very well! Nice to see that someone has understood Wing Chun and can therefore implement and convey it well! Your son's Wing Chung looks very good even at a young age! :)
Well said. “ used and abused “ on point! My experience it’s a great technique but you have to be aware of the no look hooks some people will throw at you.
punch with an elongated arm, this teacher has already trained in boxing, and is just adding the element of strength, let's see takedown defenses and remove or adapt the trap, as it is not easy to control the opponent's hand, however it is the best adaptation, congratulations.
Honestly, the part where you talk about the ground, I have seen the scene. But I would add that instead of knee-on-belly, (Jiu-Jitsu term) I would transition to full mount then chain punch the person then get up real quick when in a self defense situation...for I have actually used it before after taking the back and taking the person down transitioning to a side-control into a knee-on-belly to full mount. Just my 2 cents, (and this all happened on the road not concrete.)
I think the point he was making was is much more dangerous to go to the ground, ok you got away with it, but he didn't say it was impossible just more risky which is an obvious fact especially when there is more than one person around (not necessarily an opponent at first) that might just join in. Sadly that's the kind of society we live in now. Just my opinion (10p worth)
Good advice on almost everything, but I have to heavily disagree with the locking of the elbow when throwing a punch. You lose speed and power when you lock the elbow and you open the door for some very nasty injuries to your elbow joint in the process. This type of punching puts a lot of stress on the elbow. Not to mention because you're slower you leave room for an actual lock or attack on your elbow by your opponent. Your arm is very vulnerable when extended like that. If you lock the elbow when punching the kinetic energy of your punch during impact will end up in your wrist, elbow and shoulder. You want that energy to go to the ground via your stance and structure.
Hi Pavel, thanks for your feedback. I disagree, you won’t injure your elbows if you launch the punch in a thrusting motion, generating the power from the shoulders. Plus, if you’re hitting someone stronger than you and you don’t lock, your punches won’t be as strong. As for speed, straightening the arm won’t make you slower and in terms of power, you want it to go forward through the target.
@@UltimateMartialArtsAcademy But I don’t want to generate power just from the shoulders. I want to have the structure of my whole body and the ground behind the punch. Of course we want to punch through our opponent, but that means the punch should be like a whip so it penetrates more deeply. If I punch with completely extended arm (we’re talking in the context of a vertical fist here) the potential of kinetic energy ends at my fist and the damage delivered is based entirely on my arm + shoulder strength. That type of damage could be damaging if we’re strong, but it’s external damage. We can’t penetrate more since we’re extended too much. If the idea for “the chase” is to use these punches after we bridge then the short 3/4 punch will surely punch through much deeply in our opponent, so that means we need more effective footwork to carry us to that range.
@@_hao1047 Years ago when training (elsewhere) and my tech was not great I ended up with having to get the bursa removed from my left elbow. Since training with Sifu Henry my tech, still not where it should be, is much better and it has never caused me grief. The concept of not "rolling" is tricky is that the name "Chain" evokes the imagery of a bike chain which rotates in a far more circular manner than the near missing of your own hand, which is all that is required, that coupled with the forward movement to drive the opponent back means that the term "Chase" is a more fitting term is trying to convey the correct image. Try thinking of it as playing Pool with a piece of rope vs a pool cue. Both may be straight but only the cue is going to get the job done. But having said that I think Sifu has done his best to explain without having you here to demonsrate the practical application, everything else is simply theory.
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I like your explanation on the chain punch, good job.
David looks really sharp, confident, poised. In 5 years he will formidable.
In 5 years I’ll be the strongest around
@@ramanman9792 we'll see big man
david is absolutely cooking 🙏
very well!
Nice to see that someone has understood Wing Chun and can therefore implement and convey it well!
Your son's Wing Chung looks very good even at a young age! :)
Top of the line instruction, that was clear and to the point; son was a mirror of the father!
Well said. “ used and abused “ on point! My experience it’s a great technique but you have to be aware of the no look hooks some people will throw at you.
Sifu, thank you for an excellent lesson.
Love the demo on the tires on the wall at the end. Great explanation.
With chain punches you can block a punch and hit at the same time, over his arm.
punch with an elongated arm, this teacher has already trained in boxing, and is just adding the element of strength, let's see takedown defenses and remove or adapt the trap, as it is not easy to control the opponent's hand, however it is the best adaptation, congratulations.
Back to basic lim weng kung. Thank you 🙏
Excellent video.
I am wondering when you are punching how are the knuckles used so that you do not sprain or damage your hands
Honestly, the part where you talk about the ground, I have seen the scene. But I would add that instead of knee-on-belly, (Jiu-Jitsu term) I would transition to full mount then chain punch the person then get up real quick when in a self defense situation...for I have actually used it before after taking the back and taking the person down transitioning to a side-control into a knee-on-belly to full mount. Just my 2 cents, (and this all happened on the road not concrete.)
I think the point he was making was is much more dangerous to go to the ground, ok you got away with it, but he didn't say it was impossible just more risky which is an obvious fact especially when there is more than one person around (not necessarily an opponent at first) that might just join in. Sadly that's the kind of society we live in now. Just my opinion (10p worth)
Cool
Love the knowledge 🙏🔥
👊👊
這是梁紹鴻師傅一脈的詠春嗎?
Good advice on almost everything, but I have to heavily disagree with the locking of the elbow when throwing a punch. You lose speed and power when you lock the elbow and you open the door for some very nasty injuries to your elbow joint in the process. This type of punching puts a lot of stress on the elbow. Not to mention because you're slower you leave room for an actual lock or attack on your elbow by your opponent. Your arm is very vulnerable when extended like that. If you lock the elbow when punching the kinetic energy of your punch during impact will end up in your wrist, elbow and shoulder. You want that energy to go to the ground via your stance and structure.
Hi Pavel, thanks for your feedback. I disagree, you won’t injure your elbows if you launch the punch in a thrusting motion, generating the power from the shoulders. Plus, if you’re hitting someone stronger than you and you don’t lock, your punches won’t be as strong. As for speed, straightening the arm won’t make you slower and in terms of power, you want it to go forward through the target.
@@UltimateMartialArtsAcademy But I don’t want to generate power just from the shoulders. I want to have the structure of my whole body and the ground behind the punch. Of course we want to punch through our opponent, but that means the punch should be like a whip so it penetrates more deeply. If I punch with completely extended arm (we’re talking in the context of a vertical fist here) the potential of kinetic energy ends at my fist and the damage delivered is based entirely on my arm + shoulder strength. That type of damage could be damaging if we’re strong, but it’s external damage. We can’t penetrate more since we’re extended too much. If the idea for “the chase” is to use these punches after we bridge then the short 3/4 punch will surely punch through much deeply in our opponent, so that means we need more effective footwork to carry us to that range.
@@_hao1047 Years ago when training (elsewhere) and my tech was not great I ended up with having to get the bursa removed from my left elbow. Since training with Sifu Henry my tech, still not where it should be, is much better and it has never caused me grief. The concept of not "rolling" is tricky is that the name "Chain" evokes the imagery of a bike chain which rotates in a far more circular manner than the near missing of your own hand, which is all that is required, that coupled with the forward movement to drive the opponent back means that the term "Chase" is a more fitting term is trying to convey the correct image. Try thinking of it as playing Pool with a piece of rope vs a pool cue. Both may be straight but only the cue is going to get the job done. But having said that I think Sifu has done his best to explain without having you here to demonsrate the practical application, everything else is simply theory.