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Not sure why. But there is something that make him seem more legit then the other original students of Bruce Lee.
Toughts?
Toughts?
Is it though?
Different hits, but quite similar principals of knowing when to apply resistance, when not to, hand redirection, and getting a hit off it.
There's another trainer here in Vegas, this is two of his students doing drills:
His fighters are undefeated against mine in Amateur bouts. They use a lot of re-direction and deflection, and I've seen them do it to pretty much anyone they spar.
IMO its folly to try and distill an Art down to either terrible examples of it, or a singular thing we may see missing from a video. By this rationale I can provide dozens of examples of why pretty much any art is garbage.
I've taken 8 months of wing chun a long time ago so I'm not totally in the dark about it - or basing the stuff entirely on what I garner from a single video.
I think you're right I didn't really think about its value for gloved sports like boxing where you can't grab.
I don't want to go into all of my strong reservations to how they train, though because it drives me bonkers.
Being fairly new to boxing your knowledge, experience, and those training videos are highly appreciated.
Are you implying your fighters are losing to the other trainers fighters because their deflection techniques?
Yes, and they have xxxx styles, definitely many of them have something usable.finding viable Gung Fu of any type isnt easy.
Oh, you had to bring up WC again.
I don't understand why they don't just grab each other's hands/arms for control then push away, move into a clinch or takedown, or throw a strike.
Chi sao is an interesting practice, but I don't consider it realistic for combat arts with so much emphasis being on deflecting instead of grabbing.
It's just terrible.