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Thread: Shuai Jiao

  1. #31
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    Do you mean in tourneys or what?
    In tournament they divide you by weight, And the weight classes all depend on how many people there are.
    Some shuai chiao tourneys down here everybody just fights everybody....
    The way to get best is to fight all kinds of people of all different body weights though, and thats what I try to do.
    Strength always plays a part in shuai chiao... You use your opponents energy against him, but you compress him like a spring first, load him... But you have to have the strength to do that, otherwise the throw wont work, and the throw wont be ballistic. Shuai chiao is like compressing the spring, and when the spring releases you help it a little.
    Hope that helps.
    "i would show them 8 hours of animal porn and beheadings in a single sitting then make them write a paper about italy." -GDA
    "he said there were tons of mantids fornicating everywhere. While he was there, he was sending me photos of mantis porn regularly." - Gene Ching

  2. #32
    ok, i hope i'm not asking to divulge any secrets here

    but how is strength training done in SJ?
    Is it achieved naturally through the course of fighting and fighting and fighting until you become strong,
    or is there supplimental strength training like weight lifting etc.

    does the concept of qi play a major role in the teaching of the art,
    and if so is it frowned upon to use weights?

  3. #33
    by the way , thanks for the reply so far guys.

  4. #34
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    The only real way to build up throwing power is to throw someone. There are some pretty neat-o training tools and excercises.

    Like Stonepole, Canvas Bag Tossing, and The Well Pully.
    CPA's current P4P List:
    -Bas Rutten
    -Captain Jack Sparrow
    -Cindy Lauper
    -Lester Moonvest

  5. #35
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    Single side rock pole - A pvc pipe with a cement filled flower pot on one end, used by wrapping the leg around it and lifting it in different ways to train different aspects of reaping, shaving, and leg siezing.

    Double side - A pvc pipe with cement filled flower pots on both ends, is swung in ways emulating a throw to train same muscle groups, done in conjunction with stepping patterns to train a student how to move in and out of range properly.

    Belt cracking- A regular "karate" style belt is used, folded into 3rds, to crack much the same way you would a regular belt. This is done in several different stepping patterns to emulate several different throws.

    Square bag - Thrown around to increase finger strength, hand eye coordination, and grabbing skills.

    Long bag - Swung in a half pendulum type swing to get a student used to the smooth pulling and sudden jerking action of throws.

    Well pulley - 40' rope with weights at the end, held up by a pulley. With your arm outstretched, you lower your hand holding the rope to by your waist. You then extend that hand fast enough to make a wave in the rope, and hold the rope tight enough so that it is not ripped from your hand when the weights drop.

    Bull in the ring - This is one of my favorites. One student stands in the middle, one person stands on each corner of the mat. Without speaking, someone rushes the student in the middle, attacking at about 70%. Student in the middle must dispatch this attacker, and upon doing this, is rushed from another corner by a random attacker. Does wonders for your awareness.

    Free wrestling - Pretty much like the shuai chiao at the tourney, but we train with out a jacket. Jackets get you too used to a "unrealistic jack situation" and if you do not know how to throw without the jacket already, sometimes the transition is rather difficult to make when you are in a dire situation.

    Other than that I lift weights on a regular basis, kirk looks down on it, but apparently it helps. Master wang insists that qi is not in any way relevant to martial arts training. To healing yes, but not to fighting. Not at least in this day and age, the dedication to cultivate qi to a high enough level to use for fighting simply no longer exists.
    "i would show them 8 hours of animal porn and beheadings in a single sitting then make them write a paper about italy." -GDA
    "he said there were tons of mantids fornicating everywhere. While he was there, he was sending me photos of mantis porn regularly." - Gene Ching

  6. #36
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    I also hit the heavy bag and jog and do all of that fun stuff too.
    Hope that helps.
    "i would show them 8 hours of animal porn and beheadings in a single sitting then make them write a paper about italy." -GDA
    "he said there were tons of mantids fornicating everywhere. While he was there, he was sending me photos of mantis porn regularly." - Gene Ching

  7. #37
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    A pvc pipe with cement filled flower pots on both ends
    AKA barbell...
    Cut the tiny testicles off of both of these rich, out-of-touch sumbiches, crush kill and destroy the Electoral College, wipe clean from the Earth the stain of our corrupt politicians, and elect me as the new president. --Vash

  8. #38
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    Not in the ghetto. We use flower pots.
    Now go find someone elses ghetto things to make fun of.




