I like what im seeing and hearing. What this sifu is trying to get across is the point is to be styleless, to not have a particular form but be able to flow and merge the arts.
i agree. JKD is to bring out your particular style but not be trapped by it, whatever your innate talent is, then bridge other styles seamlessly into it and be like water. its needs to all flow.
if what is taught is actually JKD then it will stay true to the original concept and teachings of Bruce Lee and therefore will most likely be worded in the same fashion 🙏🙏🙏
... right idea , wrong concept, only kung fu families can merge , mixed martial arts has holes, thats why it is " MIXED " as well as JKD , if they say this about wing chun , there on the wrong pipeline.... mastered the wrong book....thus made a bigger dragon of bad habits.....
I trained with Two Bruce Lee students and the most well know "Back yard" student for 16 years or so. I like what you are doing. Nice Job. I will say having fought muy Thai and having been a major boxing Gym rat until I was 50, Really good boxers and kickboxers have answers for a lot of the JKD stuff. Keeping it simple seemed to work the best; good footwork, controlling distance, ample use of lead hand lead leg, intercepting when possible ( watch out for "counter time" from good fighters. They will feint to draw your interception and then counter your counter!) It's a fencing technique we JKD'ers should use, but good fighters do it naturally. Good fighters are no joke. JKD kept me above water in a lot of gyms thank goodness. My advice is to work out at a good gym where Boxers, muy thai and or mma fighters are in addition to practicing JKD. JKD worked wonders when all everyone knew was traditional Karate or Tae Kwon do. With the proliferation of fighting arts and so many people in the water, JKD does not give the edge it used to. It still has a technological edge. Watch Samart highlights. Ironically, the best Muy thai fighter in History looks like how a JKD fighter would fight most of the time. Remember, he was world class boxer and Muy thai fighter, and knew when and how to apply his interceptions and footwork. Get out of the JKD bubble to get fight experience is my advice.
Not everyone does martial arts to fight in the ring. Those people are in the minority. The average person does martial arts to defend themselves from other average people and the average threat. As long as they’re making their martial art work successfully that’s all that matters
@@adandyguyinspace5783 there's no such thing as average threat, it depends on where you live. A daily threat to a person living in Brazil, Mexico or America could be murderers with fire arms is completely different to a person living in Asian countries that's banneed all forms of weapons so their biggest threat might just be a kitchen knife. Getting in the cage is not necessery but competition against people that's just as good or better than you is a must if you take your martial art seriously. If all you do is train to defend against average people that can't throw a punch properly, might as well spend time learning how to say sorry and swallow ego instead of garbage techniques that can only work on people that can't fight
@@jaketheasianguy3307 don’t care to read all that. You’re entitled to your opinion. And yes there is such thing as an average threat. But you’re entitled to your wrong opinions
I love this. My wing chun/ muay thai teacher always said "it's not about the moves, it's about the principles." Like any discipline, whether it's martial arts, engineering, teaching or whatever, it's always about the principles.
@@peterclarke7240 Don't you know what qualities are? If you have the qualities of kung fu, and if you grab someone, they will not be able to free themselves, and if capture you, they will not be able to hold you. This is an example of how qualities defeat technique and principles. If, of course, they are developed.
@@peterclarke7240 They are different, very specific in Taijiquan, if you are not familiar with this, and have only practiced external techniques, then it is difficult to understand the qualities that are sources of strength, speed, variability, extraordinary stability and balance.
This is something I've been practicing in my JKD training for a while. Very important to understand how to properly bridge different fighting styles. That is flow. That is the way of having all styles and no style.
@@OfficialStreamSagaTvmma is jkd but it evolved because the world evolved... I would say jkd is just now taking its next evolution after years of mourning its creators death... The difference between spiritual and religious progression I'd say
Great lesson, I've done JKD since I was 17 years old trying to understand bridging the gap from different system to another is amazing. Just let it flow and feel ur partner, then it'll just like second nature.
“The majority of people who practice Jeet Kune Do are mixed up, they think it should be a part of Wing Chun, a part of MMA, a part of Thai boxing, a part of wrestling, you know, a part of Wing Chun, which this is completely incorrect. You don't go from style to style, you go from distance to target or target to distance. Longest weapon to the nearest target and the most direct and efficient route possible, that is Jeet Kune Do.” - Tommy Carruthers JKD instructor
This is absolutely phenomenal. Sifu Singh uses unparalleled methods to combine Jeet kun do trapping into traditional boxing. If only this was included in his online training curriculum.
