finishes with shape.
  • Use first-phase games where the opening action must create the next position.
  • Use guarded-entry rounds that reward taking space without chasing.
Compare against this profile

If this is your match

  • The result points toward volume as a useful training prompt.
  • The coaching priority is to turn the visible cues into simple, safe rounds before adding pace or power.

What to watch

Use these notes to understand the boxing behind the profile and what to watch when you compare it with your own quiz result.

  • Volume What to study

    Volume is the clearest study cue in the available study evidence.

  • First Phase Control What to study

    First Phase Control helps explain how the profile behaves across range, rhythm, and ring position.

  • What to watch What to study

    Use the available footage and record context as a practical training outline rather than a full technical biography.

Compare shapes

Search all 250 public profiles or compare Fighting Harada with your saved quiz result. Gold shows this profile. Blue shows the comparison.

Start with the suggested close style match or type to search the full profile set.

What do these axes mean?

Compare your style

Use this profile as a reference, then take the diagnostic to see which axes match your own training choices.

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