    "i would show them 8 hours of animal porn and beheadings in a single sitting then make them write a paper about italy." -GDA
    "he said there were tons of mantids fornicating everywhere. While he was there, he was sending me photos of mantis porn regularly." - Gene Ching

  9. #39
    "AKA barbell..."

    lol

  10. #40
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    quoted on bloody elbow

    ASIAN MMA
    Shuai Jiao: Finding China’s martial arts renaissance in a 4,000-year-old wrestling system

    Bloody Elbow’s two part feature goes in depth on Kung Fu’s past, present and future.
    By chrismassari Mar 12, 2019, 8:00am EDT

    The Grandfather of the Martial Arts in the Modern Era

    Nearly 30 years ago, martial arts forever changed.

    UFC 1 was a catalyst to forever reshape the ideology, foundation, education, approach and very make up of self-defense and the martial arts.

    Simply put, the Gracie family changed the game.

    Without neglecting the history of Shoot Boxing, Catch Wrestling, Pancrase, Vale Tudo and even the philosophies of individuals like Bruce Lee and other multi-martial art disciplines pre-UFC, the practice of “cross-training” wasn’t mainstream among western practitioners, nor was it thought of as something integral to becoming a successful or even competent martial artist. Historical nuances aside, this event in 1993 can be seen as a defining marker in martial arts and how the culture shifted to where it is now.

    In that span of three decades, we’ve seen martial arts grow from traditional based systems, rigid, linear and structured, to the basics of mixed martial arts. Slowly dipping their toes into what it means to train in multiple disciplines, before fast forwarding only a few years, where the practice starts to culminate in the ultimate form of cross training found in the “complete martial artists” like George St. Pierre or Jon Jones.

    And as mixed martial arts continued to grow and adapt, traditional styles began to die in the early years of internet forums.

    The Bullshido days of MMA.

    Yet, instead of dying, some traditional systems reinvented themselves and modernized with this changing landscape. Practitioners like Lyoto Machida, Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, Michael Page or Anthony Pettis to name only a few, began surfacing years later and proving their styles had a place among these modernized systems.

    But, unlike other styles, one of the most ancient systems of fighting, Kung Fu and the martial arts of China, hold almost zero influence in 2019 and never regained that foothold of relevancy it once had. After UFC 1 and the ushering in of the next era of martial arts, Kung Fu was faced with the dilemma all traditional martial arts were: adapt or die.

    The difference? Unlike Karate or Taekwondo who adapted, Kung Fu never recovered in Western combat sports since, and in some cases, globally too.

    The reason is simple. An internet search of “Kung Fu versus” can provide an almost a perpetual stream of videos of Kung Fu experts in Gracie style challenge matches or “dojo storms” against blue belt level grapplers or western boxers with only a few years of training. All of them ended with the same invalidating results, leaving Kung Fu currently on life support.

    Gene Ching, the associate publisher of Kung Fu Tai Chi Magazine and KungFuMagazine.com, as well as a weapons master featured on El Rey Networks’ Man At Arms, was asked why Kung Fu hasn’t found success in Western combat sports.

    “One reason is that China has a romantic notion of martial arts, and the kind of braggadocio seen in MMA (ie. Khabib vs. McGregor) doesn’t fit within their cultural view, so it’s not encouraged. When you have MMA fighters challenging Tai Chi practitioners, that’s painfully tone deaf in terms of what each style looks to achieve. But, China is starting to come around. ONE Championship just crossed a quarter billion in total capital, and while that’s Singapore, not China, well, that’s where Crazy Rich Asians is set, right?
    Another reason is that Kung Fu is working for a longer game, so it’s more sophisticated, and in this case, to a fault. A practitioner doesn’t really come into mastery until their thirties, and that’s outside the window of MMA competitors. A simpler way to look at this is that if someone pursues Kung Fu in earnest, they have to study dozens of cold-arm weapons. That’s time that an MMA competitor will spend training fighting, so they are more focused. Kung Fu can be stripped down to just sparring, which is essentially what Sanda is, and that has achieved some level of success in MMA.”

