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Yet another instructor using the ol "we are a martial science not a sport" argument cunningly disguised as "sport arts like Thai/boxing/kickboxing don't work on the street but ours does". If I visited a school where the instructor said this kinda stuff (especially no sparring until chum Kiu, wtf?) I would make my excuses and leave.
You said:You really do need Chum Kiu material (steps, turns, and kicks) ...The form can come later. I'd think a few months of drills and two man of exchanges would be a good amount of time to ingrain the "muscle memory" necessary for controlled free-sparring.
I've had snt level students put on the gloves and be able to have a good basic sparring game after a few months. once they are equipped with basic footwork, 4 gates awareness (and the ability to protect that airspace), basic striking skills and have worked their form(s), drills and sensitivity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Yes Geezer, I haven't been around lately and was expecting the usual torrent of abuse from "the usual suspects" as I was making observations about a "VT" instructor. Tell you what though, I was thinking about the whole sparring thing and I think unlike wrestling/judo/jiu jitsu where you can pretty much go full out to test your skills with minimal(ish) risks and know how effective they are, ultimately with striking you have to compromise so much more and have to use an element of speculation to determine whether your skills will be enough.
Yet another instructor using the ol "we are a martial science not a sport" argument cunningly disguised as "sport arts like Thai/boxing/kickboxing don't work on the street but ours does". If I visited a school where the instructor said this kinda stuff (especially no sparring until chum Kiu, wtf?) I would make my excuses and leave.
As WSLVT goes, it's more efficient and reliable to follow the system in sequence, not to skip important stages of development and jump ahead to where unnecessary errors will arise. It may be counterintuitive to some that early sparring will not allow one to reach the goal sooner, but the system is set up in stages for a reason. Followed as prescribed, it results in better quality VT, and in a shorter amount of time. Other systems may differ.
I don't practice VT but I had a few lessons with him and I consider him as one my friends. So maybe train with someone before you judge.
My Sifu says some of the people he trained with would not fight while others did and they fought often. They would train for a few weeks then out on the streets of Hong Kong they would fight. Lot of gangs so finding someone to fight was easy. Win or lose they would go back to the school assess what worked, what didn't work, and why. Train it and back out onto the streets again. Those who didn't fight much or at all weren't looked down upon but they also didn't get the same attention from Jiu Sifu as those who did in training. Jiu would scold them for fighting but worked more with them and was far more upset if they lost than at them for fighting. If someone lost a fight he would punish them by making them do additional exercises to burn out their arms and legs before training. So they would always say they won but if not he'd some how always found out and then the training was even harder.I personally agree with what you say here and apply the same thinking to instructing within my lineage.
However, it is also useful to consider that WSL fought before he learned Yip Man's VT, he fought while learning VT, and fought even better after mastering VT. The same is true of anyone who is temperamentally a fighter. In the WT lineages, Emin fought as a kid before he studied WT, he fought while training in WT, and continued to fight better after gaining considerable skill in WT. A friend of mine knew Hawkins Cheung. He said that "...that little guy" (Hawkins) "fought from the time he was a kid... he had to!". He didn't wait to learn WC first. The same was probably true for all the WC guys who were fighters.
My point? Just that whatever the ideal instructional progression may be, fighters will fight whether they are "ready" or not!
I think you are reading for more into this than what is being expressed.So what I'm tasting here is a bit of "if you never fought, your ****" flavour?
What a load of ********, sorry Saul and Geezer but do you both fight every day in the street? DannyT do you honour your teacher by doing the same by fighting in the street?
LMAO
So what I'm tasting here is a bit of "if you never fought, your ****" flavour?
What a load of ********, sorry Saul and Geezer but do you both fight every day in the street? DannyT do you honour your teacher by doing the same by fighting in the street?
LMAO
...initial sparring is friendly, light contact with no kicks. My group is mostly older guys who most definitely are not training to be like Josh Kaldani!![]()