You should look into Tommy Carruthers. He’s the best JKD instructor without a doubt. He has Bruce Lee like attributes and even Jesse Glover, Bruce’s first student said he had never met anyone that came close to Bruce until he met Tommy. You think this guy is good. He’s having methods Bruce moved away from and stopped doing.
This is good stuff. It also works well if you break centerline and weave to the outside as you trap. You can also use the trapping to give you a advantage on entry to the clinch.
Sigung Singh, you're a good teacher. I love what you taught! "Be like water My Friend", Sigung Bruce Lee. There's so much to learn, so I keep learning. Thank you for the lesson and the knowledge.
I've been thinking of trapping with other styles for some time, the only thing that came to mind was hand arts like joint manipulations or inside throws from jujitsu. It's really cool to see its application to Western boxing. We are blessed that Bruce came up with JKD what a evolution in fight psychology.
Not sure how to politely put this, but sorry there's a major flow with the execution here. You JKD folks like the idea of intercepting so this should be something straight forward to grasp. First things first, this slap to the belly is not really major to your opponent. It's just an unarmed hand and I don't want to expand more on it. The main thing wrong here is when sifu is doing this slap, he is leading with his face, further to this puts his arm down thus opening himself up even more. He is very susceptible to being stopped with a stiff jab. Watch in slow motion start at 3:54 or 3:57 and you will see clearly that opponent can just punch your nose with his lead hand. It's not smart to let yourself in range like that. You go up against the right guy and you are just provoking them. The head enters in a nice straight line also (thanks centerline), it's moving forward to compound more damage.
Who did you train with? Dan Inosanto use to really work on stuff like that. I have a few old VHS tape’s with him really working boxing flows with a low cloths line. Then lots of trapping and entry concepts, if I remember correctly on the same tape. When I was really into this stuff I really loved Miuy Thai and got pretty efficient with that, but also incorporated some JKD concepts, and Silat stuff when it suited me. I’m a short 5’ 4” 190lb lean 20 year old at the time. So I had my disadvantages and advantages. JKD really help me with that 45 degree lateral moment to gain entry with the taller guys. I got really good at a blind kind of an over cross. Anyways nice video.
All these type of fighters always use the starting point of reference with low jab and then trap for entry. That simply doesn’t work 99% of the time in a real fight
@@nitai154 works against low level opposition only. If he actually kicks off with a guy who can box, well he’s gonna have to start kicking real soon lol
That's great Singh..the JUNG DA GUA CHOY PING CHOY is in every jkd guys toolbag.. very nice . Maybe be careful about moving your head too close when it's not needed.
Boxing hands are a very good asset to anyone trying to get in or avoid fights you can't just trap all day and expect it to work. At some point you have to get in there and mix it up and you have to have hands. Not thar trapping can't work but there's certain places where it breaks down and you need to switch it up.
@@thiagobecker5603 yeah I agree you don’t see much footage of real JKD sparring with mma gloves. If you don’t do real sparring you don’t know if it will really work.
@@brysonz which is wild because JKD was founded on the basis of doing Full Contact Sparring. Nowadays it’s really about commercializing the art and also making it more accessible.
Well I mean Jeet kune do was never meant to be sport effective it was meant to be a self defense tool so you are right. But there are some things that a few mma fighters have ripped off from Jeet kune do. Like the trapping hands but not like this.
Wrong many people use JKD/wing chun boxing trappping silva and others, you just havent been watching much MMA to recognize it in its practical use which completely differs in learning the tech in practice
You can easily score or create a opening using PIA. It's the best set up for every offensive counter, and too throw your opponent off guard. Nice work!!!
How real a danger is breaking your own hands in a street fight if you punch your opponent hard? Boxers always compete with their hands wrapped as well as gloved, but when, for instance, Mike Tyson got into street fights he broke his hands. I'm just wondering how much punching for self-defense should be emphasized if you're likely to break your own hand hitting someone's hard head?
I have been trying this on sparring partners. On lower level partners, it works well. But on higher level partners that have a decent kicking game (Esp. Side kicks and teeps), I find this difficult even though I love doing it. Any suggestions against TKD type dudes please?
