Indeed I've never come across a traditional martial art (Chinese or otherwise) where people say their school/system has a history of meeting challenges... and lost 50% of them
It's rather like how every Chinese MA was created after a) someone saw two animals humping, b) a General well-versed in killing with nothing but his icy glare decided to create his own special system, c) someone secretly looked through a window, crack in a doorway, etc, and saw the 'secrets'.
The world has much to thank the Chinese for... fiction and tall stories included
i know who you are talking about but chow gar shouldnt be judged just on him lol
one of my class mates studied chow gar whilst at uni for a few years, they used motorcycle helmets to spar in to allow them to use those hammer fists without really hurting each other, they hit hard and didnt mind being hit, even now his power is very good
Not saying the style is deadly lol but it does have a fairly decent rep over here for actually sparring and fighting
No such thing as a "deadly" MA or even a "deadly" technique.
Death maybe the result of a technique BUT you can kill someone with a punch ( more people have been killed by a "simple" punch than any other empty hand technique by the way) but no one calls a left hook "the deadly".
A MA is ONLY as good as how it is trained AND who is training in it.
IF WSL lost to a Chow Gar fighter than it was NOT WC losing to CG but simply WSL losing to whoever it was.
Psalms 144:1
Praise be my Lord my Rock,
He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !
Anyone know of a good chow gar clip with this hammer fist ?
[QUOTE=trubblman;1259459]For some reason Chinese Martial Arts are full of these [unverifiable] stories...They are worth the paper they are printed on in my opinion
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TRUE. Besides- both jum and gan are and have been parts of Ip Man's slt. Ho Kam Ming wasa student of Ip Man soon after WSL began but HKM learned directly from Ip Man- not from WSL.
And, gan has always been there as well as jum in HKM's slt... each in a specific place for a specific direction related reason.
The downward hammer fist staring at 0:33 into this clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmkQiHttjR4
I attended a Gary Lam Seminar a few years ago just to ask how he used his wing chun to fight Mui thai fighters, even though it wasn't the answer I was expecting, I respected him for his honesty. He Told me, inside the ring thaiboxing is king, but on the streets a wing chun fighter can beat a thai boxer. He also told me that when he fought with thaiboxers, he used thaiboxing himself. He said wing chun is good at medium range and thaiboxing is good at long distance.
Kev, Now I have a couple of questions for you:
1. Can you tell us a little more about WSL experience with Muai Thai, when did he fight the Thai's, was it during the 1960's when yip man sent a team of wing chun fighters to fight against the thais?
2. besides the use of side stances what specificly did he modified in the wing chun system to deal with fighting with muai thai fighters?
Last edited by kung fu fighter; 01-09-2014 at 07:22 PM.
[QUOTE=Vajramusti;1259522]Joy can you point out Jum in this form ? http://youtu.be/foAAVQKvhtA
True. It doesn't matter, as long as you have both in your system and make good use of them.
There is no point in arguing what should be in the system and/or what shouldn't be. Yip Man and WSL are not here to ask.
Good Ving Tsun comes down to the person using it and one who is capable of applying logic to unarmed combat. It also needs a person that is capable of seeing through the BS. Unfortunately most Ving Tsun systems are full to the brim with BS but idiotic systems only attract idiots and fools will only follow other fools.
"Ving Tsun is a horse not everybody can ride"
Wong Shun Leung.