Please, more videos of Qi La La, he has all my respect because he test his Wing Chun and show an open mind to other martial arts, for me he is a real martial artist.
Actuqlly QiLaLa is an Mixed!artialArtist due to incorporating kicks, having a clinch game, adding a ground game, gone away from wingchun blocking. So WingChun may have been basic, but this isn’t just a WingChunFighter any more as far as I can tell.
Qi La La is becoming one of my favorite martial artists to watch on YT because of his progression. He acknowledged that he was lacking and set out to improve and actually TEST himself! Much respect
Watching makes you realise that Mma is a good fighting sport ... sombo, sport jujitsu among others all have their place in combat preparation.. good work in highlighting your culture as most martial Artists practice arts that originated in the Far East.. now we can all learn from each other ..
It seemed like a fluke that they gave the point to Red cuz the ref definitely raised his blue hand when Qi La La hit that crescent kick. Probably just whoever was running the scoreboard messed up. I love seeing Qi La La's Wing Chun, because like you said, he actually uses the Wing Chun principles harmoniously, whereas other practitioners will get hung up on just a single piece of the puzzle. Keep putting it to the test, man!
5:33 it looks like his opponent just barely dodged that crescent kick when he spun and he got the point because qi la la went to the ground. I'm assuming they counted that as a take down point
These are (JJIF) Jujutsu fighting competition rules !!! It's a big deal in Europe and Asia. Many European judokas quit for this unlike in America (BJJ territory). I'm so glad you found this as I am a practitioner. From what I know (I think they all award a point) kicks above the belt to the chest area are allowed Knuckle punches are controlled body shots Backfist strikes are allowed to the head (Top and side of the head) Haito zuki (?) (that circular strike idk the name) can also hit the head The striking part of the fight is called part 1 Part 2 is the takedown transitions I forgot how many points do you get for that and part 3(Newaza or ground work) Fighters prefer pining but submissions are okay ,still forgot how many points do you get I hope I did my best and that you consider that jujutsu style and maybe make a video about it. It's very interesting I think
Nice pak sao parry / trap and hit at 1:15. Clears the side kick with a gong sau takes the back at 3:25. At 4:05 pak sau against punch then gum sao against kick with simultaneous strike (lin si di dar). Good leg check at 4:09. Then Qi La La just stands there watching a kick go by that is out of range.
Good hits are points. Kicks to the head, jabs, power shots. It's like a karate style point system. You can sweep them when they stack you and get the armbar.
Qi La La is a very impressive Wing Chun practitioner. He uses very well kicks, by far better than the average Wing Chun practitioners. Great strategy, very good timing and drilling. I like the way he uses Wing Chun principles. Very modern and effective.
i have a huge respect for him. He trained hard, had experience, and fought many people. This shows that Experience and Discipline is the importance of martial arts.
Chu La La actually uses a lot of wooden dummy concept attacks. Dude, I love this guy. I've sparred a few tkd guys and it's hard - short range vs long range tactics.
It looks like they fought in Combat Jujitsu competition They are using westernized version of "ippon and waza ari point system" If the ref. raise his hand verticaly it's an "ippon", two point If the ref raise his hand horizontaly it's a "waza ari", one point If the ref. point with his finger it's a penalty
I think the opponent actually rotated out of the way of the kick and the kick never connected. It doesn't look like he spun from the force of the kick. So maybe he got a point for avoiding a legit KO blow.
Hi, this is actually """traditional jujutsu""" or Jiu-jitsu or japanese jujutsu, however you wanna call it. It's not actually one of the many ACTUAL traditional Ju-jutsu schools from Japan. This sport organization has it's roots in Europe's judo. The rules: you need to get 3 ippons (points) one in striking, one in throwing and one in submission. So you achieve the Full Ippon and win. Otherwise you keep fighting. If I had to describe it (I practiced) I would say it's one third WKF karate, two thirds bad Judo (more open on the ground). Not a complete waste of time but black belts of this get ragdolled in bjj mats when they finally make the leap. If you are currently practicing this go try a free class of Wrestling or BJJ, you will wake up.