The problem with the way most MA are trained are against similar fighters. In reality, most any confrontation is going to be dissimilar combat. The probability of you needing to employ your techniques against a competent kicker are super slim, outside of competition. That said, I used to train TKD. Either don't try to enter/close in a straight line, or close with a kick of your own. Sliding/Skipping front kick. Or bait their kick and move off center and blitz. ITF guys will be slightly more comfortable with a fist fight than WTF. The guy that definitely wants to kick will likely reset evading backward, so you'll need to counter to get inside. Lateral movement gives you the option to take an angle.
@@blkspade23 Thanks Stacey, this is awesome stuff. I forgot to mention that I do train ITF TKD as well, so your advice is right up my alley. As I mentioned, I have used the trapping-boxing techniques against lower-level partners to success. But what you mention here makes a lot of sense to me. Perhaps follow-up the trap/initial strike with a boxing combo of my own. Thanks!
Decent. For the ring though, gotta turn that backhand into a hammer fist and immediately follow with a straight rear hand. Otherwise, magick...a great demo of boxing set ups!
yes, but the beyond has nothing to do with discarding, useful tools should not be discarded and for those who train and dedicate themselves to applying something complex like trapping can apply the technique of Effective and functional, I respect your decision not to train trapping and I respect carruthers too, after all jkd is like a wallet, everyone has their own.
Yup. There's nothing wrong with this but just don't call it JKD. There's a few people from Ted Wong line still teach this stuffs but they're at least honest about it and teach 2 different classes : JKD (the late Bruce stuffs) and Jun Fan Kung Fu (the trapping stuffs)
Shouldn't it THEN (As ONE sequence) go into Grappling, so you do that to stun or hit, then IMMEDIATELY follow a grappling chain, JKD is meant to be adaptive and always change isn't it? Don't stand and try to be Bruce less, do that and hit them a few times, but IMHO then do grappling as it is the faster way to stop them(Hitting you). EDIT, as I paused the video to write that comment, i clicked to keep watching, Sifu Singh said wrestling after that. WELL DONE, with respect to Sifu Singh. I am glad you said that.
I have a legit question. I’m an amateur mma fighter and have been boxing for a while. I don’t really see how this is useful in a ring or a cage. I respect all martial arts and how they teach discipline and respect, but how is this useful against a good jab and a cross. Do you know what I’m saying? A fast snapping jab, a good feint, and a sharp cross. When I look at this, it seems like that’s all it would take for this to not work? Maybe I’m bias or I’m not seeing it right. Can someone enlighten me thank you all!
There are safer ways to set up traps without compromising your defense, like stepping in and out to bait a jab, leaning forward for a pull counter whilst having your hands up, throwing a quick cross just to bait out for a hook. All these traps don’t require you to put your hands down therefore having a good defense while being prepared for offense. What are the pros and cons of JKD versus having good basics of boxing? I hope you guys can help me out
Being at the level where u can find flaw in another Doctor's teachings, or coach, or whatever field you're in, and having the grace and humility to not say anything, are two separate things lol. He's good. Everyone has flaws. He seems fun to train with. I wonder which of Bruce's originals he trained under?
Just like bagua zhang it was said to be created for people who already knew how to fight these arts are for advanced fighter learning it by self will take a life time to understand how to make it work with no fighting experience
Oke heard the talking, now prove it under pressure. Try this concept on an actual boxer, and yes it has to be a boxer because I know u can beat up any regular guy, thats obvious.. Without the prove it stays pure theory🤷🏼♂️
@@jasonm4927 traps are done in muay thai all the time, again its how you train the clinch and approach the fighter, grapplers make good trappers in the clinch
The backfist is a good telegraphed punch to set up and engage the clinch because of the predictable framing it comes to, they want! You to respond to it up high,so it leaves the body vulnerable for a shot and it doesn’t have to be with striking, wrestlers do a similar approach for when they shoot low. If no one can see that this has been explored countless times against many “styles” over time on the mat and you haven’t even tried it yourself in sparing then you aren’t understanding the lesson let alone the tactics of bruces “fast” approach… people tend to forget this key aspect considering Bruce relied on speed and thats why he refrained himself from teaching everyone “his” JKD because it varied on the body types and athleticism… its a structure! Tactics! Sifted out for a small athletic man with speed! Try it all yourselves and quit waiting for video validation “Find your own way” and be formless
Well the average person does martial arts to defend themselves from the “regular guy”. The average person doesn’t care about pressure testing and all of this stuff people like you hilariously use to try to disprove TMA. Not everyone does martial arts to fight in the ring. As long as how they use their fighting style against the “regular guy” gets them out of a bad situation then that’s all that matters. And yeah “proven” fighting styles like BJJ have lost on the street as well.