    The issue with Sanda or Sanshou, is most would barely recognize the difference between it and any other kickboxing related practices. There have been a handful of notable Sanshou-based MMA fighters such as UFC and Strikeforce veteran Cung Le, or Filipino champions like Eduard Folayang and Kevin Belingon, but the success of a few outliers is not going to win the hearts and minds in a systems’ ability — which Kung Fu desperately needs, unfortunately.


    Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

    Everybody was Kung Fu Fighting...

    Kung Fu originally exploded into the Western eye in the 60’s and 70’s thanks to Chinese cinema and more specifically, through the influence of martial arts pioneer and icon Bruce Lee, as well as films from the Shaw Brothers.

    These films not only promoted the art of Kung Fu to the West, but really the martial arts as a whole. It can even be argued that if it wasn’t for the Kung Fu film genre, that the martial arts might not have reached the global level of popularity and the cultural influence that it has. These films took Kung Fu and martial arts mainstream.

    Still, Kung Fu’s influence has since remained, if not wholly, reserved to cinema and culture exclusively, slowly fading into obscurity in the world of hand to hand combat.

    There is one individual though, who wants to change that and will take on anyone, abiding by a philosophy of “the mats don’t lie” as he puts it, in order to prove Kung Fu’s legitimacy and bringing the Chinese martial arts back into the conversation of combat application. He is Lavell Marshall, who is not only accepting all challengers, but is actively seeking them out in competition.

    “My goals are to become as great as I knew I could be since I was three years old. To keep going to new levels and reach a place no one’s ever seen in this art.” Marshall states, “Through this journey, I want to show the world how great Shuai Jiao [Kung Fu] is and not just for Shuai Jiao, but for anyone and in any arena. When I’m old the whole world will know what Shuai Jiao is.”

    continued next post
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #41
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    Continued from previous post


    Lavell “Shaolin” Marshall: A Jack of all Grappling Trades and a Master in One, Throwing Backs to the Mat

    Marshall is a Shuai Chiao Black Belt and a multiple-time national Shuai Jiao champion on team USA, who competes regularly in Shuai Jiao internationally. He is also a state Judo Champion and has competed in Jiu-Jitsu as well. In particular, he is the star of a viral video that has made the rounds around the internet several times, where Lavell displays his grappling prowess involving a spazzy white belt. Marshall has even begun venturing into other grappling art competitions too and is finding success there in Mongolian Bökh, Kazakh Kures, Belt Wrestling, and Russian Sambo.

    Lavell, who also holds a Judo Brown Belt, Taekwondo Black Belt, and Jiu-Jitsu blue belt, is a student from the famous Shuai Chiao fighting lineage of Chang Tung Sheng, Master David Lin and his teacher, Sifu Omar Harvin. Marshall, who has also appeared in Netflix’s second season of Luke Cage, is currently studying under Vladislav Koulikov — a world-renowned sambist and grappling ace in his own right — in Sambo and Sambo Fusion (a mix of Sambo, Judo, Wrestling, and BJJ).

    As far as the grappling world goes, the four kings are Jiu-Jitsu, Wrestling, Judo, and Sambo, and when it comes to the purely throwing arts, Judo is deity. Kung Fu may be viewed to most modern martial arts as very low on the totem pole of fighting systems, but it’s even worse when it comes to grappling, making what Marshall does that much more exciting.

    He is not just an outlier in the grappling disciplines of the West. He is also the only one using a Chinese system at a high level in multiple grappling disciplines, and winning on what is traditionally an area of fighting that Kung Fu is considered one of the worst in.

    Kung Fu is known as a striking art and made mainstream by Bruce Lee and again, Chinese cinema. Films of all nature in the action genre focus on the striking nature of Kung Fu. Whether it’s Drunken Boxing, Crane Style, 5 Animals, or Wing Chun, generally speaking, Kung Fu is thought of as a martial arts with zero grappling based principles or history.

    Because there’s no wrestling in Kung Fu, right? Judo was the first real throwing art, right?

    Wrong.

    Ancient Chinese Secret: China’s Oldest Combat Based System

    Shuai Jiao or Shuai Chiao, often incorrectly referred to as “Chinese Judo” and sometimes known as Chinese Wrestling, dates back over 4,000 years ago as an ancient system of military close combat or Kung Fu, in which it was referred to then as jǐao dǐ (角抵) or jiao li (角力) and translated as “horn butting”, before reaching its modern term of Shuai Jiao.