I dunno, it's good from a technical point but I'm just not feeling it. He always throws it it abruptly and it throws the viewer out of the video. Maybe it'd be better if the intro came before everything.
2:44 This was great and every ref in China should imitate this man! And finally I'm actually a bit impressed with a Wing Chun guy but jkd fills in the gaps
Point is awarded to the first cleanest, controlled attack. Any clashing is decided as a draw. The idea is that it becomes more technical rather than haymakers.
As a teenager, I grew up in the Wu Tang era and trained Wu dang snake style. I was in a street gang and would often dominate in fights. If you can fight with gungfu, you can beat an untrained opponent easily.
Dude there is a delay before they put the points. Not sure why you did not notice. So in 5:50 they added the sidekick point to the red one and later they added the point for the blue one.6:39 that was not a block. He clearly kicked the inside of his hand.
Yeah the judges signals, then the score keeper put up the score. The dummy we are think the scores are just gonna pop up the moment the punches hit like a video game.
it's a type of jiujitsu competition by the IFJJ, called jujitsu fighting system. its divided into 3 parts, stand up striking, than after being grabbed, a no striking stand up grappling, then when it hits the floor it becomes a traditional jiujitsu competition
It could also be Shotokan Karate, because they bounce around like that too, but they tend to have a more direct attack. He does used a lot of round kicks and side kicks. Shotokan fighters tend to punch more.
Finally a non-Chinese Wing Chun fighter. All good Wing Chun is outside China, but it seems that all the Wing Chun we ever see is the crappy Chinese type.
Qi La La gets it in, but why do the judges ALWAYS give an extra point or the win to his opponents not just in this video but in every other fight video with Qi La La? His fights are rigged I think.
That is very true, Karate practice the side stance all the time and is very functional. Look at Bill Superfoot. The problem with the fighter and his side stance is lack of flexibility I think. I think he is struggling to get those kick where he trying to place them making him turn and give his back. Shoot fighters always look for that. When you use a side stance, you stay sideways and only squared up when you are aggressing with combos.
I don't get the point contact system. You put more focus on speed instead actual effective strikes. Similar to shadow boxing, it is easy to be fast if you're not putting intent behind your strikes. If you can kick your opponent clean in the face and they don't fall down, it's not an effective strike. The idea that you're "pulling back" means that you're also not committed. Once you commit, you tend to slow down. Also, one of the things I encountered several years ago is that it is easy to close distance when your not actually getting punched if the face or kicked in the gut. I came out of Kyokushin and went into boxing. They called me "Tank" because I would just walk forward. Then a guy who was way better lit me up, and I learned the necessity of defense. If you wanna close distance, you're gonna eat some shots. If your defense isn't up (which it wasn't here), you're probably not gonna successfully close that distance. I understand that their are sports and each sport has it's own tweeks to make better competitors. But in Cross-training, the actual effectiveness should be examined over how well they competed. Otherwise, why cross-train? just stay in the sport.
I do not get it. The oponent does not at all have a tkd fighting style. Also, hard to identify as wing chun style kf. In my opinion, dosent matter what you train, if you do not stick to style, it is not a style vs style match.
Tyson Durr - Maybe go to your special place and calm down before you burst something important. You can leave the commenting to the adults in the mean time.
Red glove fighter that is not taekwondo. Uniform looks to be a karate gi. As for the fighter blue gloves didn't see any wing chun. If anything both fighters fought like freestyle karate fighters.
@@monkeylemur I'm with you, he used the vertical punch both hands, used interception (which is in Wing Chun before it was in JKD), he used one and two handed traps, front kick, side kick, round kick even the high crescent was used from a Wing Chun stance, followed by Wing Chun hands. It's cool watching him evolve and elevate his Wing Chun not just adding new techniques.
Seems like a point karate fight.they give you points for only specific kicks and punches. You might killed your opponent, but you will not win the fight...