Its funny because i learned that from street fighting.. block and strike at the same time.. and ive trained mma and boxing some.. not much because i didnt have enough money lol... but my boxing instructor told me not to slap the hand that strikes me.. wich can leave a open spot.. but the way ive learned from street fighting and the mma training.. that can and will work. As long as u counter strike with the block
I practiced JKD when I was a young boy. I can tell you with certainty you want to simply go to a boxing gym, learn true western style, then get your ass in the ring often. A lot of the shit you see on RUclips here is simply not practical. It does not work against another good boxer.
@@bjjkickboxing7876 well you know what I mean, like for a high school tournament it's quite big, it was like a multiple high school tournament like the whole city or something.
If you try this to me one feet back and rotate left punc in the head and right jab with all my kilos and KO Never be with no defending head Thas is the 1thing that we teach I boxing
He feels everything out then acts like he already knew that and sees where is arms are and says thats why my arms are like this he makes it up as he goes
Sifu Singh better than master Wong? Really?! ? Ask Wong or Singh ?! Where do these JKD people come.from that never trained with Bruce Lee or his other teachers?!
I like all this stuff, it's very similar to the wing chun (which is obvious considering JKD's origins), however... watching videos doesn't help you. If you want to try it out, don't go to your class where you are practicing, just try a guy who is a real boxer, and test it. It looks all cool and nice when he stops after first punch to let you do "your stuff", but if he just pushes hard on you, it's a different story. I'm not saying it won't work. Just don't believe you're golden against a boxer if the only sparing you tried was with a classmate who doesn't really try to "beat you up".
I like what im seeing and hearing. What this sifu is trying to get across is the point is to be styleless, to not have a particular form but be able to flow and merge the arts.
i agree. JKD is to bring out your particular style but not be trapped by it, whatever your innate talent is, then bridge other styles seamlessly into it and be like water. its needs to all flow.
Lmao, are you trying to Quote Bruce Lee? Because he is the Father, founder and creator of JKD. Or are you trying to be funny?
if what is taught is actually JKD then it will stay true to the original concept and teachings of Bruce Lee and therefore will most likely be worded in the same fashion 🙏🙏🙏
... like water
... right idea , wrong concept, only kung fu families can merge , mixed martial arts has holes, thats why it is " MIXED " as well as JKD , if they say this about wing chun , there on the wrong pipeline.... mastered the wrong book....thus made a bigger dragon of bad habits.....
I trained with Two Bruce Lee students and the most well know "Back yard" student for 16 years or so. I like what you are doing. Nice Job. I will say having fought muy Thai and having been a major boxing Gym rat until I was 50, Really good boxers and kickboxers have answers for a lot of the JKD stuff. Keeping it simple seemed to work the best; good footwork, controlling distance, ample use of lead hand lead leg, intercepting when possible ( watch out for "counter time" from good fighters. They will feint to draw your interception and then counter your counter!) It's a fencing technique we JKD'ers should use, but good fighters do it naturally. Good fighters are no joke. JKD kept me above water in a lot of gyms thank goodness. My advice is to work out at a good gym where Boxers, muy thai and or mma fighters are in addition to practicing JKD. JKD worked wonders when all everyone knew was traditional Karate or Tae Kwon do. With the proliferation of fighting arts and so many people in the water, JKD does not give the edge it used to. It still has a technological edge. Watch Samart highlights. Ironically, the best Muy thai fighter in History looks like how a JKD fighter would fight most of the time. Remember, he was world class boxer and Muy thai fighter, and knew when and how to apply his interceptions and footwork. Get out of the JKD bubble to get fight experience is my advice.
Not everyone does martial arts to fight in the ring. Those people are in the minority. The average person does martial arts to defend themselves from other average people and the average threat. As long as they’re making their martial art work successfully that’s all that matters
@@adandyguyinspace5783 there's no such thing as average threat, it depends on where you live. A daily threat to a person living in Brazil, Mexico or America could be murderers with fire arms is completely different to a person living in Asian countries that's banneed all forms of weapons so their biggest threat might just be a kitchen knife.