    During different periods of time and Dynasties, this art was extremely popular and was not only an art of the military, but entertainment as well. It was then in the Qing Dynasty (1644 to 1912) that it was the art of the Shan Pu Ying, The Battalion of Excellency in Catching, who were the bodyguards to the Emperor and when it truly flourished with Chinese, Manchuria Buku and Bökh really beginning to mesh.

    At one point, even women participated in entertainment based wrestling events, in the same garb as the men, shirtless with undergarments similar to Sumo. Lavell explained in more detail, this Chinese and Japanese wrestling connection, as well as other influences to Asia abroad.

    “Sumo has its origins in Shuai Jiao. During the Tang Dynasty when it was called Xiang Pu, it went over to Japan and was taught to a few people. Down the line with modifications, it became Sumo. Many people will dispute this, but one thing we can’t dispute is that Japan was heavily influenced by China, and so was Sumo.

    “As for Bökh, there are two main styles, Inner Mongolian and Mongolian. Inner Mongolian has developed along Shuai Jiao, so aside from uniform, it has much of the same techniques, just with a different emphasis. Mongolian Bökh also has close relations because of the Mongols taking over China and encouraging people to wrestle. Much of what is seen today is thousands of years of crossover between the two.”

    Since Shuai Jiao is almost completely unknown in the West, there has been confusion that this 4,000 plus-year-old art actually borrowed techniques from more modern throwing systems, rather than the other way around.

    Matt Gelfand, an international and national Shuai Jiao champion, elaborates by stating:

    “Shuai Jiao can be considered the father of Chinese martial arts and also the father of most Asian wrestling or grappling arts. It’s a wrestling based art with combat and close quarter applications. However, unlike most Kung Fu styles, the focus is on throwing and takedowns as opposed to striking.”



    A Phoenix in the Ashes: Reclaiming the Middle Kingdom’s Martial Glory and Where it’s Future Lies

    If Kung Fu is going to have a future, then it must look to its past. An ability to excel in combat sport and to adapt to a sports-based setting, regardless of tradition or practices linked to “self-defense” is the only way to rise from it’s defeated state. The biggest hurdle Kung Fu is currently facing in the modern martial arts landscape, and more precisely in the West, is simple: results. And the only one holding it back from those results, is itself.

    “Many teachers would say it’s because their techniques are “lethal”... but, realistically, most just haven’t made the jump to sport training,” Gelfand states. “Arts like Western and Thai Boxing have been tried and tested in the ring for a long time, as they make it a point to simplify concepts to fit [a sport setting]. Kung Fu styles like Praying Mantis, Wing Chun and Dragon Style involve catching and breaking limbs, which can’t really apply to sport. Most techniques, when broken down to sport concepts, look almost exactly like western boxing. If you look up Sanda or Sanshou (Chinese Kickboxing) you’ll get a glimpse of how that translates.”

    Between YouTube, World Star, mixed martial arts, the internet and media overall, for a martial art to be deemed valid, you need tangible outcomes which are commonly found in some form of combat sport. This isn’t said as a negative either.

    Fighting arts of all kind must be shown as capable in combat. It’s in their very design. The reason people don’t question the effectiveness of Jiu-Jitsu, Judo or Muay Thai is that not only can they take what they practice and instantly apply it in some form of sparring or sporting event, they can watch it in action from others in a competition.

    The martial arts are a physical embodiment of the scientific method. It’s why they have been ever evolving throughout human history, building the validity and practicality of any given technique through constant testing. The only difference in this method is, if the thesis is proved wrong, the results generally have repercussions, and in the most serious cases, could even result in permanent injury or death.

    Meaning, for theories of technique to be scientifically tested over and over again, they must be done where the researchers of this subjects, martial artists, are able to experiment safely and continuously in their study. This leaves sport training as the only way we can continue to evolve the martial arts.

