Paul is directly responsible in my opinion for teaching martial arts instructors how to present and demonstrate their art on video. In the eighties Paul was the king of video presentations.
I'm convinced this is the only video you will likely ever need to watch to master combat, so long as you actually practice and feel true pressure and test and test and familiarize against another person trying to score hits against you or do the drill back to you. Couple that with all of your grappling fundamentals, use these to find your single and double leg takedowns, neck ties, then once on the ground master BJJ. I'm literally convinced you will only ever need this one video to give you the mastery pathway. You just have to walk down this path he is showing you. Those pathways are all real and really work when timing is applied. Just practice your ass off, walk that path, cut away the foliage, keep walking
Paul Vunak you've reenergized my love for JKD. I remember you from the late sixties, early, mid seventies martial arts magazines. You haven't aged. You're like a cool glass of "WATER ". ✊👍✌
This isn’t JKD. It most certainly isn’t Bruce Lee’s JKD, it’s Inosanto interpretation of something he could never do himself. Bruce stopped doing trapping, he stopped doing chi sao. He removed them from the curriculum and found better methods. It’s the facts. The sad thing is people thinking this is what Bruce was doing.
@@axelstone3131 Dan Inosanto wasn't as fast as Bruce Lee was. Few are and only a handful of people on this planet move that fast. So maybe Dan needed trapping and chi sao where Bruce did not. There's a reason it's called Jkd Concepts.
@@jkdbuck7670 correct, but Dan didn’t train like Bruce Lee did. Most people don’t or refuse to train like Bruce. As genetically gifted as he was, a lot of his attributes came from the way he trained. If you don’t train like Bruce, how can you expect to even gain attributes similar to him. If you follow Bruce’s methods, and do the reps, the body mechanics, the footwork, the supplementary training outside of the martial arts, like isometrics, etc. You will gain similar attributes to Bruce. The problem with JKD concepts is that it doesn’t follow JKD principles, especially of simplicity and directness, and non classical. JKD concepts is classical arts repackaged under a fancy name “JKD concepts” which wasn’t a thing when Bruce was teaching.
Before the BJJ legion chimes in, I doubt that Paul or anyone else in JKD (anyone credible) would argue that grapplers are also fond of this range as a potential entry point into a takedown or whatever. Paul is teaching concepts here, not trying to present a 'defence for all situations' - I dont believe that such a thing exists anyway, particularly in a world where too many people carry concealed weapons. Personally, the absolute last thing I would want to be doing in the street is rolling around on the cement ./ bitumen /. whatever, but fights do end up there and I've fallen off enough bikes to know that you dont even need a 260lb gorilla on top of you when you hit the ground ;)
His RAT system addresses this. There are a lot of dirty and very effective applications that Paul uses that sport BJJ ( most are sport btw) don’t train and are very difficult to deal with. 😎
The sad thing is people thinking this is what Bruce Lee was doing because I can assure you Bruce wasn’t doing this stuff and he most definitely wasn’t by the 70’s. Paul because he is a student on Inosanto lacks key principles of JKD. No interception, no fencing footwork, to much wing chun trapping and mixing with other arts. Bruce stopped doing trapping and chi sao and he most certainly wasn’t mixing kali or Thai boxing either. Inosanto concepts is NOT Bruce’s JKD.
Honestly real concepts are meant for practical application rather than theoretical discussion. Nobody can possibly argue on youtube comments about what a real fight feels like, you just have to physically be in a fight to experience the reality of the situation. I have been in a real altercation where I was able to use these exact concepts Paul is teaching in order to find my takedowns, and I have also been in real altercations on the street where I was able to use these EXACT (not exaggerating....when I say exact.....read back to me the word you just read to yourself out loud.....if you read the word exact, you would be accurate) concepts in order to find inside control and underhooks and neck ties and every possible wrestling fundamental entrypoint to securing arm control on the feet with arm drags and wrist control and everything you can possibly imagine. My experienced opinion is that if you actually practice these concepts taught in this exact video you will become a proficient martial artist. However standing on the side of the road and watching people who actually do things is not the same as practicing
I think the hu bud drill should be part of every martial artists education. It is easy to learn, and crazy effective for learning sensitivity and reading your opponents intention.If you have a fear of sparring this is also a great drill for teaching you how to confront an opponent and how to keep your hands up with a lot of stuff is flying in your direction. I learned this drill as a Filipino martial arts student but I must say I perfected it while watching Paul’s videos
The hubud vs. straight punch is much more important to me. Especially if you replace the "to slow" punch with two fast jabs or a fast 1-2 from time to time. Also one needs to change hight of attack and level of pentration from time to time. If the energy doesn't really change, it's years of stagnation.
