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What Boxing Bag Drills Help Build Better Elbow Combinations?
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What Boxing Bag Drills Help Build Better Elbow Combinations?

Elbows are the blades of Muay Thai—sharp, devastating, and criminally underused by beginners. They’re fast, hard to see coming, and fight-enders when thrown right. But unlike jabs or low kicks, elbows need finesse, timing, and serious reps to land cleanly.

You don’t need a sparring partner to sharpen your elbow game. With the right drills and mindset, you can build precision, power, and flow into your elbow combinations—all with your bag.

Whether you’re prepping for a fight or just trying to add more edge to your game, this guide will show you exactly how to build better elbow combos through smart, focused bag work.


Why Elbows Are Tricky and Why They Matter

Throwing an elbow isn’t the hard part—landing it safely and effectively is. Elbows are close-range weapons. That means:

  • You have to close distance without eating a counter

  • You must maintain balance, posture, and vision

  • They’re often used off breaks, clinches, or as intercepts

  • Poorly thrown elbows leave you exposed or off-balance

But if you can get good at throwing elbows with speed, timing, and flow? You’ve got one of Muay Thai’s nastiest weapons in your arsenal.



Before You Drill: Form Comes First

Before you throw a single elbow on the bag, make sure your technique is on point.

Key tips:

  • Keep your hand relaxed but firm, not clenched into a tight fist

  • Elbow should lead, not your wrist or forearm

  • Turn your hips and shoulders into the strike

  • Always re-chamber quickly after throwing

  • Protect your face on the exit

When in doubt, go slow and precise. Elbows aren’t about raw force—they’re about placement and snap.


Drill 1: Basic Horizontal Elbow Combos

Start with the bread and butter: horizontal elbows off your boxing combos.

How to do it:

  1. Throw a 1–2 (Jab–Cross)

  2. Step in with a left horizontal elbow

  3. Step out, reset, and repeat

Alternate with:

  • 1–2–Right horizontal elbow

  • Jab–Right elbow

  • Cross–Left elbow

Do this for 3 rounds, focusing on:

  • Stepping in with your elbow

  • Keeping your head protected

  • Snapping the elbow across the “face” of the bag

Goal: Learn to blend your boxing with short-range strikes.


Drill 2: Elbow–Elbow Combos (Double Trouble)

Once you’re comfy with single elbows, start doubling up.

Examples:

  • Left horizontal → Right uppercut elbow

  • Right slashing elbow → Left step-in diagonal

  • Right upward elbow → Left spinning elbow (advanced)

Do 3 rounds of elbow-only combinations:

  • No gloves—just wraps

  • Flow through different angles

  • Stay close to the bag—this is clinch range work

Focus: Tight movement, minimal wind-up, creative flow.


Drill 3: Clinch Control + Elbow Combo

Imagine you’re in the clinch—you pummel inside, you swim, you control—and now you want to elbow on the break.

Bag simulation:

  1. Grab the bag like a clinch (plum or single collar)

  2. Pull, pivot, or push the bag slightly to simulate a break

  3. Fire an elbow immediately: diagonal, horizontal, or spike

  4. Reset and repeat

Do 2 rounds each side, working elbows from different clinch angles.

Pro Tip: Pair this with clinch knee drills for a full-range clinch attack session.

Drill 4: Intercepting Elbows on the Bag

Elbows aren’t just offensive—they’re lethal counters when timed correctly.

Bag Setup:

  • Let the bag swing toward you

  • As it enters your space, throw a timed elbow (diagonal or upward)

  • Maintain your stance and composure after impact

Do 3 rounds, focusing on:

  • Timing the elbow to intercept

  • Not leaning or reaching

  • Staying planted and balanced

Great for fighters who like to counter or punish overly aggressive opponents.


Drill 5: Elbows After Catch or Parry 

Practice elbows after catching or parrying a punch on the bag.

Example sequence:

  1. Jab–Cross (on the bag)

  2. Imagine catching a kick or parrying a cross

  3. Step in with a sharp elbow (diagonal or horizontal)

  4. Follow up with a short combo or pivot out

This mimics real fight sequences and teaches you to flow from defense into offense—exactly where elbows shine.


Drill 6: Elbow Finisher Rounds

For your last round of bag work, go all elbows. Freestyle. Mix everything you drilled.

Rules:

  • Stay in close

  • Keep moving your feet

  • Use every angle: horizontal, upward, downward, spinning (if you're advanced)

  • Keep your eyes up—don’t zone out

Goal: Build endurance, creativity, and real-time reaction with elbow combinations.



Bonus: Southpaw vs. Orthodox Elbow Work

If you're southpaw or switching stances:

  • Practice elbows off your rear side to break open angles

  • Drill lead elbow entries from southpaw vs orthodox footwork

  • Pay attention to how your stance affects elbow range and rhythm

You’ll discover new lines of attack just by changing stance and distance.

 

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Throwing elbows from too far out
You won’t land clean and you’ll get countered. Always close the gap first.

Over-rotating or losing balance
Keep your feet under you—especially on spinning elbows.

Dropping your other hand while striking
Every elbow should be guarded. Protect the dome!

Bag-only training with no follow-up sparring
Elbows need timing. Once you're comfortable, test them in light clinch sparring (with pads or elbow sleeves for safety).

 

Final Thoughts: Blades Over Bombs

When done right, elbows are faster, safer, and more destructive than most power punches. But they need precision, angles, and a fighter’s eye.

The heavy bag won’t flinch, but it will help you:

  • Drill your setups

  • Improve strike recovery

  • Chain elbows into real combos

  • Build elbow-specific endurance

So next time you're at the gym, don’t just jab-cross your way through another round. Step in close, get surgical, and start slicing.


Ready to Throw Real Elbows? Gear Up First.

You need wraps that support your wrists, elbow pads for partner work, and a bag that’s firm enough to handle clinch-range elbow strikes.

Shop at MuayThaiRoots.com

Train sharp. Elbow smarter. Finish fights like a Nak Muay.

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