Is this Wing Chun fighter trying to prove that Wing Chun techniques don't work in a fight? Is that why he uses techniques from everything but Wing Chun? Why bother calling him a Wing Chun fighter?
This looks like Taekwondo Sport system. Any hit that is considered Landed awards a point and I assume the head is 2 points at some moments depending on the move.
Nice video, but you really sound like you don't know what you're commentating about. Crescent kicks are common in Taekwondo. You should at least understand the points system.
Please, more videos of Qi La La, he has all my respect because he test his Wing Chun and show an open mind to other martial arts, for me he is a real martial artist.
The Lillens Exactly. That is a real martial artist!
Ha, there is a little wing chin here, mostly kickboxing and grappling. He learned some real fighting and came out against a very green guy.
Even thought hes try to representing wing chun his style more resembling mma than wing chun just saying.
Actuqlly QiLaLa is an Mixed!artialArtist due to incorporating kicks, having a clinch game, adding a ground game, gone away from wingchun blocking. So WingChun may have been basic, but this isn’t just a WingChunFighter any more as far as I can tell.
Bro I hope he teaches others and spread proper wing chun. This qi lala deserves more respect than a fake master.
Qi La La is becoming one of my favorite martial artists to watch on YT because of his progression. He acknowledged that he was lacking and set out to improve and actually TEST himself! Much respect
4:11 cant believe you went over that badass reach awareness
Yes too badass for me
Total respect to Qi La La. He is always fighting and you can see him getting better.
wow he definitely improved a lot. good job integrating wing chun.
Hes by far one of the best wingchun fighter
About time a Wing Chun fighter who kicks ass, cool man. Qi La La will send his opponent to La La land (knock out).
Watching makes you realise that Mma is a good fighting sport ... sombo, sport jujitsu among others all have their place in combat preparation.. good work in highlighting your culture as most martial Artists practice arts that originated in the Far East.. now we can all learn from each other ..
It seemed like a fluke that they gave the point to Red cuz the ref definitely raised his blue hand when Qi La La hit that crescent kick. Probably just whoever was running the scoreboard messed up. I love seeing Qi La La's Wing Chun, because like you said, he actually uses the Wing Chun principles harmoniously, whereas other practitioners will get hung up on just a single piece of the puzzle. Keep putting it to the test, man!
Big respect to test his martial arts in so many different arenas
5:33 it looks like his opponent just barely dodged that crescent kick when he spun and he got the point because qi la la went to the ground. I'm assuming they counted that as a take down point
I was about to say the same thing
no the judges were bribed
At 1:27 it looks like Jeff Chan from MMA shredded is in the background
That's Jeff, he made a trip to Taiwan recently
ruclips.net/video/BrFi4pT0M8c/видео.html
Jeff has a great channel over at MMA Shredded. He's really helped me become a better martial artist.
His' style is very good for these point based competitions; he strikes as he defends, very nice.
Chinese is so difficult I haven't learned a single word from your videos. Nevermind learning the written language.
The more Wing chun spare the better he gets. So I'm wit it.
These are (JJIF) Jujutsu fighting competition rules !!!
It's a big deal in Europe and Asia. Many European judokas quit for this unlike in America (BJJ territory).
I'm so glad you found this as I am a practitioner.
From what I know (I think they all award a point) kicks above the belt to the chest area are allowed
Knuckle punches are controlled body shots
Backfist strikes are allowed to the head (Top and side of the head)
Haito zuki (?) (that circular strike idk the name) can also hit the head
The striking part of the fight is called part 1
Part 2 is the takedown transitions I forgot how many points do you get for that
and part 3(Newaza or ground work) Fighters prefer pining but submissions are okay ,still forgot how many points do you get
I hope I did my best and that you consider that jujutsu style and maybe make a video about it.
It's very interesting I think
5:36 he probably got the point for stopping qi la la takedown and took him down instead. Kinda like sanda rules
Nice pak sao parry / trap and hit at 1:15. Clears the side kick with a gong sau takes the back at 3:25. At 4:05 pak sau against punch then gum sao against kick with simultaneous strike (lin si di dar). Good leg check at 4:09. Then Qi La La just stands there watching a kick go by that is out of range.