@@kenkongermany7860Hubud has so many variations, you can throw a variety of punches, use elbows, and switch sides, use different weapons, heck you could replace the punch with a kick
Yepp. And they are all useless. But if you do some quick daggerstabs instead of the timed only one too slow attack from time to time ... and so on. One has to put sparring mode intend to hit attacks into it. Break the rythym, create REAL timing. And so on. Kick s n ellbows my ... .@@yogurt_junior
Paul is who the writers of Lethal Weapon designed the character “Martin Riggs” off of. It’s a great action movie with a brilliant duo filled with different martial arts. Mel Gibson taught me the triangle choke at 9 years old from the film. I had no idea what it was doing to my bigger friends or how it effected them. But I did it and it worked every time. I didn’t see it again and tell UFC 1. But Dan Inosanto , Paul and Chuck Norris were black belts in BJJ before most people.
@@RegisWilkins Bruce Lee took chi sao and sticking out the curriculum in 1971. These people are teaching outdated methods Bruce himself stopped teaching and doing. He went beyond wing chun. Even his last friendly spar with his senior in wing chun, Wong Sheung Leung in 1970’s said “he used his own method” meaning he didn’t use wing chun. So some more research.
In our school we work on inside/outside Russians and establishing other clinches from chi sau along with the trapping. We blend the grappling into the trapping so we can implement our walt bayless jiujitsu and catch wrestling
Yes if your opponent has no training at all...this spastic flailing would probably be successful. But pumbling is a much more effective technique in these up close situations.
Another good Streetfighting Energy class with kail Whing Chung Kung fu sevalt Thai Chi In KJD. I have done some multiple Martial arts in my past to see what you mean inspiring as well
Some learn at vastly different rates by comparison, though yes largely you are correct. Not everybody is meant to make full sense in their body the same-particularly in mastering the martial ways of combat.
The practical aspect of the majority of the skills are learned within hours. He cuts to the chase scene to give you the quintessential elements. Training and practicing them will make them reflex.
It’s possible if you already have the training and just develop it and mix it. It becomes easier cause you already felt the hands and grappling. Don’t let people put that in your head that you can’t. The mind could do anything. Fighting is all geometry from bjj to wc to kali etc. high level people in bjj, wc , Kali and other arts know this
In one of Vunak's videos they do apply the energy drill technique to practicing grappling. Basically one person is in mounted then the person on bottom posts, or oompa's, then they switch; bottom person becomes top and top becomes bottom, bottom person posts and reverses it. I don't know if I explained it very well. I'll try to find the video and post it.
Wow. This is really cool. This is so old school. This ancient kungfu tought pretty decently. Not like any of this works now a days. Maybe 200 years ago
It s not really ancient Kung Fu. It's basically Wing Chun. But built with different arts around it. It s more of a sensitivity drill. And that's the unique thing about martial Arts. Take off what works and leave out the rest out that don't apply in today's world
"If you're a wing chun man and you end up on the ground, there is something wrong with your wing chun." Oh, good grief. Yeah, it could mean there is something wrong with your wing chun. But it could also mean the other guy was a good enough grappler to get through whatever barrier you had covering center line. And grappling skills have a shallower learning curve than wing chun.
not true,Paul actually addresses that very point in his straight blast video. He also talked about Rickson gracie etc (this was before the world knew about Rickson). check that out there is a more elaborate explanation. these tapes are very useful.
Totally missing the entire point of what these drills are for. The big misconception that still persists is that JKD is a _style._ It's not, and never has been. Jeet Jun Do is a methodology of training for martial arts skills that can then be applied to *your* style. There's a difference. These are training _drills._ Not fighting methods. As my teacher used to say, they give your techniques a fine polish and sharpens their edge. To say they're "useless for a real fight" is like saying running 6 miles or doing a one rep max deadlift is useless for a fight. Nobody gets into a fight, either in the street or in the ring, and says "Right! Let's bench press each other then do 20 burpees!" But who's going to have the better ability to handle themselves in a fight: someone who trains like that, or some dweeb who spends their days typing nonsense on the internet? And besides, speaking as someone who was lucky enough to have trained under Sifu Paul, and Guro Dan Inosanto and the late Sifu Larry Hartsell back in the day, and has been in more than one or two "real fights" in the streets after working my share of nights on the doors, I can tell you from experience: This. Shit. Works.