Getting in the cage is not necessery but competition against people that's just as good or better than you is a must if you take your martial art seriously. If all you do is train to defend against average people that can't throw a punch properly, might as well spend time learning how to say sorry and swallow ego instead of garbage techniques that can only work on people that can't fight
@@jaketheasianguy3307 don’t care to read all that. You’re entitled to your opinion. And yes there is such thing as an average threat. But you’re entitled to your wrong opinions
@@adandyguyinspace5783 ok little man, stay in your box. You're entitled to your wrong opinion as well
@@adandyguyinspace5783 and i'm sorry if you have mental illness that made you can't read pas 3 sentences. Hope you will get treatment and be better
I love this.
My wing chun/ muay thai teacher always said "it's not about the moves, it's about the principles." Like any discipline, whether it's martial arts, engineering, teaching or whatever, it's always about the principles.
principles and techniques are always weaker than real specific qualities! 😉
@@AndreyDao In what way?
@@peterclarke7240 Don't you know what qualities are? If you have the qualities of kung fu, and if you grab someone, they will not be able to free themselves, and if capture you, they will not be able to hold you. This is an example of how qualities defeat technique and principles. If, of course, they are developed.
@@AndreyDao Ok... But could you give me an example of what you mean by the "qualities of Kung Fu?"
@@peterclarke7240 They are different, very specific in Taijiquan, if you are not familiar with this, and have only practiced external techniques, then it is difficult to understand the qualities that are sources of strength, speed, variability, extraordinary stability and balance.
This is something I've been practicing in my JKD training for a while. Very important to understand how to properly bridge different fighting styles. That is flow. That is the way of having all styles and no style.
. **note this is diff then wing chun bridging principles.... within the sec form..
MMA
@@OfficialStreamSagaTvmma is jkd but it evolved because the world evolved... I would say jkd is just now taking its next evolution after years of mourning its creators death... The difference between spiritual and religious progression I'd say
Great lesson, I've done JKD since I was 17 years old trying to understand bridging the gap from different system to another is amazing. Just let it flow and feel ur partner, then it'll just like second nature.
.. **note this is diff then wing chun bridging principles.... within the sec form...
“The majority of people who practice Jeet Kune Do are mixed up, they think it should be a part of Wing Chun, a part of MMA, a part of Thai boxing, a part of wrestling, you know, a part of Wing Chun, which this is completely incorrect. You don't go from style to style, you go from distance to target or target to distance. Longest weapon to the nearest target and the most direct and efficient route possible, that is Jeet Kune Do.”
- Tommy Carruthers JKD instructor
Sifu, this is the evolution if the chun. The transition of the mind frame. I love it
This is absolutely phenomenal. Sifu Singh uses unparalleled methods to combine Jeet kun do trapping into traditional boxing. If only this was included in his online training curriculum.
You should look into Tommy Carruthers. He’s the best JKD instructor without a doubt. He has Bruce Lee like attributes and even Jesse Glover, Bruce’s first student said he had never met anyone that came close to Bruce until he met Tommy.
You think this guy is good. He’s having methods Bruce moved away from and stopped doing.
perfect explanation of jkd
This is good stuff. It also works well if you break centerline and weave to the outside as you trap. You can also use the trapping to give you a advantage on entry to the clinch.
Sigung Singh, you're a good teacher. I love what you taught! "Be like water My Friend", Sigung Bruce Lee. There's so much to learn, so I keep learning. Thank you for the lesson and the knowledge.
Perfect to add in my current boxing arsenal. Been practicing Kali for a while and so far my boxing inside game definitely improves.
I've been thinking of trapping with other styles for some time, the only thing that came to mind was hand arts like joint manipulations or inside throws from jujitsu. It's really cool to see its application to Western boxing. We are blessed that Bruce came up with JKD what a evolution in fight psychology.
Those shirts are badass and I love how you bring techniques and blend with philosophies. 🥋
Not sure how to politely put this, but sorry there's a major flow with the execution here. You JKD folks like the idea of intercepting so this should be something straight forward to grasp. First things first, this slap to the belly is not really major to your opponent. It's just an unarmed hand and I don't want to expand more on it. The main thing wrong here is when sifu is doing this slap, he is leading with his face, further to this puts his arm down thus opening himself up even more. He is very susceptible to being stopped with a stiff jab.
Watch in slow motion start at 3:54 or 3:57 and you will see clearly that opponent can just punch your nose with his lead hand. It's not smart to let yourself in range like that. You go up against the right guy and you are just provoking them. The head enters in a nice straight line also (thanks centerline), it's moving forward to compound more damage.