    A very easy case to study for this idea is the very rapid evolution of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    One can debate the difference of “sport” versus “real” Jiu-Jitsu, however, there is no denying the Jiu-Jitsu of today is more advanced in its “vocabulary” than it was 10 years ago, let alone 50. And while within the Jiu-Jitsu community there is debate versus how the sport or game aspect of Jiu-Jitsu may have deviated from its original self-defense roots, that is a path most, if not all, combat sports take. They are forged in combat and spawn offsprings meant to foster competition that can be tested over and over again without participants facing the same consequences as war.

    The debate of sport and self-defense will continue in Jiu-Jitsu regardless. Nonetheless, there are ways of testing modern Jiu-Jitsu’s competency through MMA and high-level players like Demian Maia, Ryan Hall, Gunnar Nelson, Shinya Aoki or “Jacare” Souza, to name a few, have shown Jiu-Jitsu does just fine in combat or self-defense.

    Daniele Bolelli, a professor at California State University and Santa Monica College, host of the History on Fire podcast and author of On the Warrior’s Path, states:

    “Historical circumstances have made Chinese martial arts considerably less effective than others at present. It’s not so much that the techniques employed in these arts are bad — in many cases they are quite sound — but the training methods and teaching methodologies are antiquated. The same thing would have happened to Japanese martial arts had it not been for people like Kano Jigoro, and their efforts to modernize the practice of martial arts. Out of all Chinese styles, Shuai Jiao is one of those that offer the most promise in terms of being adaptable to MMA.”
    continued next post
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #42
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    Continued from previous post



    Cultural Renaissance over Revolution: The Future of the Chinese Martial Arts

    Without diving into the 4,000 plus years of Chinese history, which includes countless revolutions, uprisings, social unrest, cultural and customs, the big question becomes, if Shuai Jiao is Kung Fu, then why hasn’t it succeeded in the West?

    Marshall sheds some light on this extremely valid question:

    “It comes down to the fact there aren’t [many] high level instructors and [there’s] no money. It is now growing so things are changing, but because of these reasons it has been hard to develop strong players in the West. Many of the players are hobbyist and don’t train full time like professional athletes. I am one of the exceptions.”

    This is where Shuai Jiao provides so much potential for reviving Kung Fu.

    Not only is Shuai Jiao a practice that employs modern principles and can be applied over and over again in a live sparring setting, it can also do so completely removed from theory, philosophy and internal development, while still maintaining traditional and cultural roots so intertwined within Kung Fu.

    Shuai Jiao, unlike Sanshou or Sanda, looks like traditional Kung Fu in the purest form. The movements look right out of the movies, but have actual practicality. The training resembles something out of ancient Shaolin, and the techniques themselves present something uniquely Chinese.

    Everything about it oozes the aesthetic look of a traditional look Kung Fu system, that maintains both art and combat application.

    And because of this, if there is was a martial art that returns Chinese influence to the forefront of combat and even simply conversation, it is Shuai Jiao. In 2015, Sascha Matuszak of Vice’s Fightland stated:

    “Shuai Jiao is still on the outskirts of the combat sport cypher, with no real chance of grabbing the mic just yet. But, mixed martial artists are beginning to explore past the well known striking, grappling, submissions triumvirate into other, lesser known styles in search for an edge. At some point the Taiji-infused, Qin Na [Chin Na] influenced grappling and throwing game of traditional Shuai Jiao could prove useful.”

    Lavell, an active Shuai Jiao competitor, is seeing that eruption of Chinese martial arts happening right now. In his opinion, it’s only a matter of time.

    When asked if Shuai Jiao could compete with other grappling arts, he states:

    “A question I get asked a lot and the answer is, of course, it can! I’ve competed in many competitions from popular grappling styles to ones even more obscure and on international levels for some, and found great success. Most styles of grappling can compete with others as long as you learn to adapt to the ruleset in which you are competing.”

    China no longer wants to lose at its national sport, Shuai Jiao, Lavell explained. The Chinese government is backing Kung Fu now, rather than opposing it’s martial elements as they have done in the past:

    “But, now the government is putting a lot of money and effort to spread their national art. There is even a pro league now and it is something you can major in at the Universities there.”