Overcomplicated violates the K.I.S.S. principle. Lop sao against a boxer and bam your down wondering what happened. He himself says the movements are very complicated. They keep quoting Bruce but aren’t following his principles of using what works and simplify things. Bruce’s evolution was not complete he passed away long before he refined it to what is now similar to MMA. If you’re a Wing Chun guy and you end up on the ground it means you met a grappler and didn’t have grappling in your arsenal! Almost all JKD guys use what was taught early in Bruce’s evolution and the gospel. It’s way behind what Bruce was even doing just before his death. Remember he wasn’t teaching toward the end, he was making movies. He does know his Wing Chun, it’s just not practical!
Vunak describes most traps as incidental if not accidental. They are trained for that one moment in split second where they are effective. If you're clinched with a boxer, you're damn right a lop sao will work. If you walk up to a boxer at range and try and lop sao him you're going down. Vunak adds a little to Bruce's teachings by saying that there is a superior art at the MOMENT and to use it when the time is right. Also, Bruce was doing grappling at the end.. you can see it in the beginning of Enter the Dragon.
His skill & language of the combative arts” is pure poetry”. He’s still the itinerary master of controlled demolitions. A legend then…and now.
Not really. Bruce Lee on the other hand, absolutely.
This is martial arts harvard. Respect!
Paul is directly responsible in my opinion for teaching martial arts instructors how to present and demonstrate their art on video. In the eighties Paul was the king of video presentations.
I could watch good Ole Paul V’s work all day. 😎🙏🏼💙 A true martial arts genius.
“There’s an old saying: the firstest with the mostest is the bestest.”
True saying
Paul Vunak is Amazing
I'm convinced this is the only video you will likely ever need to watch to master combat, so long as you actually practice and feel true pressure and test and test and familiarize against another person trying to score hits against you or do the drill back to you. Couple that with all of your grappling fundamentals, use these to find your single and double leg takedowns, neck ties, then once on the ground master BJJ. I'm literally convinced you will only ever need this one video to give you the mastery pathway. You just have to walk down this path he is showing you. Those pathways are all real and really work when timing is applied. Just practice your ass off, walk that path, cut away the foliage, keep walking
Paul Vunak you've reenergized my love for JKD. I remember you from the late sixties, early, mid seventies martial arts magazines. You haven't aged. You're like a cool glass of "WATER ". ✊👍✌
This isn’t JKD. It most certainly isn’t Bruce Lee’s JKD, it’s Inosanto interpretation of something he could never do himself. Bruce stopped doing trapping, he stopped doing chi sao. He removed them from the curriculum and found better methods. It’s the facts. The sad thing is people thinking this is what Bruce was doing.
@@axelstone3131 Dan Inosanto wasn't as fast as Bruce Lee was.
Few are and only a handful of people on this planet move that fast. So maybe Dan needed trapping and chi sao where Bruce did not.
There's a reason it's called Jkd Concepts.
@@jkdbuck7670 correct, but Dan didn’t train like Bruce Lee did. Most people don’t or refuse to train like Bruce. As genetically gifted as he was, a lot of his attributes came from the way he trained. If you don’t train like Bruce, how can you expect to even gain attributes similar to him.
If you follow Bruce’s methods, and do the reps, the body mechanics, the footwork, the supplementary training outside of the martial arts, like isometrics, etc. You will gain similar attributes to Bruce.
The problem with JKD concepts is that it doesn’t follow JKD principles, especially of simplicity and directness, and non classical. JKD concepts is classical arts repackaged under a fancy name “JKD concepts” which wasn’t a thing when Bruce was teaching.
Dated yet timeless. Vu da man.
Before the BJJ legion chimes in, I doubt that Paul or anyone else in JKD (anyone credible) would argue that grapplers are also fond of this range as a potential entry point into a takedown or whatever. Paul is teaching concepts here, not trying to present a 'defence for all situations' - I dont believe that such a thing exists anyway, particularly in a world where too many people carry concealed weapons.