Good hits are points. Kicks to the head, jabs, power shots. It's like a karate style point system.
You can sweep them when they stack you and get the armbar.
Qi La La is a very impressive Wing Chun practitioner. He uses very well kicks, by far better than the average Wing Chun practitioners. Great strategy, very good timing and drilling. I like the way he uses Wing Chun principles. Very modern and effective.
i have a huge respect for him.
He trained hard, had experience, and fought many people. This shows that Experience and Discipline is the importance of martial arts.
Chu La La actually uses a lot of wooden dummy concept attacks. Dude, I love this guy. I've sparred a few tkd guys and it's hard - short range vs long range tactics.
1:33 How are you going to stand up to mainland communist China if you’re going to act like little girls?
😂
It looks like they fought in Combat Jujitsu competition
They are using westernized version of "ippon and waza ari point system"
If the ref. raise his hand verticaly it's an "ippon", two point
If the ref raise his hand horizontaly it's a "waza ari", one point
If the ref. point with his finger it's a penalty
I can see he must of learned some ground fighting from else where.
I think the opponent actually rotated out of the way of the kick and the kick never connected. It doesn't look like he spun from the force of the kick. So maybe he got a point for avoiding a legit KO blow.
I seems that only "clean" connecting strikes are counted as points. This gives a lot of license to referees to favor the fighter they like.
Hi, this is actually """traditional jujutsu""" or Jiu-jitsu or japanese jujutsu, however you wanna call it. It's not actually one of the many ACTUAL traditional Ju-jutsu schools from Japan. This sport organization has it's roots in Europe's judo.
The rules: you need to get 3 ippons (points) one in striking, one in throwing and one in submission. So you achieve the Full Ippon and win. Otherwise you keep fighting.
If I had to describe it (I practiced) I would say it's one third WKF karate, two thirds bad Judo (more open on the ground).
Not a complete waste of time but black belts of this get ragdolled in bjj mats when they finally make the leap. If you are currently practicing this go try a free class of Wrestling or BJJ, you will wake up.
@@ambm9808 sure buddy
@@ambm9808 HAHAHAHAHHAAHA
@@ambm9808 bro, you better go and play with your G.I. Joes when adults talk. This guy knows what he's saying
@@camilomontesdeoca8009 yo yo yo what's up? We need to roll again!
@@toastyzone whenever you want, bro! It would be a pleasure!
good job Jerry! Like the way you run the video back frame by frame and show arrows of advances or disadvantages.
He seems to be getting better. This is what pressure testing does. This is the guy who tried fighting the big guy throwing heymakers right?
Qi La La is pretty good. Good strategy and reaction time is on point
Great content Jerry. I really enjoy the introduction cartoon in the beginning. Did you create that yourself? It’s pretty badass bro.
I dunno, it's good from a technical point but I'm just not feeling it. He always throws it it abruptly and it throws the viewer out of the video. Maybe it'd be better if the intro came before everything.
2:44 This was great and every ref in China should imitate this man! And finally I'm actually a bit impressed with a Wing Chun guy but jkd fills in the gaps
The Taekwondo is way to energy intensive. Jumping around getting all exhausted.
Wills Pram That depends, the ITF brand is known to be quite decent, the WTF brand is known to be nothing but performance oriented.
Point is awarded to the first cleanest, controlled attack. Any clashing is decided as a draw. The idea is that it becomes more technical rather than haymakers.
As a teenager, I grew up in the Wu Tang era and trained Wu dang snake style. I was in a street gang and would often dominate in fights. If you can fight with gungfu, you can beat an untrained opponent easily.
Dude there is a delay before they put the points. Not sure why you did not notice. So in 5:50 they added the sidekick point to the red one and later they added the point for the blue one.6:39 that was not a block. He clearly kicked the inside of his hand.