    China no longer wants to fall by the wayside in something that is so closely linked to their traditions and heritage. Gene Ching states:

    “The future looks bright. There’s more research published than ever. There’s more Kung Fu movies than ever. China has become a wealthy nation, and many of the new rich are enthralled with Kung Fu and what it represents. Jack Ma is a perfect example. In his wake, a few other affluent leaders have been working to preserve and revitalize martial traditions. It’s a slow yet steady rise, and it’s certainly not for everyone (no martial art is), but it is continually adapting to serve the diaspora in unique ways.”

    Efforts and money are a good start, but the real change won’t come unless there are students learning and then spreading their knowledge. This is, of course, the age-old conundrum that all martial arts face, as growth is found in lineage and preservation through students. Money and access are great assets but ultimately, what will really push Shuai Jiao into the mainstream is successful students which come from tangible results.

    The results in hardware found in combat sports.

    The career and educational options found in combat sports.

    As well as the prestige, financial compensation, and fame that once again, comes from sport.

    This is where Lavell Marshall believes he can be at the forefront of this renaissance and one of the driving forces behind the coming wave:

    “I want to bring the highest skill level of Shuai Jiao to the West and have people here see its effectiveness. Many people are already starting to see that and largely because of what I post and do, but I want the West to truly dig deep into it and for you to see players of all styles competing and training in it.”

    Within the last few years, Marshall has become more and more prominent in the social media world, with an ever growing following. While on the grappling circuit, he is achieving victory after victory in the competition space, putting himself out there to spread this art to other arts through tangible, competitive victores. He’s featured in film, as well podcasts to help inform others about Shuai Jiao. Lavell has been in an all out push in every medium and avenue that he can, in order to gain eyes and grab attention to Shuai Jiao.


    Lavell Marshall

    This year, Lavell has moved to Inner Mongolia to continue his training further. He believes this environment will allow him the professional level insight and the technical growth in his daily training that he just cannot find at this time for Shuai Jiao in the West.

    He wants to immerse himself in various grappling styles and disciplines, with martial artists who are just at a different level, and spend their days doing nothing but training, living and breathing the combat arts. Marshall feels the atmosphere towards wrestling, grappling and general life of the martial arts is different there, providing him the opportunity to grow and learn like nowhere else.

    Lavell’s goal after obtaining the competition experience and accolades in competition victories, is to return and begin his next journey: To expand Shuai Jiao in the West, to become a household name, and to bring Kung Fu back to relevance in the modern stage of martial arts. In BJJ, in MMA, in all forms of grappling.

    Only time will tell if Lavell and Kung Fu, through Shuai Jiao, will find its renaissance in the modern mixed martial arts, but the evidence seems to point to something special on the horizon.
    Chris has been working towards an article for us with Marshall. Hopefully that will happen someday soon.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  13. #43
    But, unlike other styles, one of the most ancient systems of fighting, Kung Fu and the martial arts of China, hold almost zero influence in 2019 and never regained that foothold of relevancy it once had. After UFC 1 and the ushering in of the next era of martial arts, Kung Fu was faced with the dilemma all traditional martial arts were: adapt or die.

    The difference? Unlike Karate or Taekwondo who adapted, Kung Fu never recovered in Western combat sports since, and in some cases, globally too.

    The reason is simple. An internet search of “Kung Fu versus” can provide an almost a perpetual stream of videos of Kung Fu experts in Gracie style challenge matches or “dojo storms” against blue belt level grapplers or western boxers with only a few years of training. All of them ended with the same invalidating results, leaving Kung Fu currently on life support.
    To me this is a hunk of horse sh*t which we have to start calling out. It's not that Kung Fu hasn't adapted or isn't relevant, it is just held to a higher standard. One which isn't applied to other martial arts.

    There is nothing *pure* in MMA. If a person wants to fight in MMA and they are serious, they train for it. They have strength and conditioning coaches, striking coaches, grappling coaches, heck - they even have nutrition coaches.

    They are not doing tae kwon do, boxing, jiu jitsu or judo -- they are training to compete in an MMA match.

    Here's an idea, the next time a MMA / BJJ guy challenges a Kung Fu guy, the Kung Fu guy should throw them a san ji guan and say "ok, let's fight with these." The MMA guy would cry foul and say it isn't fair because he isn't prepared to fight with a 3 sectional staff. Well why not? He is a martial artist after all. Shouldn't he be good with everything martial?

