An essay · Trust the Film

Three Phases, Not Two

I

The question I keep getting asked

Someone asked me, again, what makes A Million Styles Boxing different from the rest of the boxing instruction out there. I have been asked this question for eighteen years. Most of the time I answer it sideways. I show somebody a drill. I run them through a base. I point at a film study and let the fight do the talking.

I am going to answer it straight this time.

The field operates on a broken count. Mainstream boxing teaches two phases. Defense and offense. Slip drills, parry drills, then offense drills, then sparring. The fighter is told to integrate the two on their own.

The system I teach operates on three.

II

What the binary leaves out

Pick up any published boxing program. Watch any well-run amateur practice. The structure is the same. The coach calls a defensive sequence. Slip, slip, roll. The fighter does it on a partner or on the mitts. Then the coach calls an offensive sequence. One, two, three. The fighter throws it. Then the coach says, "okay, now put it together," and the fighter spars.

That is two phases. It is the operating model of the entire published field.

The model is not wrong because the techniques inside it are wrong. The techniques are mostly fine. The model is wrong because it leaves out the phase where most of the fight actually happens.

Defense begins when the opponent has already committed to a strike. The strike is loading or in flight. Your fighter is reacting. The clock has already moved against you. By the time defense is the right name for what is happening, the round has already cost you something.

Offense begins when your fighter has decided to throw. The decision has been made. The shape is committed. The opportunity, whatever opportunity exists, has been created by something that happened before the offense started.

That something is the third phase.

III

Pre-defense

The work taken before the opponent has committed to a strike. Posture. Hand position. Presence in the opponent's vision. Feinting. Occupying the lead leg or the lead hand. Stir the pot. Get the opponent off you. Walk. Disengage. Show shape. Take shape away. All of it.

This is the phase that buys time. This is the phase that narrows the opponent's options. This is the phase that determines whether defense and offense are necessary at all.

I have been pointing at this for eighteen years with one sentence.

Defense Number One. Your opponent is not allowed to strike.

That slogan has been in the work since the beginning. It is not a metaphor. It is the operating instruction. The first job of the fighter is to take the punch away before it loads. Defense, when it is needed at all, holds the line. Offense is what becomes available because the first two have done their work.

The triadic model is what the slogan was always pointing at. The slogan is the doctrine in one sentence. The model is the doctrine in three.

IV

Twenty-seven seconds

The reference frame for what this looks like at the elite professional level is on the record. In the tenth round of Ryan Garcia against Devin Haney, with both fighters tired and momentum on Garcia's side, Garcia opens the round by feinting a disposition and then standing in position for roughly twenty-seven seconds without throwing. Twenty-seven seconds. The clock is running. Haney is in front of him. Haney is unable to commit to a strike.

Twenty-seven seconds is most of a minute. The clock keeps running. Haney is being held to almost nothing. No offense available. No combinations available. The right hand a champion of his level has trained for a decade is unavailable. Not because Garcia has thrown a punch and stopped it. Garcia has thrown nothing. The strike is unavailable because the position Garcia has taken makes it unavailable.

That is pre-defense in round ten. That is the phase the binary cannot account for. Twenty-seven seconds where nothing the binary recognizes is happening, and where the round is being won.

Most coaches watching that round will tell you nothing happened. Most commentators will tell you Garcia was inactive. Most scoring will reward whoever throws next. The whole apparatus is grading the punctuation. The sentence is what just got written, and the sentence is being missed.

V

Why the binary breaks the rest of the system

Once you accept the third phase, the rest of the system reorganizes itself. This is the part that takes years to feel but is straightforward to state.

A defensive call is not an interlude between offensive calls. A defensive call is the call that creates the position the next offensive call requires. The slip is not a thing you do until you can punch again. The slip is the position from which the next punch is loaded.

Posts are not defense in the Catch or Slip family. Posts are controls. They hold geometry while the next thing loads. The fighter with a Lead Hand Post on the opponent's shoulder is not defending. The fighter is holding a position the opponent cannot fight out of and from which the next call will run.

Pre-defense, defense, controls, and offense are not four separate skill families. They are four functions of a single continuous operating loop. They share vocabulary. They share rhythm. They share base. The fighter is never doing one of them in isolation. The fighter is always running the loop.

This is not a coaching style. It is a different theory of what fighting is.

That sentence is the load-bearing one. Read it again.

VI

What to do with this

If you are a fighter, watch the next round of professional film you have access to with a single question in your head. What is the fighter doing when no punch is being thrown. The answer is the third phase. The amount of work happening in that answer is the level of the fighter.

If you are a coach, watch your next practice. Notice what you cheer for. If your fighter throws a five-punch combination and you cheer, ask whether your fighter created the position they threw it from, or whether the position was handed to them. Then ask whether the drill you ran an hour ago trained the position-creating work or trained only the combination. Most published programs train only the combination. The position is left to chance.

If you are a student of mine, you have heard all of this before. You have heard Defense Number One. Your opponent is not allowed to strike. a thousand times. The essay above is what that sentence has always meant. It is now in print.

VII

The closing inversion

The field counts two phases. Defense and offense.

The film counts three.

The work is the third phase. The work is what happens before the punch is necessary. The work is what makes the punch a formality when it comes.

Defense Number One.

Your opponent is not allowed to strike.

That is the sentence. The rest of the system is the grammar that lets you speak it.

· Coach Barry Robinson
Trust the Film, essay four · A Million Styles Boxing · June 1, 2026