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Boxer Saviyon Dann Lands 10 Hooks in 0.775 Seconds, Rewriting the Limits of Human Speed

  • Apr 10
  • 3 min read
The 10-punch sequence is completed in 0.775 seconds, establishing a new global benchmark
By Atlas Editorial Team
10 April 2026 • Detroit, Michigan, USA


A Moment Faster Than Perception

There is a moment, barely visible to the human eye, where motion ceases to feel like effort and instead becomes inevitability. In that moment, the body no longer negotiates with time. It outruns it.


Saviyon Dann has found that moment.


In a continuous burst of motion captured on video and verified through frame-by-frame analysis, Dann delivered 10 consecutive hook punches in just 0.775 seconds. The sequence unfolds faster than instinct can process it, a blur of left and right hands striking with a precision that borders on disbelief. What was once thought to be near the limit has been cut nearly in half.


For context, the previously recognized benchmark—published on RecordSetter—stood at approximately 1.58 seconds for the same number of punches. Dann did not merely surpass it. He collapsed it.


Built in Repetition, Discovered in Motion

But this achievement did not emerge from nowhere. It was built in repetition, in failure, in the quiet monotony of a training bag absorbing thousands of impacts.


“I just really loved the sport growing up,” Dann explains. “Watching people like Mayweather, Canelo, Ryan Garcia, Amir Khan… they’re not big guys, and neither am I. But they still found ways to win. That inspired me.”


In those fighters, he saw not dominance through size, but through speed. Through timing. Through efficiency. And so he trained toward that edge.


For weeks, he returned to the same task. Ten punches. Again and again. Measuring, failing, adjusting. The bag became both opponent and witness.


“I failed a lot,” he says. “But when I finally got quicker, I didn’t even realize I was hitting the bag more than 10 times while beating the time.”


There is something revealing in that admission. The record was not chased in a straight line. It emerged almost accidentally, discovered rather than declared. Speed, when pushed far enough, begins to distort perception itself.


A New Benchmark, and an Open Invitation

The final video tells a quiet story before the storm. A few slower punches. A measured rhythm. Then, without warning, acceleration. The body commits. The sequence unfolds. And just as quickly, it is over.


What remains is the record.


To the outside observer, it may appear as a simple feat of hand speed. But within it lies something more fundamental: a study in constraint. How fast can a human body coordinate opposing limbs, generate force, recover, and repeat—all within less than a second?


Saviyon Dann has answered that question, at least for now.


“Breaking this record just made me a part of history,” he says. “Doing something we only see on TV or at a gym—it’s a good feeling. And whoever is able to beat my time, I’ll be happy to cheer them on.”


There is no defensiveness in his tone. No attempt to protect the record from the future. Only an understanding that records are not possessions. They are moments—brief, fragile, and meant to be surpassed.


For now, though, this moment belongs to him.


What comes next remains uncertain.


“I really don’t know what’s next,” he says. “But I’m always glad to explore, and I’m always up for a challenge.”


And so the record stands: 10 hooks. 0.775 seconds.


A number that feels less like a measurement, and more like a threshold.


One that, until now, no one had crossed.







Certified by Atlas World Records on 10 April 2026

Media kits and interviews available upon request.
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