Personally, the absolute last thing I would want to be doing in the street is rolling around on the cement ./ bitumen /. whatever, but fights do end up there and I've fallen off enough bikes to know that you dont even need a 260lb gorilla on top of you when you hit the ground ;)
His RAT system addresses this. There are a lot of dirty and very effective applications that Paul uses that sport BJJ ( most are sport btw) don’t train and are very difficult to deal with. 😎
The sad thing is people thinking this is what Bruce Lee was doing because I can assure you Bruce wasn’t doing this stuff and he most definitely wasn’t by the 70’s. Paul because he is a student on Inosanto lacks key principles of JKD. No interception, no fencing footwork, to much wing chun trapping and mixing with other arts. Bruce stopped doing trapping and chi sao and he most certainly wasn’t mixing kali or Thai boxing either. Inosanto concepts is NOT Bruce’s JKD.
Honestly real concepts are meant for practical application rather than theoretical discussion. Nobody can possibly argue on youtube comments about what a real fight feels like, you just have to physically be in a fight to experience the reality of the situation. I have been in a real altercation where I was able to use these exact concepts Paul is teaching in order to find my takedowns, and I have also been in real altercations on the street where I was able to use these EXACT (not exaggerating....when I say exact.....read back to me the word you just read to yourself out loud.....if you read the word exact, you would be accurate) concepts in order to find inside control and underhooks and neck ties and every possible wrestling fundamental entrypoint to securing arm control on the feet with arm drags and wrist control and everything you can possibly imagine. My experienced opinion is that if you actually practice these concepts taught in this exact video you will become a proficient martial artist. However standing on the side of the road and watching people who actually do things is not the same as practicing
@@S4MBONE you win - if I can make it the end of the year without getting into a confrontation with someone, I'll consider that a very good year.
I could watch Good Ole Paul V. ALL day! 😎💙🙏🏼
I think the hu bud drill should be part of every martial artists education. It is easy to learn, and crazy effective for learning sensitivity and reading your opponents intention.If you have a fear of sparring this is also a great drill for teaching you how to confront an opponent and how to keep your hands up with a lot of stuff is flying in your direction. I learned this drill as a Filipino martial arts student but I must say I perfected it while watching Paul’s videos
The hubud vs. straight punch is much more important to me. Especially if you replace the "to slow" punch with two fast jabs or a fast 1-2 from time to time. Also one needs to change hight of attack and level of pentration from time to time. If the energy doesn't really change, it's years of stagnation.
@@kenkongermany7860Hubud has so many variations, you can throw a variety of punches, use elbows, and switch sides, use different weapons, heck you could replace the punch with a kick
Yepp. And they are all useless. But if you do some quick daggerstabs instead of the timed only one too slow attack from time to time ... and so on. One has to put sparring mode intend to hit attacks into it. Break the rythym, create REAL timing. And so on. Kick s n ellbows my ... .@@yogurt_junior
Do it blindfolded for maximum effectiveness.
Paul is who the writers of Lethal Weapon designed the character “Martin Riggs” off of. It’s a great action movie with a brilliant duo filled with different martial arts. Mel Gibson taught me the triangle choke at 9 years old from the film. I had no idea what it was doing to my bigger friends or how it effected them. But I did it and it worked every time. I didn’t see it again and tell UFC 1. But Dan Inosanto , Paul and Chuck Norris were black belts in BJJ before most people.
Any proof for this wild claim?
Yeah, that is some wild lore.
If memory serves, Riickson consulted for the fight choreography on Lethal Weapon.
Edit: Just checked. It was actually Rorion.
Martin Riggs was not based on Vunak. Stop. 😂
Thank you Paul for that 200 dollar class.
Sifu explains everything wonderfully. Thank you
Vunak s stuff is the best,easiest to apply and great combinations
Props to the Assistant, good Reflexes 👍
I love that Steely Dan is playing at the end
One wonders if rights were procured... lol
@@thomcarnell haha yeahhhh prolly not lol
That intro was so bad ass. It was like Mr. Rogers meets the Fonze
lmao
Thanks for sharing. Very generous of you
Larry is so kind not to say that he is drawn on with a black marker and nothing is going to be vizable. Great video.
Meaningfully and Beautifully Explained Appreciate Thank you .
Great master💪👍😘
Dude i wish i was born in these day with you Paul... fck your the best at training...
He’s still doing it, he does a 2 day seminar every year in Oceanside. Look into it if your serious
Not Bruce Lee’s JKD.
@@axelstone3131 Really, lets see your video chump!
@@RegisWilkins Bruce Lee took chi sao and sticking out the curriculum in 1971. These people are teaching outdated methods Bruce himself stopped teaching and doing. He went beyond wing chun. Even his last friendly spar with his senior in wing chun, Wong Sheung Leung in 1970’s said “he used his own method” meaning he didn’t use wing chun.
