Adult boxers working at close range in a boxing gym
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Boxer style guide

Myung-Woo Yuh

Era Modern
Division Light Flyweight
Stance Orthodox
Key context Lower-weight tempo and angle changes

Why study this fighter

Myung-Woo Yuh is useful for studying Pressure Volume Defensive Engine Inside Craft. Key coaching cues are: lower-weight tempo and angle changes, pressure without losing stance shape, repeatable output without losing balance. Use the page as a study aid: isolate one visible habit, train it safely, then test whether it improves your own rounds.

Style-study reference only. This is not a claim about level, ability, or matching a champion. Use the diagnostic to compare habits, then bring the result into class or PT.

Orthodox Modern Study note Training prompt

Use this as a practical style guide. Treat the cues as training prompts, then check the study notes before leaning too hard on one pattern.

Boxers showing pressure, guard, and range in a gym

Study, do not imitate

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

What to study

  • Lower-weight tempo and angle changes
  • Pressure without losing stance shape
  • Repeatable output without losing balance

What not to copy

  • Do not walk forward without a defensive exit.
  • Do not throw extra shots just to look busy.
  • Do not make defence passive or stop punching completely.

Training translation

  • Use angle-entry rounds where foot position is checked before punch choice.
  • Use pressure rounds where entry, punch, and exit are all judged before pace increases.
  • Use controlled-output rounds where every combination finishes with balance and guard shape.
Compare against this profile

If this is your match

  • The result points toward lower-weight tempo and angle changes as a useful training prompt.
  • Use the match as a coach-led study cue, not as a claim about level, talent, or outcome.

Similar style profiles

Ordered by closest 8-axis style-shape overlap first across the public library.

Study notes

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

  • Lower-weight tempo and angle changes Useful study cue

    Lower-weight tempo and angle changes is the clearest study cue in the reviewed study material.

  • Pressure without losing stance shape Useful study cue

    Pressure without losing stance shape helps frame how this profile should be used in training.

  • Study context Useful study cue

    Evidence is sufficient for a public study profile, but the page should still be read as training guidance rather than career biography.

Compare shapes

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

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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 habits.

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