The presentation on how you can use the discipline in a real situation. Great vid 👍
Who did you train with? Dan Inosanto use to really work on stuff like that. I have a few old VHS tape’s with him really working boxing flows with a low cloths line. Then lots of trapping and entry concepts, if I remember correctly on the same tape. When I was really into this stuff I really loved Miuy Thai and got pretty efficient with that, but also incorporated some JKD concepts, and Silat stuff when it suited me. I’m a short 5’ 4” 190lb lean 20 year old at the time. So I had my disadvantages and advantages. JKD really help me with that 45 degree lateral moment to gain entry with the taller guys. I got really good at a blind kind of an over cross. Anyways nice video.
Wow, Jeet Kune Do boxing style is way more effective than ever 🥰
Yeah he moves awesome I've always liked this guy . His body movement and stuff he's very fluid and looks good doing it
Damn wish I could get one on one training from him
Crazy head exposure. Bruce would never lean in and expose his head like that, this is nuts lol
Yes.
All these type of fighters always use the starting point of reference with low jab and then trap for entry. That simply doesn’t work 99% of the time in a real fight
@@nitai154 works against low level opposition only. If he actually kicks off with a guy who can box, well he’s gonna have to start kicking real soon lol
@@nitai154 It works fine. It only works once or twice and it never ends it against a man who's used to being punched
Your going to get knocked out lf you do this.
Lot of philosophy and scientific approaches in this wonderful art of Jeet Kune Do … RIP BRUCE LEE … you were Genius
Good explanation brother. Thanks.✊🏽
Looks good, pretty legit stuff!
Bruce would be proud of this instruction.
Please make some video of the different throwing techniques in JKD. :)
This is a style for street fighting that’s what Bruce always intended it for
These techniques are in which category of jkd belts?
Great self perfection training..body mechanics are nice ..🥊
This is real one !
At 0:01 the defender should extend his longest weapon to prevent approaching. The basics to apply to such an exposure.
Wonderful like it ❤️
Wonderful
You can play slap hand , or use low line kicks, or move off the line of attack, use some powerful mid target power kicks
That's great Singh..the JUNG DA GUA CHOY PING CHOY is in every jkd guys toolbag.. very nice . Maybe be careful about moving your head too close when it's not needed.
Sigung.Singh is the truth flat out
He knows his craft to say the least a true master in the arts.
@@themalhama9129 I felt his aura when I seen him in person. Dude is the truth
I can tell this guy is a deep thinker
Good Wing Chun boxing mix...
personal ly, jkd is a concept to me. it is flowing and transitioning from one style to the next, whatever it may be, seamlessly.
Boxing hands are a very good asset to anyone trying to get in or avoid fights you can't just trap all day and expect it to work. At some point you have to get in there and mix it up and you have to have hands.
Not thar trapping can't work but there's certain places where it breaks down and you need to switch it up.
This rarely works in the mma world. I don’t know why. This seems like it is very effective. I am sure it would work very well as a self defense.
Effective with you combined with your partner. That´s why rarely works in the mma world.
@@thiagobecker5603 yeah I agree you don’t see much footage of real JKD sparring with mma gloves. If you don’t do real sparring you don’t know if it will really work.
@@brysonz which is wild because JKD was founded on the basis of doing Full Contact Sparring. Nowadays it’s really about commercializing the art and also making it more accessible.
Well I mean Jeet kune do was never meant to be sport effective it was meant to be a self defense tool so you are right. But there are some things that a few mma fighters have ripped off from Jeet kune do. Like the trapping hands but not like this.
Wrong many people use JKD/wing chun boxing trappping silva and others, you just havent been watching much MMA to recognize it in its practical use which completely differs in learning the tech in practice
Good stuff... Very Pauk Vunak-ish style of JKD
He trained with Vunak.....they went their separate ways....
i was thinking the same thing.....
@@pked9 guess he was well coached
Well their JKD is separation...in its self.😅
You can easily score or create a opening using PIA. It's the best set up for every offensive counter, and too throw your opponent off guard. Nice work!!!
In my boxing club if you attak down with low hands you get automatcally à one two In the head
That was Amazing.😍😍
How real a danger is breaking your own hands in a street fight if you punch your opponent hard? Boxers always compete with their hands wrapped as well as gloved, but when, for instance, Mike Tyson got into street fights he broke his hands. I'm just wondering how much punching for self-defense should be emphasized if you're likely to break your own hand hitting someone's hard head?
