Sinister, I noticed today while trying out the rising hook exactly why some old school trainers preferred to teach the uppercut first. Getting the back of that second knuckle to land kept perplexing me. I would either skim the bag, leaving three white skin-streaks along the surface as I failed to penetrate at all. Or I would punch too deep and end up using the whole surface of my fingers, rather than the intended knuckle.
Finally I watched Joe do it on the bag, and then watched you do it slowly, and realized something. The movement is almost
more like an uppercut than a hook. With the horizontal, first-knuckle hook, you swing through the bag very much from side to side ("el Schwing style"). But the rising hook seems to be all about combining the hooking motion with that forward penetration. Trying to land this style of hook improperly was like trying to land an upward-only uppercut on a heavy bag. It didn't work. But the moment I got that forward drive somewhat coordinated with the sideways hooking motion, I sunk that knuckle right into the side of the bag.
I like it. I can see why it slips through. Not only does it come from below the line of sight, but it seems like it could come forward through a typical guard, and land flush on the jaw. I'll definitely be working this one a lot more.
Of course, there's always the possibility that I've come to a completely wrong conclusion, in which case, please let me know!
P.S. I've gotten a few recommendations, of which Nuke's look the best and most affordable. But do you have any recommendations for a good pair of thin bag gloves, most akin to the old articulate-thumbed horsehair ones?
P.P.S. I've clocked myself at a total weight loss of about 21 pounds so far, and still steaming ahead. Just thought I'd let you know how the diet was working out.