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Thread: What could this guy do using his yang style to win?

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    What could this guy do using his yang style to win?

    I never thought that modern yang style guys were also into fighting, nevertheless what this guy does is pretty humiliating for TCMA and shows what lack of experience in fighting has done to these systems. However I want to know how you think this guy could win the fight using his style against the white belt BJJ guy.

    http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjMxMzIzNjEy.html

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    How many Taiji guys train defense against "shooting" and ground game? Taiji guys should rearrange their training priority,

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    If the taji guy was faster and more focused what would be his chances in attacking the bjj guy's head with his knee or fists in that first takedown?
    Last edited by xinyidizi; 07-23-2012 at 09:15 PM.

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    Looks like Chinese video sites force you to watch ads before you can watch the video, too, like YouTube does

    Quote Originally Posted by xinyidizi View Post
    If the taji guy was faster and more focused what would be his chances in attacking the bjj guy's head with his knee or fists in that first takedown?
    Very low. Not saying it never happens, but it probably rarely happens, especially if you don't train against resisting opponents who are trying to take you down. A lot of the "too deadly" people who say they would stop a take down attempt with knees have probably never trained against a resisting opponent who was actually competent at grappling. Instead, they probably train against another student in their class who has no experience grappling, like the equivalent of the punch counters where the opponent throws a punch and leaves his arm extended afterward. I'm sure there are many grapplers would would be happy to train with those people.

    Has anyone here ever seen a TMA person successfully stop a takedown with knees or anything else in any of the earlier UFCs when it was style vs style?
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    Quote Originally Posted by xinyidizi View Post
    If the taji guy was faster and more focused what would be his chances in attacking the bjj guy's head with his knee or fists in that first takedown?
    zero. if he is fat, 5 percent.


    your best chance would be to offer the mma guy to push hands, and sucker punch him.
    Last edited by bawang; 07-24-2012 at 07:09 AM.

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    The BJJ guy has learned to use his stuff in an environment where he is virtually never training it solo. His road work is solo, his BJJ work is invariably done with a resisting partner.

    This is not true of Tai Chi players who focus on being alone and doing their chosen family set. The greater part of all tai chi players do not do resistance training, do not spar with any real force and the extent of their partner practice is push hands which is a competition thing in and of itself but no where near anything like a real conflict.

    In short, Tai Chi is not a useful martial art martially at this point. It has been for the most stripped of all the martially useful stuff and turned into a health regimen for old people or a martial art for people who don't want to do all the hard work part of martial arts.

    It's good health exercise based in martial arts but is no longer martially valuable.
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    Quote Originally Posted by bawang View Post
    zero. if he is fat, 5 percent.


    your best chance would be to offer the mma guy to push hands, and sucker punch him.
    Good point.

    A lot of more traditional martial arts (not just Taiji) have been so focused on preserving the "tradition" and they have stopped allowing their art to evolve over time.

    The mindset seems to be, "If it worked way back then, it'll work now." But that's really just a lame excuse to get fat and do your forms by yourself.

    The reality is: Things change and if your art doesn't adapt to that change then it stops being useful as a legitimate fighting method - it becomes an anachronism. Sure, it can have it's place as a way to honor older traditions and build discipline (perhaps even some level of fitness) but it won't be of much use outside of that context.

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    Quote Originally Posted by xinyidizi View Post
    If the taji guy was faster and more focused what would be his chances in attacking the bjj guy's head with his knee or fists in that first takedown?
    Those "defenses" have been dis proven more times than blocking fists with your face.
    Fact is that the defending the shoot with knees only works ONE way and that is NOT the way that TCMA tend to train it.
    You defend the shoot with a knee by moving/jumping INTO the attempted shoot/tackle ( which does NOT work VS a take down from the inside).
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    Quote Originally Posted by xinyidizi View Post
    If the taji guy was faster and more focused what would be his chances in attacking the bjj guy's head with his knee or fists in that first takedown?
    he would have a better chance astrally projecting himself out of the way...

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    The TCMA guy would have been better off training to deal with a simple 1-2 combo ( that got him on his ass) also.
    In short that was a typical example of what NOT fighting VS someone trying to punch you in the face and take you down, does to a person.
    How many times in demos or clips showning TCMA, do you see them deal with a simple 1-2 combo?
    Rarely, but you do see them "dealing" with a "step-in punch and leave the arm there" attack, LOL !
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    He could learn how to, you know, fight...

    at all...

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    Quote Originally Posted by xinyidizi View Post
    If the taji guy was faster and more focused what would be his chances in attacking the bjj guy's head with his knee or fists in that first takedown?
    The Taiji guy's combat strategy and posture are all wrong. If he is fighting against a grappler who likes to shoot, he should

    - extend his arms, and
    - put his hands and arms in his opponent's shooting path.

    http://img221.imageshack.us/img221/2178/bridgeq.png

    This way when the BJJ guy shoots, he has to pass the Taiji guy's hands and arms first before he can gets to the leg. The Taiji guy may have chance to borrow the BJJ guy's shooting and drag him on the ground and then mount him.
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 07-24-2012 at 11:10 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    The Taiji guy's combat strategy and posture is all wrong. If he is fighting against a grappler who likes to shoot, he should

    - extend his arms, and
    - put his hands and arms in his opponent's shooting path.

    http://img221.imageshack.us/img221/2178/bridgeq.png

    This way when the BJJ guy shoots, he has to pass the Taiji guy's hands and arms first before he can gets to the leg. The Taiji guy may have chance to borrow the BJJ guy's shooting and drag him on the ground and then mount him.
    In an MMA enviroment, that well get you "overhanded" in the next day.
    Over extending like that will also motivate the opponent to "slip and take your back" as opposed to going for the shoot.
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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    In an MMA enviroment, that well get you "overhanded" in the next day.
    Over extending like that will also motivate the opponent to "slip and take your back" as opposed to going for the shoot.
    Quote Originally Posted by Frost View Post
    then again he might have his backside handed to him for trying something so stupid
    If your opponent can do that to you, your grip fight skill is still not good enough.

    When a insect extends it's tentacles to feel the environment, if his tentacles can't send him back the right signal for him to take the right body respond, that insect's tentacles donot function correctly.

    http://img528.imageshack.us/img528/4472/tentacle.jpg
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 07-24-2012 at 11:23 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    In an MMA enviroment, that well get you "overhanded" in the next day.
    Over extending like that will also motivate the opponent to "slip and take your back" as opposed to going for the shoot.
    Talking about something that looks like a traditional college wrestler's stance?
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