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Thread: WT Chisao Tournament vids

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ernie
    but not really great on that clip either i lost my hip a few times and tended to favor my right since my left is in pain all the time ,
    but i really liked the vibe and energy of it , just wing chun guys having fun with intensity yet still controlled .
    Ernie,
    So you're not perfect. That's comforting to know.
    Sorry to bring your name into a thread about Chi Sao Competitions, however I thought folks might like to see a good example of chi sao (flaws and all) so that they don't go away thinking it's some sort of pathetic shoving match...
    'Talk is cheap because there is an excess of supply over demand'

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matrix
    Ernie,
    So you're not perfect. That's comforting to know.
    Sorry to bring your name into a thread about Chi Sao Competitions, however I thought folks might like to see a good example of chi sao (flaws and all) so that they don't go away thinking it's some sort of pathetic shoving match...
    Perfect man i'm a long way from there
    but thank you and yes i feel the same way things should be cultivated , body engine, short explosive yet interruptable power , feeling during the chaos
    and understanding if your doing just rolling shapes for the sake of rolling is ...well,,,,,,, pointless

    and trying to label a drill a competition is degrading ,

    i can hear the people now --- ah there he goes reaching for that quan sau , wait hold on don't forget fook sau king has tons of knock outs with his double pak sau . i remember back in the real days before they out lawed the deadly finger thrust , oh how things have changed --------------

    now come on guys don't forget the point doesn't count unless you KKKKEEEYYAAAAA
    If the truth hurts , then you will feel the pain

    Do not follow me, because if you do, you will lose both me and yourself....but if you follow yourself, you will find both me and yourself

    You sound rather pompous Ernie! -- by Yung Chun
    http://wslglvt.com

  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ernie
    ....yes i feel the same way things should be cultivated , body engine, short explosive yet interruptable power , feeling during the chaos
    and understanding if your doing just rolling shapes for the sake of rolling is ...well,,,,,,, pointless
    Ernie,
    I think things got lost in translation somewhere along the way. Rolling is not chi sao, and yes the idea of a chi sao competition seems off to me. However, some like it; not that there's anything wrong with that......
    It just seems to be counter-productive to me.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ernie
    .... don't forget the point doesn't count unless you KKKKEEEYYAAAAA
    Tag, you're it !! ...
    'Talk is cheap because there is an excess of supply over demand'

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matrix
    Ernie,

    Tag, you're it !! ...
    OWWW you hit my eye

    no i hear you bro , i was just rambling

    people should do what makes them happy
    If the truth hurts , then you will feel the pain

    Do not follow me, because if you do, you will lose both me and yourself....but if you follow yourself, you will find both me and yourself

    You sound rather pompous Ernie! -- by Yung Chun
    http://wslglvt.com

  5. #20
    I'm of the opinion that chi sao competitions are worse than just a waste of time - they provide a very false sense of reality - EVEN IF THE TWO GUYS ARE GOOD...

    because nobody fights like that.

    Chi sao is a drill...but that's all it is.

  6. #21
    I'm of the opinion that chi sao competitions are worse than just a waste of time - they provide a very false sense of reality - EVEN IF THE TWO GUYS ARE GOOD...
    because nobody fights like that.

    Chi sao is a drill...but that's all it is.
    I'm sure that they realise this, just as judokas, BJJers, karatekas and taekwondo-ists (!) know that about their sparring...they do don't they? Hey, has anyone told them....?

    last match was the best, guy in the red looks like sifu Yan Yiu Wing so should have been good.
    Alasdair Kirby
    VingTzun Concepts
    www.vingtzun.co.uk

  7. #22
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    Sold out!

    Victor, Ernie, Bill - you are all correct!

    As a WT man, I honestly saw little to no quality WT. I am gutted that WT went this route.

    Chi Sao is just a lab for training sensitivity, structure and positioning. The clip just looked like a mash.

