Wing Tsun 4th Biu Tze section

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июл 2013
  • If you have been taught these sections in another way, that's OK. As the creator of this whole branch of Wing Chun, Grandmaster Leung Ting, famously said: "The sections are only SIMPLE exercises for beginners to understand BASIC Wing Chun principles!"
    Which variation of the sections you are learning is less important as long as you are learning all their lessons for posture, yielding to and using the opponent's force while using an effective footwork. What is important is intent, never training without the proper threat level from the attacker and counter-attacker, and having an intelligent method for learning the sections.
    Practice them step by step, like in the video, stopping between hits. Do each part until they can be performed with full speed and intent, stopping only enough power to not hurt the co-student. He/she is letting you strike for your training benefit, it is your responsibility to respect this and only use enough force for a realistic threat without following through with damaging him/her. Only then move on to adding the next part. When Chi Sau becomes a choreography without challenging each other, it is as useless for combat as a dance.
    The WT sections are a collection of quick and easy-to-learn drills for understanding the basic possibilities and requirements for Chi Sau. The drills teach principles for using sensory input from your opponent in some beneficial ways. They are NOT clever ways to attack an opponent in a fight. They are certainly not sparring, or a replacement for sparring.
    In the 4 (and a half...) Biu Tze sections, the theme is recovering from a mistake. The techniques within these sections can be used by the intermediate student to avoid a certain hit and regain control of the game, but they are even more effective when used by experts to control the game and steer the opponent into positions that allow striking and takedowns.
    The quicker you understand and learn these sections, and (most importantly) move beyond them all, the faster you will master Chi Sau and acquire your own understanding of it. While these sections are great at exploring the techniques of the Wing Chun forms and how they apply in Chi Sau, they may be a bit outdated. There are now other tools that rapidly teach effective Chi Sau technique that also applies to other disciplines like self-defense, MMA and Escrima.
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Комментарии • 63

  • @TheOtherChris
    @TheOtherChris 11 лет назад +3

    Hi! Yeah, Biu Tze is about leaving and reclaiming the centerline, without giving the opponent an opportunity to take it from you. So in all Biu Tze sections there are parts when you are turned away from the opponent's core line while still maintaining control of the situation. Hope that explains it! Thanks for watching!

  • @WingTsunSweden
    @WingTsunSweden  11 лет назад +2

    Great question! When attacking and actually taking the whole centerline like with the upward elbow you need to avoid that to hit you. There are of course alternative solutions to every attack shown here which includes less turning, but the main point here is to understand how you can use different parts of the system to defend and attack. Notice also that certain defenses are used when you are actually to late in defending, and thus there is a need to turn and recovering from your mistake.

  • @rk-do
    @rk-do 3 года назад

    Thank you very much for providing such a great resource for learning WingTsun! I am learning from your videos since approx. one year and I really value your detailed explanations. (I am practicing WingTsun since nine years.) Wishing you all the best!

  • @mirkohuusom7580
    @mirkohuusom7580 8 лет назад +1

    Thank you Sweden! Totally nice videos

  • @WingTsunSweden
    @WingTsunSweden  11 лет назад

    Regards from Sweden too! Thanks, keep watching!

  • @WingTsunSweden
    @WingTsunSweden  11 лет назад +1

    Hi, really good question. On aspect of the Chi Sau sections are meant to make the student understand the different applications of the forms, and in these sections there are techniques from more than just the Biu Tze form. So for example in the 4th BT section you have the following techniques assuming that you have some knowledge of Wing Chun :-)
    1st part: From the opening of the last part of the dummy after the low bong sau, but with no dummy to stop the upward movement,
    .

  • @WingTsunSweden
    @WingTsunSweden  11 лет назад +1

    2nd part: From the second last part of Siu Nim Tau before the finishing punches.
    3rd-5th part: From the swinging arms in the Biu Tze form
    6th part: From the same part in the Biu Tze form, but here the finish where you’ve the downward elbow
    7th part: Punch to the stomach from the Chum Kiu Form, just before the uppercut
    8th part: Turning fok sau from the Biu Tze form together with a wu sau from Siu Nim Tau
    9th - 10th part: repeating 7-8 part
    11th: Finishing of with the uppercut from Chum Kiu.

  • @notusingmyname4791
    @notusingmyname4791 Год назад

    now I see how someone who opened up a leung ting lineage of wing tsun school next to me only had 5 years of training in the art before opening a school.
    I've been training almost 12 years, sitll haven't gotten to biu tze form at my school and just mopped the floor with him when I went to see if it would be worth changing schools.
    I'll stick with mine for now.

  • @Mario2815
    @Mario2815 11 лет назад

    Thanks. I like it too ! Best regards from Germany !

  • @badgolim
    @badgolim 11 лет назад

    Thanks! Great video!

  • @WingTsunSweden
    @WingTsunSweden  10 лет назад

    Good to hear!

  • @manaraslespaul
    @manaraslespaul 11 лет назад

    yea thanks.if you have links or stuff i can download for biu tze plz share thanks.

