you all prolly dont give a damn but does any of you know a trick to get back into an instagram account..? I stupidly forgot the login password. I appreciate any assistance you can offer me
I've been doing Wing Chun for a long time and I competed in the ring. It's refreshing so watch a Wingchunner who it teaching realistically. Your students are lucky to have you. Big props.
That is one reason for the concept of forward intention. You continually move forward upon the opponent. A lot of people who criticize wing chun, or other "traditional" martial arts, and modern martial arts, forget this, don't know it, or overlook it. This is important to practice in training and even daily life.
I’m curious on who throws a “front kick” like that at thigh height? If someone is going to throw a teep the are gonna stab it into your gut or sternum. Or if they are flexible or tall enough they will catch to in the chin. This kick is mainly used as a setup for kicks later in a fight or to push the opponent to get space. If someone is well versed enough in fighting to be throwing kicks in general they will be way too fast for you to react as seen in this video. This is a great way to get setup for a roundhouse kick to the head or a right cross to the face.
Adam Turowski The catching kicks thing, this is a normal thing, they do it a lot in Sanda. It’s nothing special they do this in competition, you can find clips of this. ua-cam.com/video/PJEpg6ovVHM/v-deo.html
@@merkomalice1980 rather than say it straightaway, I'm giving him a chance to prove us wrong. He should try this with MMA fighter that would kick for real and resist for real. If this master really train for real, his grappling should work. If he failed, then he's a clown that never done never tried it on real kick
Did you learn to drive by heading straight to the nearest race track, hopping in one of the fastest cars on the planet, and competing with professional racers? No, of course not. You'd get killed. I agree with testing and refining stuff under pressure/speed, but geez, learn the right timing, form, and technique first. Otherwise you learn squat and then you'll be bitching about how nothing works. Slow is smooth. Smoth is fast. Fast is deadly. Start slow, and increase intensity little by little while still doing things with the correct timing and structure. Practicing *only* slow, or *only* fast will both leave you unable to apply things under pressure, but at least you'll have the basics down if you practice slow, while if you only ever practice only fast, you'll not have learned anything. I've met a few people of the latter type -- no structure or power, just speed and/or strength. Nothing behind the techniques.
That's the Golden Rule of all athletic excellence: start progressively slow, freeze for feedback, build instinct. Nicely done, Adam.
you all prolly dont give a damn but does any of you know a trick to get back into an instagram account..?
I stupidly forgot the login password. I appreciate any assistance you can offer me
@Kashton Emiliano Instablaster =)
You have the most thorough understanding of Wing Chun that I have ever seen. Very impressive.
I've been doing Wing Chun for a long time and I competed in the ring. It's refreshing so watch a Wingchunner who it teaching realistically. Your students are lucky to have you. Big props.
Love the sensitivity and touch.. smooth with the side step ,.. deceptive footwork. Very nice 👍🏾
that bagua spin throw is too fun not to do
'At the end of the leg...' Sounds like Master Ken
Good teacher
Great technique reminds me of wing chin do style
This works only if you can get the timing. Kicks can come just as fast as punches and a lot harder.
That is one reason for the concept of forward intention. You continually move forward upon the opponent. A lot of people who criticize wing chun, or other "traditional" martial arts, and modern martial arts, forget this, don't know it, or overlook it. This is important to practice in training and even daily life.
1:35 2:00 2:20
I’m curious on who throws a “front kick” like that at thigh height? If someone is going to throw a teep the are gonna stab it into your gut or sternum. Or if they are flexible or tall enough they will catch to in the chin. This kick is mainly used as a setup for kicks later in a fight or to push the opponent to get space. If someone is well versed enough in fighting to be throwing kicks in general they will be way too fast for you to react as seen in this video. This is a great way to get setup for a roundhouse kick to the head or a right cross to the face.
Here is an example similar to his catching the front kick, they use this in Sanda. ua-cam.com/video/ZD-ApELoSzY/v-deo.html
Wingzero83 send me some Sanda competition with this working.
TJ Lundt I don’t think you’re watching the same video I am.
@@mineofitsown The kicks are being thrown at Adam's mid section. You just want to argue for the sake of arguing. That makes you seem rather dense.
TopLessTanks ua-cam.com/video/VuoOhB7_2rw/v-deo.html around 8:17 There are a few more instances in that fight but that’s the first when I saw
2:00
Nice demo. Can you show that working against fully resisting opponent?
Doubt it would work especially from him.
Adam Turowski The catching kicks thing, this is a normal thing, they do it a lot in Sanda. It’s nothing special they do this in competition, you can find clips of this. ua-cam.com/video/PJEpg6ovVHM/v-deo.html
@@jawarakf if his movement timing it would also work from him. Unless you are implying he sucks. And if so just say he sucks. lol
@@merkomalice1980 rather than say it straightaway, I'm giving him a chance to prove us wrong. He should try this with MMA fighter that would kick for real and resist for real. If this master really train for real, his grappling should work. If he failed, then he's a clown that never done never tried it on real kick
@@jawarakf him personally or just anyone who does wing chun -jkd?
It’s easy when all the attacks are at half speed, and the “attacker” leaves his arm and leg out there for the defender to grab.
Did you learn to drive by heading straight to the nearest race track, hopping in one of the fastest cars on the planet, and competing with professional racers? No, of course not. You'd get killed. I agree with testing and refining stuff under pressure/speed, but geez, learn the right timing, form, and technique first. Otherwise you learn squat and then you'll be bitching about how nothing works. Slow is smooth. Smoth is fast. Fast is deadly.
Start slow, and increase intensity little by little while still doing things with the correct timing and structure. Practicing *only* slow, or *only* fast will both leave you unable to apply things under pressure, but at least you'll have the basics down if you practice slow, while if you only ever practice only fast, you'll not have learned anything. I've met a few people of the latter type -- no structure or power, just speed and/or strength. Nothing behind the techniques.
This is like me making a video on how to counter a sumo wrestler , with my student who doesnt train in sumo.
This is not a video on countering anything. This is just play to build a foundation.
No coz kazdemu podoba Sie cos innego, nawet jej nowe falten.
Everything is stage and all this clowns fallow the stage
Do a sparring with a boxer any boxer will destroy this guy