So some more research.
"Using no way as way" ..genius
Thank you Sir. Very good! 💯 👊
Good better best never let it rest till your good is better and your better is best
Thanks for uploading this! I recently started kali and this is fantastic for practice.
What a good this guy is
The firstest with the mostest is the bestest lol
Paul Vunak has the "understanding": and can "see" great expert in his field!
This video is... epic. Huge respect and gratitude for putting this up on youtube _/\_
You're welcome : ) It is an amazing video.
@@solgoode1 I am a beginner student of martial arts (wing chun and jkd) so this was extremely helpful. Thanks again 🙏🤘
I wonder who coined the "bammm" and the "booom" this guy or our main boi bass
What the hell? I love him! 👍
Love this love Paul. Can anyone guess what decade this was likely recorded in? 😅
It was recorded late 80's early 90's. This video is early 90's. I bought them on VHS around '96.
@@solgoode1 love the era. Grew up in the 80’s and 90’s .. the best.
Make no mistake the best masters are unknown..
this is standard jkd training....very nice I like to add jiujitsu to that, aikido and judo throws
In our school we work on inside/outside Russians and establishing other clinches from chi sau along with the trapping. We blend the grappling into the trapping so we can implement our walt bayless jiujitsu and catch wrestling
Paul was (and quite possibly still is) a student of the Gracie's.
Legend
Rambo hair??
I need someone to do this with.
I am here. In South Africa
@@NjabulisoNdzimandze-cx7jc yeah. I live just too continents away, no big deal.
Great video... 😏🙏
always wondered about the difference between chi sau and Hubad Lubad - thanks! -
Larry is a good sport
awesome👌👌👍👍🙏🙏🥋🥋
“Be like water” - Grandmaster and Founder of JKD Bruce Lee
I'm a big fan of Bruce and Brandon but the only style Bruce ever mastered is his own Jeet Kune Do and he was no grandmaster.
@@shawnsmith2610 in the end "master" is nothing more than just a title
Paul is best
Honda NSX 😎
It's funny how they all look away. Why not just close your eyes?
Yeah, it makes their body movements a little awkward.
No disrespect but he reminds me of a badass Michael J Fox
this guy kicks arse
What year?
I bought the VHS tape series in 1996. I think the videos were made anywhere between 1990 and 96.
goood good teaching
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
What do you guys think of the ratton ring to get the feel of chi sao if training solo?
Too bad these MMA millienials lack this kind of knowledge. " This don't work in a cage fight"
Yes if your opponent has no training at all...this spastic flailing would probably be successful. But pumbling is a much more effective technique in these up close situations.
Make a video about it
This would be a good thing to practice in addition to MMA. It could make you less predictable but it’s definitely not a replacement.
what year are these vids? late 80s early 90s? would like to know.
I bought the VHS tape series in 1996. I think the videos were made anywhere between 1990 and 96.
Did Paul Vulnak take an acting class from William Shatner?
They body language is strange.
My censored comment . Copyright Violation .
white leopard spotted pants???
Another good Streetfighting Energy class with kail Whing Chung Kung fu sevalt Thai Chi
In KJD.
I have done some multiple Martial arts in my past to see what you mean inspiring as well
22:18 22:30 23:32 24:16 24:50 27:11 27:18 29:17
jun fan jeet kune do (JKD)
He could play johnny cage
Inguardabile
It's impossible to learn from videos. This kind of training take months if not years to learn effectively.
Agreed. It does take years. But you can pick up the concept from the video and practice it with a partner for years until you get it.
Some learn at vastly different rates by comparison, though yes largely you are correct. Not everybody is meant to make full sense in their body the same-particularly in mastering the martial ways of combat.
The practical aspect of the majority of the skills are learned within hours. He cuts to the chase scene to give you the quintessential elements. Training and practicing them will make them reflex.
It’s possible if you already have the training and just develop it and mix it. It becomes easier cause you already felt the hands and grappling. Don’t let people put that in your head that you can’t. The mind could do anything. Fighting is all geometry from bjj to wc to kali etc. high level people in bjj, wc , Kali and other arts know this
How can we apply this to grappling?
In one of Vunak's videos they do apply the energy drill technique to practicing grappling. Basically one person is in mounted then the person on bottom posts, or oompa's, then they switch; bottom person becomes top and top becomes bottom, bottom person posts and reverses it. I don't know if I explained it very well. I'll try to find the video and post it.