Yeah the judges signals, then the score keeper put up the score. The dummy we are think the scores are just gonna pop up the moment the punches hit like a video game.
I choke when you say their name is about the same... LMAO
2:50 That waas the weirdest thing I have ever seen in martial arts and any sports.
It's called a homie hug
Narration was hilarious 😂
It says柔術on the right so isn’t this technically a Jiujitsu contest?
Sport jujitsu
it's a type of jiujitsu competition by the IFJJ, called jujitsu fighting system. its divided into 3 parts, stand up striking, than after being grabbed, a no striking stand up grappling, then when it hits the floor it becomes a traditional jiujitsu competition
It could also be Shotokan Karate, because they bounce around like that too, but they tend to have a more direct attack. He does used a lot of round kicks and side kicks. Shotokan fighters tend to punch more.
Notice the wing chung guy using his knee on the back of the other dudes knee to put him off balance and prevent him turning back around that way.
Finally a non-Chinese Wing Chun fighter. All good Wing Chun is outside China, but it seems that all the Wing Chun we ever see is the crappy Chinese type.
Does no one else see the dude from mma shred at 1:26 ?
Yeah lol
Yeah lol the one in trunk
Yeah my thoughts exactly! (I wondered if my mind played tricks on me), but seems like I’m not the only one who noticed it !! 🤣👍🏻
@@Tom_Framnes yea man exactly. That's why I commented this, to see if anyone else thought so
LOVE THE VIDEOS!!!
Blue tag at the name display correspond to guy in blue gloves and ankle guards.
Qi La La gets it in, but why do the judges ALWAYS give an extra point or the win to his opponents not just in this video but in every other fight video with Qi La La? His fights are rigged I think.
At 5:20, I think the score keeper just made an error. The ref holds up blue and red gains a point.
A fighter can use the side stance to fight full contact its only a matter of adapting it with focused sparring.
That is very true, Karate practice the side stance all the time and is very functional. Look at Bill Superfoot. The problem with the fighter and his side stance is lack of flexibility I think. I think he is struggling to get those kick where he trying to place them making him turn and give his back. Shoot fighters always look for that. When you use a side stance, you stay sideways and only squared up when you are aggressing with combos.
Looks like shotokan karate with the gi and gloves and guards and how he keeps his body on a line
1:32 you beat me to it Jerry
he is leaning? By going inside his range. thats just wing chung...
thingyee1118 I thought that too, dumbass commentary.
Which one is which
It looks like when you make contact you get the point
Wing Chun guy needs to polish off and round out his game a bit more, but I'm really wondering if he doesn't practice Jeet Kune Do?
He’s Wing Chun. I talk to him sometimes on Facebook.
I don't get the point contact system. You put more focus on speed instead actual effective strikes. Similar to shadow boxing, it is easy to be fast if you're not putting intent behind your strikes. If you can kick your opponent clean in the face and they don't fall down, it's not an effective strike. The idea that you're "pulling back" means that you're also not committed. Once you commit, you tend to slow down. Also, one of the things I encountered several years ago is that it is easy to close distance when your not actually getting punched if the face or kicked in the gut. I came out of Kyokushin and went into boxing. They called me "Tank" because I would just walk forward. Then a guy who was way better lit me up, and I learned the necessity of defense. If you wanna close distance, you're gonna eat some shots. If your defense isn't up (which it wasn't here), you're probably not gonna successfully close that distance. I understand that their are sports and each sport has it's own tweeks to make better competitors. But in Cross-training, the actual effectiveness should be examined over how well they competed. Otherwise, why cross-train? just stay in the sport.
It's pretty obvious which colour is which: just look at their footwear and gloves. Don't know why you got confused!
Yes I like to see more of his video. It is like watch a movie.
Wow, jujitsu tournament with striking?
Its not full contact fight!!!???
The lack of guard is frustrating.
This must be JJIF rules.
Name of the tournament?
Looks like Japanese jujitsu rules
I think you should make this guy a regular feature.
