futsaowingchun
Black Belt
This video show's how to break or control the opponents strong bridge or iron bridge. i show how technique is needed not force to overcome a strong bridge.
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This video show's how to break or control the opponents strong bridge or iron bridge. i show how technique is needed not force to overcome a strong bridge.
Agree!your opponent will tell you how to hit him.
First: Good choice of a demo partner for this video. IMO demos always look better when the instructor is matched against a student of equal or larger size and physique.
BTW thanks for posting these clips. It's great having concrete, visual material to discuss.
Applying the Lop Sao is not a trick. it just simply works. I agree the tan sao can not work at that contact point which is why you need to use the lop sao in order to move his bridge. The lop sao energy is different then the tan sao.To comment on the second portion of the clip - The tan sau doesn't work here, not because of some iron bridge or anything else form the opponent, but simply because the contact & leverage points aren't correct for tan sau to even be applied in the first place. So, without proper understanding of what drives tan sau or how it is applied, it makes sense that one would have to resort to 'tricks' and grabbing to compensate.
This IMO is the issue that often arises with technique-focused approaches to WC vs looking at concepts/principles of the system.
Lop might work. It's just kinda sorta like a bandaid for bad postioning and not controlling the line properly.Applying the Lop Sao is not a trick. it just simply works. I agree the tan sao can not work at that contact point which is why you need to use the lop sao in order to move his bridge. The lop sao energy is different then the tan sao.
Applying the Lop Sao is not a trick. it just simply works. I agree the tan sao can not work at that contact point which is why you need to use the lop sao in order to move his bridge. The lop sao energy is different then the tan sao.
First: Good choice of a demo partner for this video. IMO demos always look better when the instructor is matched against a student of equal or larger size and physique.
Second: what's with the sound? When I watched it the sound was out of sync by 2-3 seconds!
Third: Strange. When I was watching this my wife came into the room wearing that same "Gizmo" shirt as your student in a XXL man's size. Hmmm. I hope she isn't keeping something from me!
Now about the clip. I have no problem with the techniques, switching from pak to lap-sau if the energy so dictates. But like JP pointed out, it's not a trick, or even a choice that you make. The energy you receive dictates the response. Yip man famously said that your opponent will tell you how to hit him.
Finally, you omitted what is probably the simplest response when trying to pak-sau an opponent with a very strong and immovable arm. If the pak-sau can't move the arm, then let let the force push your body (shifting your centerline) to the side giving you an opening to strike through.
BTW thanks for posting these clips. It's great having concrete, visual material to discuss.
Once again I'm confused, as what what you are saying here and what you are doing in a demo don't seem to jive.
You say here lap sao ‘simply works’, yet you start off the video showing how the lap, tan & pak don’t initially work (which I completely agree with, more on that later). As a solution, you have to resort to what are essentially ‘tricks’ (using pak/lap) to make it work, and you even go so far as to say that you ‘do it as a fake'. But, even later in your own video @3:30 you demonstrate again that without the 'fake' that your opponent can resist the lap and that it doesn’t 'simply work'.
You also agree here that the tan doesn't work, which is why you had to use the lap. But then you've also shown several times that the lap also doesn't really work...
Like I said - confusing
So it had me thinking, why do you have to resort to faking (AKA ‘tricks’) to make your WC work?
The reason these things don’t work isn’t because of any strong or iron bridge training of the opponent as you suggest. Lap, pak and tan are easily neutralized here because you are at the wrong contact point (wrist-on-wrist), wrong bridge height (too low) and wrong range (to far) for them to work in the first place. Your opponent has far too much reaction time.
So IMO, you are trying to use fakes (what I would call tricks) as a band-aid for a much bigger issue – you are trying to use tools in the wrong timeframe. Fix the above mentioned things and you'll have a lot better success without having to fake your opponent - even if they have iron bridge training
(** I see Jake already offered one good possible solution to what I'm referring to, so I took that part out of my reply **)
I agree the tan sao can not work at that contact point which is why you need to use the lop sao in order to move his bridge.
It has nothing to do with wrong contact point
Haha... nice catch LFJ!![]()
I guess we have differences of opinions. Mine comes from experience which i have been testing for over 30 years. It has nothing to do with wrong contact point or height.
And mine comes from understanding of WC principle & theory, along with common physics, which I always try and point back to in my replies to help clarify my positions (and am always solidifying in my training). In my lineage, some of these things are line, box & gate theories, time/space/energy awareness as it relates to our heaven/human/earth concepts, as well as out saam mo kiu phylosophy to name a few of the major ideas.
Look, I am only going by what you share here and on your clips, which often-times I find a bit contradictory & confusing. Maybe it's just a miscommunication issue. So instead of giving me your resume, you could simply explain why in your opinion the tan didn't work, if as you put it, it has nothing to do wrong contact point or height (or lack of leverage for that matter)? I'd also ask the same of the pak & lap at various times throughout your clip and yet here you say lan simply works, but I'm getting the impression you're not really hear to talk WC, only to share your clips..
FWIW, '30 years' in a system/art doesn't automatically equal knowledgable or 'correct'. I have often found when people are quick to spouting their years of experience vs. actually backing up their theories and/or differing view points with sound concepts/principles or logic, they typically do the former because they lack the confidence and/or the ability to do the latter. And, I've seen people spend many years in an art only to discover after all that time they didn't really know what they thought and had to 'start over' once they realized this.
Now, I'm not saying this is necessarily the case with you, but it is interesting when I back up my POV with WC principles & theory and you only reply with your resume - as if somehow your 30 years gives you more 'correctness' over others. One would think with all those years experience you would have more to say on the matter.
Watch the video..its very easy to understand. The guy in the video who is a beginner understands so why can't you.
Short, snappy responses like this to genuine points raised are getting to be troll-like behavior.
If you're not willing to discuss your content, it seems your only motive in posting your videos here is to increase your view rates. I'm no moderator, but I wouldn't allow it much longer.
It's MartialTalk, not MartialClickOnMyVideos and "buzz off with your beginner questions. I have 30 years of experience".