Thanks you for the original wooden dummy Form. It is exactly the 116 movements of the Muk chong Wing Tsun and cool for the learning Sequencies.Thank you the instruction . A Student of Wing Tsun. J. Rewitzky 😊
It's curious the number of parts you have in these chi sau sections. Polish-Hungarian WT has like every chi sau section in A short version, A long version and B version and each of them has at least an opening (which was the whole 1st movie about the 1st chi sau section), few attacks or cycles and a closure. So we have 3 versions of seven Siu Nim Tao/Chum Kiu section plus section "3 and a half", 3 versions of nine Biu Tze sections, many many versions (A, B, C, D etc.) of eight Wooden Dummy sections and four Chi Gerk sections. Usually many of these versions even have additional "paths".
The best Wing Tsun masters are Tam Choeng Fai, Wan Kam Leung, Kong Chi Keung, etc. Leung Ting and Robin Tsang Wing Tsun King fu is just to fool foreigners. After three to ten years of training in Leung Ting and Robin Tsang Wing Tsun school, we learned simple basic forms of Wing Tsun only, not the technique of Wing Tsun fighting. They only know how to teach the form and movements of Wing Tsun such as Siu Nim Tau, Bridge-Seeking, Chi-Shou, and Biu Zhi, etc, and do not know how to apply these basic skills to real fighting techniques. Therefore, students who had learned many years from the school, cannot fight anyone. There are no outstanding students from their school.
Wrong about LT. It's a mixed bag. Plenty of crap students cuz LT is all about the money. But the serious schools are there too, and yes they are among the top of the top. Pair drills, energy, timing, reactions, closing gap, all triangle footwork patterns, stance energies to always keep activated, power of fists, palms, penetrating soft body force, sudden jut force, kick patterns with footworks, kick switching targets, kicks and hands working together, it just goes on and on and on. Don't make such a judgement on LT's curriculums/skill sets even though he is a serious Ahole.
Leung Ting changed his Chia Sao sets over the years. What I learned 30 year ago was much different. It is now better, more comprehensive, and more didactic.
now I see how someone who opened up a leung ting lineage of wing tsun school next to me only had 5 years of training in the art before opening a school. I've been training almost 12 years, sitll haven't gotten to biu tze form at my school and just mopped the floor with him when I went to see if it would be worth changing schools. I'll stick with mine for now.
Hi how are? I have been watching your videos for years. Can you guys please make a video on the wing chun stance it self and its purpose and use. Some times I see others stand straight up while others are knees bend more. Is abduction slightly or is firm or changes ar times etc.. what about the spine and use of elbow force.. thanks in advance
Very impressive very nice I'm glad I watched it I wish I could have been doing this when I was at my karate class that could have helped what waterpark is one of those or bought one of those wooden training dummies Groupon karate or Kung-Fu or any other martial arts 🥋💪😉👍🥋
If he gets you in a clinch he's going to be shooting knees into you, groin, stomach or head. I think you would find it hard to slap or palm him on the head. Maybe the other dummy move, double horizontal palms to the mid section and then takedown or throw.
This doesnt look like the leung ting wooden dummy I was shown exactly changes at the end no tan sau with the kick before scraping kick didn’t keep the wu sau up when doing those last movements but then again maybe its been modified
The first movement you show will get you elbowed. Leung Ting himself said never do that pulling movement. The first move uses forward pressure during the whole thing. You must have learned that from Emen Bozetepe. I saw him teaching it that way and Sifu Leung Ting said it is wrong.
I learned Boztepe system and you do not pull the opponent like that when you do this drill. You do the pull with one arm and tan sao with the other but it only looks like a pull. You actually give forward pressure and lock the partners shoulder into the socket, slide the arm and pak sao the chest. If he does not give up his force and tries to give you a bent elbow instead of a straight arm, you simply roll over his arm with your elbow.
@Dan53196 Not the same move. Notice that sifu doesn't use an advancing step. He uses a turn stance. There is absolutely no pulling in that first move... none.
Il Jab e i movimenti dei piedi dell' aggressore sono proprio surreali🙈non credo un lottatore esperto attacca in quel modo per essere atterrato come un kamikadze.. chissà forse uno a caso che incontri per strada potrebbe attaccarti cosí. Fatto stà che le tecniche sono interessanti.. solo l'applicazione mi sembra come una "prova" di attori🙏
ci sta quello che dici, tuttavia cosi come l'attaccante ha rispetto cosi lo fa il maestro che difende accennando attacchi, quello da studiare e' il timing e la distanza. Nella boxe si usano tecniche simili
@@trocchiettoski lo detto un anno fa e lo ripeto dopo un anno. Se uno ti arriva in quel modo tutto scomposto. Significa che nn sa nemmeno come si tira un pugno e le prende giustamente in quel modo che il maestro gliele da. Ma tutto sommato se si parla di professionisti nn credo facciano aggressioni del genere in modo scomposto.
@@federotsbloodyroots5030 si chiaro, hai ragione al 101 per cento, spesso il problema dei praticanti kung fu e' che non si sono mai allenati con pugili, muay thay fighter, grapplers veri. Un semi professionista e' capace di tirarti jab, cross e middle kick prima ancora che uno li veda partire. Personalmente dopo 30 anni, ho lasciato le arti marziali mi davano troppo nervosismo la notte quando le prendevo di brutto, e cosi iniziavano a farmi pena le persone che picchiavo, specie giovani pieni di aggressivita'. Alla fine dobbiamo lottare con noi stessi. Cordiali saluti.
@@trocchiettoski la penso come te. Anche se pratico MMA e faccio sparring con semi pro e pro. Cmq nn mi interessano gli incontri. Lo faccio solo per migliorare le mie tecniche di Kung Fu, il mio primo insegnante mi ha insegnato il fakuen come forma. Over 30 ho fatto giusto qualche gara di grappling. Ne farò ancora qualcuna solo per divertimento. Io il weng chun lo trovo molto interessante sia chiaro. ⚔️ Ogni stile e basato ed evoluto nell' epoca in cui vivevano chi lo ha inventato. C'è da capire che gli stili e i modi di combattimento sono in continua evoluzione, ad esempio la lotta olimpica di 20 anni fa. Non potrebbe mai competere con la lotta olimpica di oggi. Le tecniche sono in continua evoluzione. Questo é il mio modo di ragionare. Senza le forme e il taichi. Non avrei sviluppato certe abilità questo é certo. Infatti ti danno molta più tecnica di chi magari pratica a puro scopo di fare male. Grazie del tuo pensiero.💯⚔️🥋
Excuse me if I am commenting out of turn, knowing little to nothing of what you are doing (so pls correct me where wrong); however, watching over and over again, and comparing the bit of knowledge I _do_ have regarding stance and form, there are number of visual 'flaws' that I would point out, if I am correct at all in pointing them out: 1. First being the opening thrust of the pole, in that all of the physical movements should be applicable without the pole itself. I note that you do not turn your arm/wrist as you would normally thrusting a jab. Your wrist should be pointing inward, not upward, turning the pole as you thrust, otherwise (a) risking injury and (b) being unprotected, were the wrist struck here you'd instantly be disarmed. 2. Ma Bu is weak and uneven esp. at the thrust. You'd easily be uprooted 3. @2:06 Examine your R foot. All of your control of the pole should come from upper body strength, not lower extremity leverage. At this point (it seems) the pole is controlling _you._ You are relying too much on its weight to ground you, so that for too long almost all of your weight is on the left. You are literally in the air. The pole could easily be wrestled from you and you thrown to the ground trying to hold it.