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Fight Lab – Round 2 Aerobic Conditioning: The Gas Tank

Rhys Morris

6th September, 2025

Fight Lab – Round 2 Aerobic Conditioning: The Gas Tank
Rhys Morris

“YOU don’t get fit for boxing by skipping boxing. The sport is the main conditioning element”

It’s an old truth in the game, but one that gets forgotten when roadwork, runs, or the latest fitness craze take centre stage. Boxing is unique, a mix of speed, power, and skill layered on a gas tank that must last round after round. You can be slick, you can be sharp, but if the engine runs dry by the sixth or seventh, those tools suddenly look a lot less dangerous.

That’s where conditioning comes in. Not in isolation, not as the star of the show, but as the foundation. You want to throw five-punch combinations, reset, and repeat without drowning in fatigue? Build your aerobic base. You want to recover between hard spars, or even between pad rounds, and still deliver the same quality? That’s aerobic fitness doing its job.

As we discussed in Round 1: Assessing & Planning for a Boxer, I provided you with some ideas of how to test your aerobic capacity. Remember, you don’t need a lab, oxygen masks, or expensive gadgets to measure it. A simple 6-minute time trial tells you plenty.

Cover as much distance as you can in six minutes. From there, you can calculate your average speed:

Speed = Distance ÷ Time

So, if you hit 1609.2m in 360 seconds, that’s 4.47 metres per second. It’s straightforward, repeatable, and shows whether your conditioning is heading in the right direction as camp progresses (remember the bigger the number the better).

Planning Conditioning Around Boxing

Here’s the key: boxing itself is conditioning. 

Sparring and bag work should leave you fitter if they’re done with intent. Be a master at your sport first. Conditioning must sit around your technical and tactical work, not fight against it. If you’re slogging miles and turning up too flat for sparring, you’ve got it the wrong way around. Conditioning should support your craft, not blunt it.

Programming Approaches

So how do you build the engine without breaking the fighter? 

Steady-State Runs (Zone 2 training): Great for base fitness. But to really move the needle and adapt, you need serious weekly mileage (a heck of a lot!), which isn’t always practical alongside sparring, skills, or life! The good news? This low intensity (Zone 2) work is often built into your technical boxing sessions anyway.

High-Intensity Intervals: Short, sharp bursts with controlled rest, on the bag, hills, track, or bike. Efficient, easy to fit into a busy week, and a proven way to move the needle without spending hours pounding the pavement. 2–3-minute blocks (High intensity runs) repeated 3-5 times!

Sprint Interval Training (SIT): The brutal cousin of intervals. Very short (6–30 seconds), all-out, followed by long recoveries (and yes, the recovery is crucial, don’t cheat it). This potent stimulus will move the needle and your boxers will adapt! The golden rule? Empty the tank on the first rep. Don’t pace it, go flat out. The adaptations come from maximum effort, not from saving yourself for the next round. Perfect when you need intensity without piling on volume.

Putting It into Practice

In a typical mid-camp week, the golden rule is simple: the sport is the main conditioning tool. Get better at your boxing first. Conditioning should support, not steal from, your skill work. If time is tight, lean on SIT or HIIT sessions. Add a longer tempo or “recovery” run if you’ve got room, but let sparring, pads, and bags do most of the heavy lifting. That balance keeps the engine sharp, you’re not training to be a marathon runner, but you’re not ignoring the aerobic base that helps you recover, repeat, and push the pace.

Final Bell

Aerobic conditioning won’t win you fights on its own, but it keeps you in the fight long enough to use your skills. Build the engine but never forget: the sport itself is the main conditioning element. Boxers don’t need to be marathon runners, but they do need an engine built to go the distance; use a combination of tools to ‘move the needle!’

Next time in Fight Lab: we’ll turn to strength, and how it feeds into true punching power.


The Fight Lab series is produced by Rhys Morris, PhD, your resident S&C coach.

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