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Wing Chun - an overview of its training methods and effectiveness.

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  • Wing Chun - an overview of its training methods and effectiveness.

    I trained WC for approximately 1 year. I put my heart and soul into it and rarely missed a day. Even when there was no lesson I spent my time refining what I had been taught.

    I have also now experienced many other fighting styles, including Karate, Japanese Jiu Jits, Grappling, Thai Boxing and Combatives. As a police officer I have fought for real many times.

    So here is my overall review of the Wing Chun style. I do, of course, recognise that there are now many versons of it but, for the most part, I believe that to be people merely trying to remarket the same core system in an attempt to gain money.

    Forms

    There are three main forms (or Katas for our Japanese stylists) in WC. I trained the first one only. Often the movements were both repetitive and slow. Practice was meant to somehow enhance your understanding and feel for a technique and this would lead to you becoming more effective. They were also mean't to keep some kind of record of te WC syllabus.

    It didn't and it doesn't make you more effective. And in this day of video and DVD there is no need to keep this record. Los of training time was wasted erforming these useless movements. There was no opponent, no resistance, no timing, no power etc. etc. etc. Forms are part of martial arts mythology, and they were a substantial part of the training.

    Put it this way, Mike Tyson never needed Forms, and he got pretty effective. Wasted time.

    Basic Techniques

    The basic punch held the fist vertical and relied on alot of speed in delivery for power. There was only limited body projection behind it. As such it was quite weak. I saw heard a well known WC practitioner write that "a highly trained WC punch can be as hard as the average man's wild swing". Hardly something to brag about. In fairness, though, a good WC man could throw 3 or 4 of these punches before the average mans wild swing was complete.

    The style is structurally very fast. Movements are kept to a minimum, and straight punches are the norm. Remember Bruce Lee taling of "economy of motion"? Well, he got it from WC. They have Bil Jee (or "thrusting fingers"), and I do think that this is an excellent variation for self defence. However, this could only be used in the most extreme conditions, and it's use could be nullified by the grappler. Structurally fast yes, but also structurally weak.

    Stances are poor, with weight often on the back leg. With the weight so far back, a good shove in the chest and over you'd go. Also the movement was effected. So moving around was almost like hopping. And they stick their chins out. Its like a Boxers birthday party.

    Blocking and parrying was OK. They had ways to subtley guide attacks away, rather than the Neanderthal linear blocks that I had seen before (from Karate). I did take some of these moves away with me and incorporate them into my training. Again, something of use.

    Chi Sao (or "sticky hands")

    This is where they learn to react to their opponents energy through touch. The limbs are rolled, and then strikes made. The opponent tries to redirect these strikes and then counter etc.

    It s all too civilised. Each person is politely keeping the correct distance, and torso's stay erect. I contrast it with Senshido's idea of tactile sensitivity. Here both combatants are performing standing grappling. training is hard, unscripted and spontaneous. It is also a position much more akin to a real fight. He can sense his opponents energy through his body movement too, but it is a world away from the arm fencing of WC Chi Sao. Wasted time.

    Trapping

    Linked with Chi Sao, it is where you can momentarly immobilise an opponents limb to create a gap for your own attack. It is much too complex for real fighting and I have never seen it used in a real fight.

    There s a case, for example, for grab and remove the opponents lead hand, then fire a puch into the face etc. But this simple move does not need hours of fancy looking training. More wasted time.

    WC Dummy

    I did no training on this, so my comments do not come from real experience. I opine that it could be of some use, since it provides "limbs" to deal with as you train. But its rigid striking surface is useless for power generation. I personally have a "Spar Pro", which is basically like a tailor's dummy (just head and torso) that you can hit. Something like this is better for striking practice. But, if it had some kind of "arms" like the WC Dummy, it would be better.

    Grappling.

    None, zero, zilch. Real fights can go to the floor. WC has no answer for what to do then. Sure they have now developed this "Anti Grappling". But it isn't good. We only have two legs and, as such, are relatively easy to knock over. This lack of grappling is a massive flaw in a supposed overall fighting style.

    Wall Bags

    These are filled with hard beans (or whatever) and hand on the wall like a picture. I trained with one of these alot. OK to hit, but not brilliant. The bag never moves like a real person, so it is too easy to "apply" your techniques. A punchbag moves all over the place. I have seen WC men work out on one and, because of the lack of power and poor stances, they look pretty silly doing it.

    Kicks

    They never kicked higher than the groin, which is good. But they were rarely practiced, and never against a striking aid. As such, they were not trained to the level required for appplcation. I won't even mentione "sticky legs". It is too ridiculous.

    General training.

    Most of the training is done against thin air. I do think that this is useful if you are learning a technique for the first time, or "shadow boxing" (but doing it properly, as a spontaneous mental training aid). But to spend the majority of your time hitting thin air? Rubbish. All you do is get better at hitting air, and it does NOT translate into hitting people. No, I don't think you should batter your training partners all the time (but full contact training should occur), but I do believe that you should be hitting things. General training was a general waste of time. It was made worse by the "we are the best" attitude of many of the instructors, who theorised how it was so.

    Relevance to Self Protection

    Issues like awareness, avoidance, posturing, threat assessment etc etc etc. were not addressed one iota. These isues were totally unknown to the so called instructors. They were training people how to mess around in a training hall. They were not training them how to survive in the big bad world.

    I bet there are people who can make WC work. But they will be near the top of the WC tree, AND they will be in the minority.