Wing-chun 💪
Red guy was a disaster, constantly giving his back and acting timid.
The Red Guy never learned his kicking technique correctly, or his instructor didn't know how to teach.
I do not get it. The oponent does not at all have a tkd fighting style. Also, hard to identify as wing chun style kf. In my opinion, dosent matter what you train, if you do not stick to style, it is not a style vs style match.
Is Kirara part of a Japanese homage? Then, omg, Tsuki Kirara means "moon sparkle"
qi la la looks a lot like a yoseikan fighter in this
Can’t teach confidence! Good job Qi la la 💯
The guy in blue seems to be wearing a jiu jitsu gi. Those are not very comfortable for punching.
Isn't he the wing chun guy.
What's wrong with bjj gi?
@brydon yao I'm sure for a few tournament rounds he soldiered through the discomfort, thanks though
4:24 the judge declaring qi la la the winner here I belive
Wing Chun guy’s wearing a BJJ gi.
Tyson Durr - So he’s wearing a BJJ gi. Not a big thing and not worth the attitude in your post.
Tyson Durr - Well aren’t you just an angry little keyboard warrior.
Tyson Durr - Maybe go to your special place and calm down before you burst something important. You can leave the commenting to the adults in the mean time.
Not tkd, that is karade
the only reason why Qi La La won is because the other TKD guy is horrible, when he turns his back he should throw a back kick or a a back round kick
Omg 1:30 I swear that's mmashredded lol
There's no grappling in taekwondo. Maybe Japanese jiu-jitsu?
He does little to no wing chun. At some point he'll become a full blown MMA fighter
dang point based... their strikes are so light and weak. might as well just do bell snatching and try to pull bells off each other's belt.
I’d probably say just karate
Red glove fighter that is not taekwondo. Uniform looks to be a karate gi. As for the fighter blue gloves didn't see any wing chun. If anything both fighters fought like freestyle karate fighters.
Ju-Jitsu Fighting System; interesting but strange rules
I don't think that Taekwondo guy have experience of sparring
Qi la la is a good fight but maybe he must be change his punch style,,,
As usual, there wasn’t much actual wing chun in there
The stance? Leading hand? We watching the same vid my guy?
@@monkeylemur I'm with you, he used the vertical punch both hands, used interception (which is in Wing Chun before it was in JKD), he used one and two handed traps, front kick, side kick, round kick even the high crescent was used from a Wing Chun stance, followed by Wing Chun hands. It's cool watching him evolve and elevate his Wing Chun not just adding new techniques.
Seems like a point karate fight.they give you points for only specific kicks and punches. You might killed your opponent, but you will not win the fight...
U said mma yesterday
Red guy is definitely Taekwondo. He doesn't know how to use his hands and then not following through with his strikes when he throws them.
My tkd teachers taught us to clinch and throw knees to the dick lol. There's a wide variety of tkd out there.
why does qi lala look like donnie yen for some reason
Looks like blue could have hit a tani otoshi at 0:49
LOL that is not a taekwondo fighter....Thats a sport karate guy, you can tell by the stance,footwork and type of kicks and hand strikes he uses...
tha pak da is really good an the other guy have anything for the hands
he's not even a tkd fighter lol, he's a karateka
where is Taekwondo? I do not see any typical Taekwondo move. Wrong topic.
It is a jujitsu contest
Hey
My Taekwondo 😞
Is this Wing Chun fighter trying to prove that Wing Chun techniques don't work in a fight? Is that why he uses techniques from everything but Wing Chun? Why bother calling him a Wing Chun fighter?
This looks like Taekwondo Sport system. Any hit that is considered Landed awards a point and I assume the head is 2 points at some moments depending on the move.
Nice video, but you really sound like you don't know what you're commentating about. Crescent kicks are common in Taekwondo. You should at least understand the points system.
This is karate tournament not tkd
Agree with you. The red guy fighting techniques looks more like Karate than Taekwondo.
I'm sorry to say this, but the tarkwondo guy is not master.
His footwork and also how is kicking is not blackbelt