  • @ThiagoVelozoMistySad
    @ThiagoVelozoMistySad 2 года назад

    Very Well

  • @manaraslespaul
    @manaraslespaul 11 лет назад

    ah...i see.anyway im still a beginer but im looking for info on the bui tze clearly out of curiosity.thanks

  • @manaraslespaul
    @manaraslespaul 11 лет назад

    heres a question.in biu tze chi sao dont u have to keep the centerline?i mean your centerline must face to your oponents?i notice that u turn too much here.thanks

  • @annawolska9407
    @annawolska9407 11 лет назад

    Hm.. Biu Tze sections are conected with the part of form Biu Tze ( like paj jar, like kwai jar ) I don't know the moves like that in The Biu Tze form ;))

  • @alekx58
    @alekx58 10 лет назад

    it s a really real confilict forme fare at all leranable too she ja hai ih kuang du cheng zai shui nah ken pao ci diao ah nah shi fu zai he je

  • @kamelt5436
    @kamelt5436 3 года назад

    Je vous aime bien tous les deux.

  • @alekx58
    @alekx58 10 лет назад

    skho lu jiang cher je zai cher so jet while here see also after a good kung fu one

  • @alekx58
    @alekx58 10 лет назад

    very welcome im alswas happy if ones be serious happy with his serious kung fu welcome bai hao jing gong fu fu shin ih tai schin qi hai wo ghan man zai si hai wang fu

  • @theOPshadow
    @theOPshadow 11 лет назад

    nu saknar jag kung fun :( jag kanske kommer tillbaka nån dag

  • @wingchunmann
    @wingchunmann 10 лет назад +1

    good work for analysing all these so called "sections", which are tought in the Leung Ting and Kernspecht-Lineage.. But all in all: all the sections are not working .....................................................................!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thanks!

    • @WingTsunSweden
      @WingTsunSweden  10 лет назад +3

      Hi Horst, first of all, thanks for positive feedback. I imagine you mean that the all the sections doesn't work in a combat situation. We see the sections more like a tool to understand the system. The sections are showing us things like: You can combine techniques from different forms together. A technique can be both applied for example both pushing or pulling, inside or outside. And of course the actual sensitivity training. If you can make them work in an actual combat situation that is entirely up to the martial artist and depending of the skill of your opponent. If you're superior - anything works. If you're equal or inferior - it is more difficult. Hope that explains our view. In the meantime, have fun! Thanks!

    • @wingchunmann
      @wingchunmann 10 лет назад

      i think - sorry for saying that - and saying it from my own experience with Leung Ting--Kernspecht WT - it is based on a wrong understanding of fighting principles.. It doesn´t matter, if it is a tool or not. Why spend my time with a system or training tool, which only shall work, when i am superior? Than it is useless for smaller or weaker people.. There is a big mistake in WT at all.. and that crap from "closed-door"-student and so on is not true and only a sort of glorification for making a good business. But i think nobody wants to hear, that it is not working when spending 10, 12 or years to reach a higher technician Level by paying thousands for useless "sections"..They are also based on that wrong idea of "soft" WT and its wrong 4 fighting principles, where Ip Man only taught 3 fighting principles.. That system is invented by Kernspecht and LT.. And even when you are still not connected to LT or Kernspecht.. your WT is still based on the same - wrong idea - of the system.. i say it through 22 years of experience with different teachers and my own daily training with WT-students who learned 4 5, 8 or 9 years these "sections". i know, why they are not working. Maybe, there will be an opportunity to show sometimes.. Take care

    • @rsbrehm
      @rsbrehm 9 лет назад +2

      Horst Drescher Sifu Drescher, respectively; I think you are being overly critical. This actually makes it sound like your own marketing scheme.

    • @wingchunmann
      @wingchunmann 9 лет назад

      Roderick.. That is not correct.. Keith Kernspecht himself says in his own book "The essence of Wing Tsun" published in Germany 2013, that he invented these sections with Leung Ting and in the same book he said, that they never have been designed for fighting.. After teaching these "sections" as part of the Leung Ting System.. "Sections" have never been taught by Ip Man, Wong Sheung Leung, Lo Man Kam, Ip Ching, Ip Chun or other guys in that Lineage.. It is not my marketing scheme, it is fact, that "sections" came into WT since Kernspecht was starting to teach WT in Germany in the 70´s. In Great Britain, where WT was not established before since 1997 - i´ve been in Tunbridge Wells at one of the first Kernspecht seminars there - "sections" were not known in Great Britain. Being overcritical for me means the following thing: to prove, when somebody claims something and can´t stand to it: Kernspecht claims WT being a scientific and rational system of self-defence. And Kernspecht himself points out - 40 years later - that an important part of his system has never been designed for fighting.. So where is his science???

    • @rsbrehm
      @rsbrehm 9 лет назад +2

      Horst Drescher The sections familiarize the student with hand coordination and a general idea of how to respond in a conflict. Fighting is all 100 percent improvisation based on being "in the moment." The more tricks you have up your sleeve the more options you have to improvise with. I believe the sections could be taught differently but the reason any Sifu would comment on someone else's lineage would be to promote his/her own. So back to my first comment; you are marketing. Is this bad? Not really, but it doesn't make me want to learn from you when you are just attacking someone else's school.