Last updated: May 11, 2026
Quick Definition
The 1-2 combination is a two-punch sequence: a jab thrown with the lead hand followed by a cross thrown with the rear hand. It is the most fundamental striking combination in MMA, used to set up power shots, control distance, and create openings for follow-up strikes or takedowns.
What is the 1-2 combination?
The 1-2 takes its name from the boxing punch numbering system. Coaches use numbers to call out combinations quickly during training. The jab is 1 because it is the first punch every fighter learns. The cross is 2 because it is the second. A coach yelling “1-2” means: jab, then cross.
Each punch has a distinct job. The jab is the range finder, used to close distance and force the opponent to react. The cross is the power punch, drawing force from hip rotation and full-body torque rather than the arm alone. The jab sets up the chin so the cross can find it.
The combination works because the two punches travel down the same line. The opponent commits to defending the jab, often by raising their lead hand or pulling their head back, and the cross arrives a fraction of a second later on the same path. By the time the defence resets, the second punch has already landed.
Boxers, kickboxers, Muay Thai fighters, and MMA fighters all use the 1-2. In MMA specifically, it is one of the most-thrown combinations inside the cage, used by everyone from debut prospects to champions. Max Holloway set a UFC record of 445 significant strikes against Calvin Kattar in January 2021, many of them straight punches built around the 1-2.
How the 1-2 works in MMA
Boxing and MMA share the 1-2, but the mechanics shift between the two sports because the cage rewards different tradeoffs.
Stance is the first thing. A boxer can stand bladed and narrow to maximise reach and power on the cross. An MMA fighter cannot, because a narrow stance leaves the legs exposed to a takedown. MMA stances are wider and squarer, which shortens the cross slightly but keeps the fighter balanced enough to defend a takedown if the opponent drops in.
Glove size matters too. UFC fighters wear 4-ounce gloves, compared to 8- to 16-ounce gloves in boxing. There is less padding between the knuckles and the target, so a clean cross at the end of a 1-2 carries more concussive force per pound of punch than the same combination would in a boxing ring.
What happens after the cross is the biggest difference. A boxer can throw a heavy cross, recover slightly off balance, and reset for the next combination. An MMA fighter who leans too far into a cross gives the opponent an open path to drive in for a takedown. MMA versions of the 1-2 therefore include a deliberate reset, whether a half-step back, a re-pivot, or an immediate transition into a kick or grappling exchange, rather than the boxing-style “set the feet and dig in” finish.
1-2 vs single strikes and longer combinations
Where does the 1-2 fit in the broader striking picture? The single jab sits below it. Everything else, from multi-punch combinations to kick-and-punch chains to takedown setups, sits on top of the 1-2 as a layer of additions and modifications.
| Combination | Punches | Primary purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Jab alone (1) | Lead-hand jab | Range finder, distance control |
| 1-2 | Jab, cross | Standard offensive entry that creates openings |
| 1-1-2 | Double jab, cross | Disguises timing and covers more ground |
| 1-2-3 | Jab, cross, lead hook | Adds an angle change after the straight punches |
| 1-2-low kick | Jab, cross, low kick | Punches lift the guard; the low kick attacks the leg |
Most fighters open striking exchanges with a jab or a 1-2 because both punches return to a defensive position quickly. That matters more in MMA than in any other striking sport, since the alternative to a safe reset is a takedown attempt against an unbalanced fighter.
Common variations of the 1-2
Most variations modify either the punches themselves or what follows them. The patterns below are the ones seen most often in professional MMA.
| Variation | How it works | Common use |
|---|---|---|
| Double-jab cross (1-1-2) | A second jab is added before the cross | Disguises rhythm and covers distance; used by long-reach fighters like Jon Jones |
| 1-2 to the body | Either or both punches target the torso | Lowers the opponent’s guard and opens the head |
| 1-2 with level change | The jab and cross screen a takedown attempt | A common entry from striking range into a takedown |
| 1-2 into a low kick | A calf or thigh kick lands after the punches | The punches occupy the hands and eyes while the kick attacks the leg |
| Counter 1-2 | The combination fires as the opponent steps in | Used by counter-strikers like Dustin Poirier and Israel Adesanya |
Common misconceptions
Glossary searches often start because a fighter or commentator used the term in a way that surprised the searcher. Three assumptions about the 1-2 trip up new fans most often.
“It is only for beginners”
The 1-2 is the first combination taught in every gym, which leads some fans to assume elite fighters move beyond it. The opposite is true. Floyd Mayweather built a 50-0 boxing career largely on a refined jab and cross. UFC fighters like Israel Adesanya and Dustin Poirier do the same in MMA, where the jab and cross still account for a large share of strikes landed at the highest level.
“MMA fighters do not use it”
A common myth is that MMA stand-up is mostly kicks, knees, and clinch work. Striking data tells a different story. The jab and cross are typically the highest-volume strikes thrown from distance in professional MMA bouts.
“Speed is more important than power”
The jab and the cross have different jobs. The jab is about speed: fast and tight, so it lands and disguises the cross that follows. The cross is about power. Hip rotation and weight transfer are where the damage comes from. Without those, the cross becomes nothing more than an arm punch. Treating both as one kind of strike is the most common mistake in untrained 1-2s.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does 1-2 mean in MMA?
1-2 refers to a jab followed by a cross. The two punches come from the boxing numbering system, where the jab is numbered 1, and the cross is numbered 2.
Is the 1-2 used at the UFC level?
Yes. The 1-2 is one of the most thrown combinations in professional MMA, used by every fighter from debutants to champions. It is foundational, not basic.
Why is the jab numbered 1 and the cross numbered 2?
The numbers come from a coaching shorthand. The jab is the first punch beginners are taught, and the cross is the second. The numbers follow the teaching order.
Can a 1-2 knock someone out?
Yes. The cross at the end of a 1-2 is a power punch that can end a fight on its own, especially in MMA, where 4-ounce gloves transfer more force than boxing gloves. Knockouts that begin with a jab and finish with a cross are routine in the UFC.
Is the 1-2 the same in MMA and boxing?
The punches themselves are identical. What differs is the stance behind them and what follows the cross. MMA fighters keep a wider, squarer base to defend takedowns, and an MMA 1-2 typically transitions into a kick or a grappling exchange instead of feeding into another boxing combination.
Sources
- Wikipedia. “One-two combo.”
- Wikipedia. “Jab.”
- Evolve MMA. “Boxing Fundamentals: Understanding the Boxing Punch Number System.”
- FightCamp. “The Punch Number System 1-6 Explained.”
- UFC Statistics. UFC record book, statleaders.ufc.com.
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