Muslim "King of Kung Fu" Salikhov Hype Train

Awesome Spinning shit.

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kids spoiling everything, as always..
 
<TrumpWrong1>

Sanda was created based on Sambo / modern kickboxing.
They might have tweaked certain elements based on traditional martial art. However, It doesn't change the fact its very fundamentals are different from what is called kung fu.

Lol, so you think Sanshou got its wrestling influence from Sambo? That's nonsense. "Modern Kickboxing" didn't even exist during the development of Sanda/Sanshou. The throws and quick takedowns are 100 percent rooted in Shuaijiao. All of the original developers of Sanshou/Sanda as a government approved, "modern" sport had so called "traditional" kungfu backgrounds. The side kick and spinning hook kicks are literally EXACTLY like the kicks from Northern Tan Tui and Northern Shaolin. The throws are found in many northern styles, including San Shou Kuai Jiao and Bajiquan ("Fast Wrestling"). In other words, the cues they took from Russia were not the martial techniques, but more the categorizing and making it a national sport, (one version for the military, and one version for civilians).

It was developed when Communist China wanted to set up a standardized curriculum of the "competition" side of kungfu and make it a national sport. It was developed into 2 categories, the practical "Sanda/Sanshou" category... and the other "Contemporary Wushu" aspect, which is modern "Standardized" sets of many northern and southern styles, except done in a more gymnastic way and far removed of its combat origins.


http://www.wushu.org/eng/sanda.php



 
Another "m-1 can" Fedor was a "crazy Russian" for wanting to bring to the UFC with him.
 
Lol, so you think Sanshou got its wrestling influence from Sambo? That's nonsense. "Modern Kickboxing" didn't even exist during the development of Sanda/Sanshou. The throws and quick takedowns are 100 percent rooted in Shuaijiao. All of the original developers of Sanshou/Sanda as a government approved, "modern" sport had so called "traditional" kungfu backgrounds. The side kick and spinning hook kicks are literally EXACTLY like the kicks from Northern Tan Tui and Northern Shaolin. The throws are found in many northern styles, including San Shou Kuai Jiao and Bajiquan ("Fast Wrestling"). In other words, the cues they took from Russia were not the martial techniques, but more the categorizing and making it a national sport, (one version for the military, and one version for civilians).

It was developed when Communist China wanted to set up a standardized curriculum of the "competition" side of kungfu and make it a national sport. It was developed into 2 categories, the practical "Sanda/Sanshou" category... and the other "Contemporary Wushu" aspect, which is modern "Standardized" sets of many northern and southern styles, except done in a more gymnastic way and far removed of its combat origins.


http://www.wushu.org/eng/sanda.php





Chinesee government literally invited sambo experts to teach their military some effective Martial arts. It is known fact lol
 
Chinesee government literally invited sambo experts to teach their military some effective Martial arts. It is known fact lol

You're completely disregarding the massive amounts of documented information I presented. Of course Russian Military exchanged ideas with China. But what you're not understanding is that the main input the Russian brass gave, is the emphasis on making a standardized "national sport", out of the multiple martial arts the Chinese already had. There's a common saying in Practical chinese martial methods... Shuai, Ti, Di Na, (which roughly translates to Throw, Strike, Kick, and joint lock). This was a common saying way before Sambo was ever developed.

Sambo's roots are in Judo, which is further rooted in Jiujitsu, which is then predated by, SHUAIJIAO. That's also the reason Sanshou/Sanda matches were commonly fought on what's called "Lei Tai" (as an alternative to the ring). Lei Tai are elevated platforms that had well documented fights in China for centuries.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Shuaijiao_masters_tianjin_1930.jpg
 
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