    OK, I know I've been a bit unkind in other threads. But so what? This is my view for all to see. And all this "you only spent a year at it" is really weak. I am an experienced student of fighting arts, and an experienced fighter. One year should be plenty time to learn to apply a GOOD fighting art. Especially the extent of training I undertook. But I couldn't apply it.

    From WC I took some of the parrying movements and the bil jee (which I have now rejected in favour of other ways to throw the fingers). Not alot to show for all that work.

  • #2
    Originally posted by Thai Bri
    Kicks

    They never kicked higher than the groin, which is good. But they were rarely practiced, and never against a striking aid. As such, they were not trained to the level required for appplcation. I won't even mentione "sticky legs". It is too ridiculous.

    General training.

    Most of the training is done against thin air. I do think that this is useful if you are learning a technique for the first time, or "shadow boxing" (but doing it properly, as a spontaneous mental training aid). But to spend the majority of your time hitting thin air? Rubbish.
    One of the point discussed here (way of training) can be best summarized by this short text (taken from www.urbancombatives.com ):

    "The two lads approached me, one in front and the other just to his right. Then one of them said something like “Oi mate have you got any spare change?” I simply said “no, sorry” in a polite tone as I kept walking.

    From here one of them blocked my path and came back with “alright then, any money we find on you, we’re taking!” I instantly realised the seriousness of my situation, I dropped my gym bag to the floor and acted pre-emptively by punching one them in the mouth, then kicking the other in the groin.

    Although my shots were fast and accurate, they had absolutely no effect what so-ever other than temporarily stunning my opponents.

    The reason for this (unbeknown to me at the time) is that my muscle memory had only been conditioned to deliver touch with control impact.

    This is what comes from the practice of punching and striking out at nothing more than air, and training for point- semi-contact sparring for years. Instead, (as I later realised) I should have been developing the muscle memory for true knock out force, which only comes from lots of impact training on pads and bags
    "

    The guy who wrote the above lines is Lee Morrison, who started with TMA and now trains and teaches Combatives

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    • #3
      It is rather bold of you to give us such a strong opinion about something which you clearly don't understand.

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      • #4
        then educate us cuz im willing to learn anything and everything i can

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        • #5
          To learn Wing Chun you should go to a Wing Chun club and after some time, maybe they will take you as an indoor student of the master.

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          • #6
            kobra - you are patronising and naive. You'd fit in nicely in the class I went to.

            As a mater of fact a guy on another board has seen this. He is a WC instructor and has politely mentioned that the are WC clubs (a minority) that avoid my criticisms. He had an air tof truth about him. I'm arranging to go to his club and take a look.

            If he measures up, I'll let you all know. Persoanlly I'd be delighted if there were a group within WC that could actually train well and apply it.

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            • #7
              I'm not your patron Thai Bri.

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              • #8
                That's either very profound or just stupid.

                I think I can guess which.

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                • #9
                  If you only trained 1 year in Wing Chun how can you say that you know it enough to give such a scaving attack on its effectiveness? It is you who is naive.

                  Wing Chun is an effective close range style well suited to self defence situations. But you have to learn it before you can use it.
                  Last edited by kobra; 02-10-2004, 02:43 PM. Reason: spellins

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                  • #10
                    effective for who? If it does not work for him is it really effective?

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                    • #11
                      all people are different man...one person can be a literal "master" in judo, but it be totally ineffective for someone else(most people)
                      it just depends on the skill level u recieved

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                      • #12
                        A year of dedicated training is enough to judge. Especially since I have sommuch experience in both real fighting and other arts.

                        If I was saying how brillian the art was, you would not be criticisng the length of time I trained. You'd be falling over yourself to agree.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by kobra
                          If you only trained 1 year in Wing Chun how can you say that you know it enough to give such a scaving attack on its effectiveness? It is you who is naive.

                          Wing Chun is an effective close range style well suited to self defence situations. But you have to learn it before you can use it.
                          honest WT/WC teachers teach basic concepts and let you train hard, so that you can defend yourself against the average thug in 5-6 months, providing you use intelligent scenario-training. An example? Hans-J. Reimers, whose organization (The Alliance) accepts cross-training and lets its members fight in NHB. Is it just a coincidence, BTW?
                          Those who tell you that you have to train for years before being able to fight are either morons or thieves. Those who tell you that you can't fight without being efficent at chi-sau are also stupids. An effective SD system can't rely upon refined attributes. It should allow you to use your gross motor skills in adrenaline-packed situations. Period.
                          If Bri Thai felt that after 1 year of serious training he couldn't fight against a 1 year trained thai boxer, it means that what they were teaching him was flawed.
                          Adavanced WC practitioner can surely get useful tools through chi-sau, wooden dummy etc. etc., but it's absurd to base one's SD skills on other than simple, straight no-nonsense concepts and techniques that have been trained realistically under adrenaline stress.

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                          • #14
                            This one kid in my traditional WC school is fourteen years old and he trained for 1.5 years. He beat an Olympic champion boxer who is in his twenties... I witnessed it. He got hit 3 times he hit the boxer about 30 times. So WC can be very effective in a short period of time. Maybe Thai Bri had very bad instructors who couldn’t teach him anything useful in a year. At the place were I go the sifu knows what he is talking about and we spar very often and have full contact classes.

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                            • #15
                              The boxer didnt even understand how he was being hit.

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