Find your boxing style
Find your boxing habits and the gaps to train next.
Choose your level, answer seven coaching questions, see the habits you lean on, then compare your profile with fighters worth studying and practical routes for your next block of training.
The result compares against 250 public study profiles. Percentages show style-shape overlap, not boxing level or ability.
What the result means
Style label: plain-English shorthand for how your answers cluster.
Answer consistency: how settled your answers are, not how good you are.
Top axes: the boxing habits that shaped the result most.
Profile match: a study reference, never an ability comparison.
Live shape preview starts after your first answer.
Quick coaching quiz
Real training choices work better than perfect answers. If one question feels close, choose the habit you fall back on most often.
Show sample result
A sample result gives a style label, radar shape, closest study profile, one training priority, and a route into the boxer library. Your own result only appears after you pick an experience level and answer the seven questions.
Your result
Save or act on it
Email yourself the result or bring it into a free trial.
Saved on this device:
Visual result
What do these axes mean?Methodology for coaches and competitors
The diagnostic scores eight boxing habit axes from the selected answer deltas. Not sure keeps the radar cautious and does not move the axis shape.
Fighter matches compare style shape only. They are study references, not ability comparisons or claims about competitive level.
Boxer profiles to study
Tap a profile to change the radar overlay. The closest match is your strongest style overlap; a pinned comparison is a chosen study reference and may appear first even when another boxer scores higher.
One training priority
Start with the strongest useful action. Extra detail stays below it.
Recommended drills and videos
Recommended from H&G coaching notes where the fit is strong. Where there is no clean match, the route stays practical rather than forcing a weak video.
Turn the result into coaching
Bring the result to a class trial or use PT if you want one-to-one correction.