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Thread: What is or are the non...

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  1. #1

    What is or are the non...

    ... Chinese martial art/s that influences your kung fu the most?

    For me- it's the old school arts of Miyamar and Siam. Good ol' Burmese boxing, Muay Borat and Boran, and Krabi Kabong.

    I never studied them- but I like to watch them 'cuz I can really see the Chinese MA influence, yet they have a hardness to them that I'd like to emulate.

  2. #2
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    Boxing, Fencing, Judo, JJJ

    I have studied or competed in all four at least a little. No major accomplishments in any of them but all have influenced my Gongfu.
    Simon McNeil
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  3. #3
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    Track and Field-specifically running. I was never a fast runner, so I had to learn Martial Arts.

  4. #4
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    western boxing. Apparently my old kungfu teacher used to study it in China a loooong time ago.

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    My sifu is a huge proponent of boxing. He says he gets so frustrated talking to other sifus who dismiss it as "not Chinese".
    Simon McNeil
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    Be on the lookout for the Black Trillium, a post-apocalyptic wuxia novel released by Brain Lag Publishing available in all major online booksellers now.
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    interesting question

    Judo, Fencing & Kendo - Haven't practiced any of these in years, but they were very influential in my youth.
    Gene Ching
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  8. #8
    Chan Tai San's CMA was already influenced by western boxing and Japanese Judo... can't discount that influence in what I learned

    Initially, my biggest non CMA influence was boxing as well.... then I was of course influenced by a lot of grappling: BJJ, free style wrestling, Greco Roman, sambo. I have to admit to Muay Thai influence over the years as well
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  9. #9
    i can say without a doubt that outside of my mixed martial arts curriculum(as taught at my gym, so regardless of ti being many arts completely open to new things and change so not really a system, but for the purposes of this thread discussion i'm going to have you to think of it as a system just like any other)

    so yeah i'd say outside of my normal routine it would be Tae Kwon Do and modern wushu that have influenced me the most

    tkd was the first martial art i studied when i got kicked out of swimming class for being an ass at 7 years old and i did it for about 3 years which drilled really great and difficult kicks into me and i had a really good teacher who was an olympic silver medalist so i didnt learn to float in the air spin 3 times and then kick i just learnt how to kick really **** fast and accurately.

    and modern wushu from one when i was doing my crappy watered down version of hung gar for 2 years because we all did the line drills (crescent kicks dynamic stretching etc) and from when i actually did wushu

    wushu regardless of the forms taught me how to put my legs places they dont normally go when your sparring and taught me how to put them their fast look at your average chang quan set for wushu, and to put intention into what i was doing. my teacher always said to imagine your vanquishing a thousand oponents because it made the performance look better but it did teach me some good visualisation skills which are useful when actually preparing for fighting.

    that and the line drills were much more intense.

    so yeah the above arts didnt really teach me to fight but they really influenced my martial arts.
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