    When my training partners and I engage in CS, it is a mutual learning thing - not a points scoring match. When we spar, then we glove up and spar but we don't pretend this is CS or anything else.

    Laters,

    T

  8. #23
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    The main sweep they were trying was the foot behind the leg. The oldest trick in the book. It was like that was the only sweep they knew. And many times they both went down.

    I think overall it looked like fun.

  9. #24
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    personally i thing a full contact fighting tournament would have been much better.
    It would develop fighters!!!

    BTW even though chi sao is not fighting dont u think its still necessary to train it against resistance(competitively) to develop sensitivity based on performance?

  10. #25
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    Chi sao does not "develop sensitivity" -- we already have "sensitivity" (can feel what is going on). How can someone use a drill to develop various aspects if they don't know what those aspects are? And how we do (focus) the drill will develop different things. Learning ballroom dance requires we use "sensitivity" too (to follow your partner's movements) but is that the same aspects we are trying to develop with our chi sao?

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by t_niehoff
    Chi sao does not "develop sensitivity" -- we already have "sensitivity" (can feel what is going on).
    Hi Terence,

    I have to disagree with you. WT chi sao does hone sensitivity to pressures created by your opponents attacking limbs.

    If once considers dan chi sao (for simplicity), then the transition from Player A: fook; Player B: tan to Player A: punch or fook; Player B: bong sao is caused by the energy of the fook pressing the tan sao across the body. The tan roles to bong to rid the arm of the incurring energy right?

    If one plays dan chi sao with a beginner, then they can often require a great deal of pressure to be “coaxed” (for want of a better word) to make the tan to bong transition to neutralise the force.

    With an experienced player, a very light pressure will produce the formation of bong and thus the experienced player will not “hold” the opponents force, but more easily get rid of it. The experienced player is more sensitive to the changes and thus reacts more quickly/efficiently.

    In view of the fact that the experienced player can respond accurately to less and less force, then surely this is because he has heightened sensitivity to his opponents changes of force and can react accordingly; the production of experience/training etc.

    Thoughts?

    T

  12. #27
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    we already have sensitivity but chi sao develops a level of sensitivity to react to pressure in a wing chun way i.e tactile reflexes without thought.Chi sao develops other things like relaxation forward pressure etc and the idea of forward/stick/yield/follow concept

    so what is ur opinion on what chi sao develops?
    Last edited by IRONMONK; 04-08-2005 at 07:01 AM.

  13. #28
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    chi sao is not a competition, its a cooperative drill. Its a training tool. You give a little, you recieve a little. The idea is to feel your opponet, and do not use force or external strength. Instead you use natural strength from the structure.

    Those clips were sparring, and if you chi sao like that you are missing the whole point IMO, and if you chi sao like that, you should be sparring anyways. That is because chi sao is not sparring. I spar, and I do chi sao, they are two seperate things and should not be combined.

    Do you fight with rolling chi sao motions? NO

    When you go in towards an opponet do you do it with double fook saos, or tan bong sao? NO

    chi sao helps develope attributes, its a training tool. It helps build an extra level of sensitivity, it helps be action skills (not reaction, reactions take too long, instead you learn to act upon the situation), it helps develope structure. When you punch over someone's bong sao in chi sao its considered a cheap shot IMO. That is because nobody really fights like that, and you are not grasping the point of feeling out your opponet.

    Just my opinion though, so take what you will from it.
    http://www.wingchunusa.com

    Sao gerk seung siu, mo jit jiu - Hands and feet defend accordingly, there are no secret or unstoppable maneuvers.
    -Yip Man

  14. #29
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    chi sau can cause blindness
    quick everyone stop doing it !!!
    If the truth hurts , then you will feel the pain

    Do not follow me, because if you do, you will lose both me and yourself....but if you follow yourself, you will find both me and yourself

    You sound rather pompous Ernie! -- by Yung Chun
    http://wslglvt.com

  15. #30
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    i think ur talking about the wrong type of sticky hands

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