    That scenario is the same as a Kung Fu practitioner fighting a MMA person in a MMA match. The Kung Fu person isn't prepared or trained for that type of fighting. But guess what? Neither is a person who is only training one of the so-called combat ready sports like Judo, Boxing, Kick-Boxing, etc.

    So the next time someone says Kung Fu is dead or irrelevant at the local pub, ask them if they ever seen anybody hit anybody with a powerful strike at close range. When they say yes, tell them that's Pak Mei beyotch.

  14. #44
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    Quote Originally Posted by MightyB View Post
    To me this is a hunk of horse sh*t which we have to start calling out. It's not that Kung Fu hasn't adapted or isn't relevant, it is just held to a higher standard. One which isn't applied to other martial arts.

    There is nothing *pure* in MMA. If a person wants to fight in MMA and they are serious, they train for it. They have strength and conditioning coaches, striking coaches, grappling coaches, heck - they even have nutrition coaches.

    They are not doing tae kwon do, boxing, jiu jitsu or judo -- they are training to compete in an MMA match.

    Here's an idea, the next time a MMA / BJJ guy challenges a Kung Fu guy, the Kung Fu guy should throw them a san ji guan and say "ok, let's fight with these." The MMA guy would cry foul and say it isn't fair because he isn't prepared to fight with a 3 sectional staff. Well why not? He is a martial artist after all. Shouldn't he be good with everything martial?

    That scenario is the same as a Kung Fu practitioner fighting a MMA person in a MMA match. The Kung Fu person isn't prepared or trained for that type of fighting. But guess what? Neither is a person who is only training one of the so-called combat ready sports like Judo, Boxing, Kick-Boxing, etc.

    So the next time someone says Kung Fu is dead or irrelevant at the local pub, ask them if they ever seen anybody hit anybody with a powerful strike at close range. When they say yes, tell them that's Pak Mei beyotch.
    I agree. Kung Fu IS held to a higher standard. Why, I'm not sure. People nowadays rave about Krav Maga, but I haven't heard of any Krav Maga (or, say, any Systema) practitioners winning any MMA matches. I've also never heard of any Kali/Escrima winning in MMA, nor any JKD guys (except for that one early JKD/MMA fighter; I forgot his name).

    If you take the 'typical' MMA guy (who's only trained MMA, and not any of its individual constituent arts/sports extensively), take him/her to Thailand and put them into a match with a highly experienced Muay Thai fighter, they'll get their @ss handed to them too, in a big way. Same if you put them into a pure pro boxing bout, as was clear with the Floyd Mayweather-Conor McGregor match. And Floyd clearly allowed McGregor to last as long as he did before finishing him off; he could've ended it in the first round if he'd wanted to, and Floyd wasn't known as a 1st-round KO artist.

    The so-called MA/MMA pundits/nut riders talk about 'Kung Fu' as if it's one monolithic entity that's all the same, with the same emphases ("you've seen some, you've seen it all"), and it's not. And almost without exception, the ones doing the talking about 'Kung Fu' don't know ****-all about what they're talking about, but they're treated as 'experts' on all things MA. They're the same types of idiots who leave YouTube comments under old-school Kung Fu movies saying, "These guys would get their @sses beat down fighting like that. If they posed after side-kicking with their leg out like that I'd take them down and ground and pound them."

    I know of at least two local MMA practitioners who have gotten killed outside of the gym/ring over the years, but I would never say that MMA sucks. Everything has its place, and sometimes reality bites back hard.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 03-13-2019 at 08:46 AM.

  15. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by MightyB View Post
    To me this is a hunk of horse sh*t which we have to start calling out. It's not that Kung Fu hasn't adapted or isn't relevant, it is just held to a higher standard. One which isn't applied to other martial arts.
    That's somewhat my point with my quote in the article - "Another reason is that Kung Fu is working for a longer game, so it’s more sophisticated, and in this case, to a fault. A practitioner doesn’t really come into mastery until their thirties, and that’s outside the window of MMA competitors. A simpler way to look at this is that if someone pursues Kung Fu in earnest, they have to study dozens of cold-arm weapons. That’s time that an MMA competitor will spend training fighting, so they are more focused. Kung Fu can be stripped down to just sparring, which is essentially what Sanda is, and that has achieved some level of success in MMA." But such is the MMA perspective. They can't get out of the cage.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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