strange that, the only clips people can find of good wing chun principles in action are from non wing chun guys.........of course of course real chunners dont tape their full contact sparring matches, just their drills
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strange that, the only clips people can find of good wing chun principles in action are from non wing chun guys.........of course of course real chunners dont tape their full contact sparring matches, just their drills
Our TWC principles were used in full contact. They did well for their their very first fights.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7NCv...eature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZDkP...eature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyQH4M550M0
Resulted in this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1bSkRY3iWI
There is also this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UsS2WUlq8C0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb9-KSC1fPQ
Yeah, I know. Where are the choreographed, textbook demonstration techniques that myself and others do? The bottom line is that we have fighters testing what we do and learning from it.
satisfied, not really, i have always given props to phil and to alan orrs guys
Having said that TWC is not the same as what alot of people on this thread practise and it wasnt phils videos they were pointing it is was befort and another MMA fighter who have never trained wing chun in their lives
you happy with that reply?
Many different combat systems may share the same principle. The most common one may be the "single leg" that's commonly used in all wrestling systems. The WC chain punch is just a principle. Anybody from any style can apply that principle in combat. Even MMA guys can "cross train" chain punches (you can call it "head hunting" if you want to) and put that skill into their toolbox. After you can apply your chain punches principle in combat, where did that concept came from is not important IMO.
The other guy was Lyoto Machida, and some credibility desperados on this forum want to extrapolate his karate influence and Vitor's two second use of something resembling chain punching into validation of WC.Quote:
they were pointing it is was befort and another MMA fighter who have never trained wing chun in their lives
Basically, you can't get there from here.
I too give props to Phil and Alan Orr.
What about the guy in this old post:
This is an old clip, and if anyone knows the WC fighter and lineage please post it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXg0F...eature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1dh_...layer_embedded
I like this clip for many reasons. He has
1. strong "tiger spirit" that trying to eat his opponent alive.
2. good forward leaning that give him forward momentum to run his opponent down.
3. fast and well balanced footwork to finish his job.
4. fast and strong chain punches (head hunting if you prefer to call it) to feed to his opponent's head.
We can all learn a lot from a good clip like this.
Many years ago, a guy wanted to compete in tournament in Taiwan. He had no TCMA teacher, no TCMA training. His friend told him a training method. He tied a coconut with ropes between 2 trees. Everyday he just chessed that coconut with his fists. After 6 months training, he went to his 1st tournament. Nobody could get out of his "head hunting" and he won the 1st place in that tournament.
Style? Who care about style?
Thanks for the support guys. What I was happy about was that our guys competed in an international amateur event and got first and second place. Joe Marrero knocked out the Japanese San Da Champion. When I up loaded the clip he and someone from his organization told me to take it down. Everyone has to pay to do videos there so his organization had no copyright to the clip.
This made me very happy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aue6bIplPwI
We have a fighter for the upcoming Lei Tai in MD.
http://translate.google.com/translat....com%2Fmaitres
I think Yip Man -> Yip Ching -> Him
That's the Vitor Belfort clip Frost and I were discussing.Quote:
Nothing whatever to do with Wing Chun, despite the wishes of (too) many.