Interesting
I like what I'm seeing and hearing 👏
I have been trying this on sparring partners. On lower level partners, it works well. But on higher level partners that have a decent kicking game (Esp. Side kicks and teeps), I find this difficult even though I love doing it. Any suggestions against TKD type dudes please?
The problem with the way most MA are trained are against similar fighters. In reality, most any confrontation is going to be dissimilar combat. The probability of you needing to employ your techniques against a competent kicker are super slim, outside of competition.
That said, I used to train TKD. Either don't try to enter/close in a straight line, or close with a kick of your own. Sliding/Skipping front kick. Or bait their kick and move off center and blitz. ITF guys will be slightly more comfortable with a fist fight than WTF. The guy that definitely wants to kick will likely reset evading backward, so you'll need to counter to get inside. Lateral movement gives you the option to take an angle.
@@blkspade23 Thanks Stacey, this is awesome stuff. I forgot to mention that I do train ITF TKD as well, so your advice is right up my alley. As I mentioned, I have used the trapping-boxing techniques against lower-level partners to success. But what you mention here makes a lot of sense to me. Perhaps follow-up the trap/initial strike with a boxing combo of my own. Thanks!
sinds you call your trainer sifu i wander if jkd is a kungfu "style"
Checkin' out the footwork. Sifu Singh can dance too!
Decent. For the ring though, gotta turn that backhand into a hammer fist and immediately follow with a straight rear hand. Otherwise, magick...a great demo of boxing set ups!
Thanks for the demo sir....
Appreciated Sifu
Buen trabajo
Bruce Lee was beyond that...
💯
yes, but the beyond has nothing to do with discarding, useful tools should not be discarded and for those who train and dedicate themselves to applying something complex like trapping can apply the technique of Effective and functional, I respect your decision not to train trapping and I respect carruthers too, after all jkd is like a wallet, everyone has their own.
@@canaldospider4238 that's an excuse to do whatever you want, but still use Bruces name for marketing. It's a classic.
@@ThomasMarxJKD 💯
Yup. There's nothing wrong with this but just don't call it JKD. There's a few people from Ted Wong line still teach this stuffs but they're at least honest about it and teach 2 different classes : JKD (the late Bruce stuffs) and Jun Fan Kung Fu (the trapping stuffs)
Damn, lots of Bruce Lee fan boys on these JKD channels!
Nice skill set 🥊
Shouldn't it THEN (As ONE sequence) go into Grappling, so you do that to stun or hit, then IMMEDIATELY follow a grappling chain, JKD is meant to be adaptive and always change isn't it? Don't stand and try to be Bruce less, do that and hit them a few times, but IMHO then do grappling as it is the faster way to stop them(Hitting you). EDIT, as I paused the video to write that comment, i clicked to keep watching, Sifu Singh said wrestling after that. WELL DONE, with respect to Sifu Singh. I am glad you said that.
Situation looks quick, but with the body blows, he may be a left hook target
Very nice !!.
You are the man.
Its fighting no matter what. The name is for people who are all about them selves. Reminds me of NAPOLEON DYNAMITE
He's wide open we he's coming in does that make sense
I have a legit question. I’m an amateur mma fighter and have been boxing for a while. I don’t really see how this is useful in a ring or a cage. I respect all martial arts and how they teach discipline and respect, but how is this useful against a good jab and a cross. Do you know what I’m saying? A fast snapping jab, a good feint, and a sharp cross. When I look at this, it seems like that’s all it would take for this to not work? Maybe I’m bias or I’m not seeing it right. Can someone enlighten me thank you all!
There are safer ways to set up traps without compromising your defense, like stepping in and out to bait a jab, leaning forward for a pull counter whilst having your hands up, throwing a quick cross just to bait out for a hook. All these traps don’t require you to put your hands down therefore having a good defense while being prepared for offense. What are the pros and cons of JKD versus having good basics of boxing? I hope you guys can help me out
Great they calll counter parry
That's good skills
You guys smoke budo. 😅😂just kidding. I always liked this video. 🥊💥💯
Being at the level where u can find flaw in another Doctor's teachings, or coach, or whatever field you're in, and having the grace and humility to not say anything, are two separate things lol.
He's good. Everyone has flaws. He seems fun to train with. I wonder which of Bruce's originals he trained under?
Thank u sifu
You got another subscriber my dude, fucking awesome
Very cool
❤
Does that make sense....
