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Its a good principle, but we do want to be conscious of kicking placement. We don't want contact with the knee cap or the connective tissue directly above it in demonstration or beginners drills. Depending on a persons knee stability we could be compromising their mobility
So a shin strike to the thigh while your opponent is stationary really hurts? Wow, who wudda thought? Master Bator acts like he's teaching some secret kick instead of a poorly executed kick.
Depends..this isnt a knee kick though and you gain strength through pain. the point is hes demonstrating the subtle movement for a more effective technique.. if you have an interest in kung fu, then you should take the hit and learn from it. This is why conditioning is important.
@@Numberonechesspest so the title states wing chun master demonstrates incredible internal power.... so my point is... anyone can kick just like he does on the video and coarse pain. His kick was strong and quite honestly ridiculous to demonstrate this to someone's knee joint. You don't need to be a Kung Fu, wing chun or karate master to kick someone hard like this.
@@Itrybrothen his second attempt was off target and he got his knee. Another reason why demos may look impressive, but later on you will suffer for it.
The secret of this kick is simply that it's being aimed at a gallbladder acupuncture point, making it very painful. It can be executed with very little power, thus giving the illusion that the kicker is an internal arts master.
Just wondering, with “dropping this”, what is the “this” that is being dropped? Is it his bodyweight? Is he doing his kick in a more downwards direction?
I been doing wing chun 7 years and I can tell you That’s not a Wing Chun technique. The first tell and how I know this is we don’t turn our hips in with our kicks, ya no. . the idea of Wing Chun and most important thing is the centerline. The energy must come from the ground up and sent out 1 direction toward the centerline without breaking structure , and this is why we also don’t turn our shoulders when we punch . The problem when turning your shoulders or hips is that it breaks structure and reduces power in your jing and that work if your perfectly aligned in your stance . It’s all physics . Think about it like this , like how throwing a ball directly straight is gonna have much more velocity than a curve ball on impact is gonna be much higher velocity than throwing a curve ball , but when using your “Jing”, and you know if your doing it wrong if your using your muscle memory to generate power
It’s just like when your throwing strikes . Again The reason for that example when a ball is thrown straight towards a target, it follows a direct path, experiencing minimal air resistance and the other forces that could hinder its speed. On the other hand, a curveball, due to the Magnus effect and that curveball would slow down. So that’s why it’s important to focus on strengthening your jing and minimizing not doing hips or shoulders turns
Is there any footage of him actually sparring or even light sparring or moving with any signifikant speed in chained movements? All I see is him talking. Is that all he does on his seminars?🤔