@@solgoode1 thankyou
do this in grip fighting to get past your opponent's arms and you are taking him down
@@georgieman1910 I mean as a solid wrestler elbow passes are my thing. But I'm talking about applying redirection in judo to sweep someone
@@chrismanisay
You're already doing it in judo. It's called kuzushi.
Those shorts just took all the respect away!
what year is this ?
I bought the VHS tape series in 1996. I think the videos may have been made anywhere between 1990 and 96. That's just my guess.
thx
How can I get to this trainer for him to teach me hands on?? I'm tired of being hurt:-(
🇧🇷🇧🇷👊👊
Wow. This is really cool. This is so old school. This ancient kungfu tought pretty decently. Not like any of this works now a days. Maybe 200 years ago
It s not really ancient Kung Fu. It's basically Wing Chun. But built with different arts around it. It s more of a sensitivity drill. And that's the unique thing about martial Arts. Take off what works and leave out the rest out that don't apply in today's world
Of course this works man. You see defensive-ends using it in football all the time.
Is wing chun and kali energy drills its totally effective great art
"If you're a wing chun man and you end up on the ground, there is something wrong with your wing chun." Oh, good grief. Yeah, it could mean there is something wrong with your wing chun. But it could also mean the other guy was a good enough grappler to get through whatever barrier you had covering center line. And grappling skills have a shallower learning curve than wing chun.
not true,Paul actually addresses that very point in his straight blast video. He also talked about Rickson gracie etc (this was before the world knew about Rickson). check that out there is a more elaborate explanation. these tapes are very useful.
asshole, you did not understand what paul is talking about...asshole stupid
@@manuelromano6620 😂 another expert...
To grab me to take me to ground you have to get through center line good luck doing so
All fine and dandy but what grown ass adult is going around street fighting ffs....If you are,you need to find a job asap and grow up...lol
Q merda kkkkk
Useless for a real fight. How often in the UFC do you see an opportunity to apply this? Never
You don't know wtf you're talking about.
Totally missing the entire point of what these drills are for.
The big misconception that still persists is that JKD is a _style._ It's not, and never has been. Jeet Jun Do is a methodology of training for martial arts skills that can then be applied to *your* style. There's a difference.
These are training _drills._ Not fighting methods. As my teacher used to say, they give your techniques a fine polish and sharpens their edge.
To say they're "useless for a real fight" is like saying running 6 miles or doing a one rep max deadlift is useless for a fight. Nobody gets into a fight, either in the street or in the ring, and says "Right! Let's bench press each other then do 20 burpees!" But who's going to have the better ability to handle themselves in a fight: someone who trains like that, or some dweeb who spends their days typing nonsense on the internet?
And besides, speaking as someone who was lucky enough to have trained under Sifu Paul, and Guro Dan Inosanto and the late Sifu Larry Hartsell back in the day, and has been in more than one or two "real fights" in the streets after working my share of nights on the doors, I can tell you from experience: This. Shit. Works.
I've seen multiple clips of UFC fights with hand trapping.
stick to FMA. The WC drills are not presented correctly.
Overcomplicated violates the K.I.S.S. principle. Lop sao against a boxer and bam your down wondering what happened. He himself says the movements are very complicated. They keep quoting Bruce but aren’t following his principles of using what works and simplify things. Bruce’s evolution was not complete he passed away long before he refined it to what is now similar to MMA. If you’re a Wing Chun guy and you end up on the ground it means you met a grappler and didn’t have grappling in your arsenal! Almost all JKD guys use what was taught early in Bruce’s evolution and the gospel. It’s way behind what Bruce was even doing just before his death. Remember he wasn’t teaching toward the end, he was making movies. He does know his Wing Chun, it’s just not practical!
Vunak describes most traps as incidental if not accidental. They are trained for that one moment in split second where they are effective. If you're clinched with a boxer, you're damn right a lop sao will work. If you walk up to a boxer at range and try and lop sao him you're going down. Vunak adds a little to Bruce's teachings by saying that there is a superior art at the MOMENT and to use it when the time is right. Also, Bruce was doing grappling at the end.. you can see it in the beginning of Enter the Dragon.
Vunak has evolved a lot since this too.
Veile you're a wannabe whats your expertise besides the keyboard?
if you slow it down it looks like 2 drunk guys talking about what they would do in a fight