Just like bagua zhang it was said to be created for people who already knew how to fight these arts are for advanced fighter learning it by self will take a life time to understand how to make it work with no fighting experience
dudes dope¡!!
Oke heard the talking, now prove it under pressure. Try this concept on an actual boxer, and yes it has to be a boxer because I know u can beat up any regular guy, thats obvious..
Without the prove it stays pure theory🤷🏼♂️
@@jasonm4927 traps are done in muay thai all the time, again its how you train the clinch and approach the fighter, grapplers make good trappers in the clinch
The backfist is a good telegraphed punch to set up and engage the clinch because of the predictable framing it comes to, they want! You to respond to it up high,so it leaves the body vulnerable for a shot and it doesn’t have to be with striking, wrestlers do a similar approach for when they shoot low. If no one can see that this has been explored countless times against many “styles” over time on the mat and you haven’t even tried it yourself in sparing then you aren’t understanding the lesson let alone the tactics of bruces “fast” approach… people tend to forget this key aspect considering Bruce relied on speed and thats why he refrained himself from teaching everyone “his” JKD because it varied on the body types and athleticism… its a structure! Tactics! Sifted out for a small athletic man with speed! Try it all yourselves and quit waiting for video validation
“Find your own way” and be formless
Well the average person does martial arts to defend themselves from the “regular guy”. The average person doesn’t care about pressure testing and all of this stuff people like you hilariously use to try to disprove TMA. Not everyone does martial arts to fight in the ring. As long as how they use their fighting style against the “regular guy” gets them out of a bad situation then that’s all that matters. And yeah “proven” fighting styles like BJJ have lost on the street as well.
Its funny because i learned that from street fighting.. block and strike at the same time.. and ive trained mma and boxing some.. not much because i didnt have enough money lol... but my boxing instructor told me not to slap the hand that strikes me.. wich can leave a open spot.. but the way ive learned from street fighting and the mma training.. that can and will work. As long as u counter strike with the block
id like to see this in a dparring session with a rral boxer
Yessssss
He would probably kick the boxer in the knee cap. No need to play the opponent's game
I would love to see this in a real fight against someone who’s just as fast
I hope someday jetkundo will become ufc champions winner
Everybody has a plan.til they get punched in the face! (Tyson)
I practiced JKD when I was a young boy. I can tell you with certainty you want to simply go to a boxing gym, learn true western style, then get your ass in the ring often. A lot of the shit you see on RUclips here is simply not practical. It does not work against another good boxer.
Bruce would exploit all those openings...damn lol
Love jeekungdo Bruce Lee best
Don't forget that Bruce Lee, the grandmaster of Jet Kune Do himself, won a huge boxing tournament in high school
If it was in highschool then it wasnt huge
@@bjjkickboxing7876 well you know what I mean, like for a high school tournament it's quite big, it was like a multiple high school tournament like the whole city or something.
Rất hay 😊😊😄😄👍
Bruce Lee was the trainer of John Lewis ,who won karate championship, Mike stone also
''Everyone has a plan' till they get punched in the mouth''....Mike Tyson.
Sifu Singh !
Focus and speed
If you try this to me one feet back and rotate left punc in the head and right jab with all my kilos and KO
Never be with no defending head
Thas is the 1thing that we teach I boxing
Hmmm I don't know, it looks like nice and if your opponent sticks to striking I guess.
He feels everything out then acts like he already knew that and sees where is arms are and says thats why my arms are like this he makes it up as he goes
Head down. Hand down leading w a jab to body? Likely to catch a knee or elbow.
Sifu Singh better than master Wong? Really?! ? Ask Wong or Singh ?! Where do these JKD people come.from that never trained with Bruce Lee or his other teachers?!
From my experience with sensei’s he’s not showing much. The movement he’s teaching isn’t too applicable to a self defense/competition setting
Never underestimate the back fist!
I feel like trapping is like a catch and shoot
I like all this stuff, it's very similar to the wing chun (which is obvious considering JKD's origins), however... watching videos doesn't help you. If you want to try it out, don't go to your class where you are practicing, just try a guy who is a real boxer, and test it. It looks all cool and nice when he stops after first punch to let you do "your stuff", but if he just pushes hard on you, it's a different story.
I'm not saying it won't work. Just don't believe you're golden against a boxer if the only sparing you tried was with a classmate who doesn't really try to "beat you up".
Fuck I'm out, couldn't make it half way through it just gets more and more ridiculous if u keep watching lol.
haha fonzie training with sunglasses