Your students are good practitioners and well rounded individual. I met one of your students in Chiang Mai, Thailand for a Kung Fu seminar back in 2019. During our time training together we spoke about our martial arts and our Wing Chun journey after that we spent some time going over drills we learned from the seminar then after we did a session of light sparring together. The sparring session had giggles, smiles and grunts with the "oh you got me" moments, we were like little kids playing in the courtyard, it was fun like what you did with your student in this live application. Keep in mind nobody else was sparring just us two after the seminar class was over. I was impressed with your students skill and knew right away your students spar like our school does. Your teaching skills is up to the task of keeping wing chun from falling into the wayside like so many other wing chun schools that has become a McDojo/Internal Woo-Woo schools. I hope to meet your student again and to meet you at your school when I travel to New Zealand in the near future. Thank you for keeping Wing Chun relevant 🙏
@@alanorrwingchunacademy I had to look it up it's been awhile since we spoke his first name is Jules. Don't want to put his full name on youtube. Cool guy got along with easily.
Very little WC schools are willing to play like this. Really admire your approach to training WC rather than the traditional methods. Real innovator. Do you come out to Australia much?
2:04 Hi Alan I noticed you moved your left leg to the outside of your student's right leg when you did your arm drag. Was there any reason why you chose to step to the outside of your student's right leg instead of maintaining inside position with your left leg to go for a takedown?
I like the inside leg position, but I could feel Locky was aware and he ready to counter. So, I changed position so he would have to follow and react rather than be in a ready position as such.
You’ll never see Gary lam or Samuel Kwok interacting with their students in this manner. They will show contrived dummy applications literally lifted from the form that simply fall apart under chaos. In this exchange I can see the dummy PRINCIPLES running all the way through, especially the footwork and distance control aspects
Hi Alan I noticed you don't really chamber your front kicks much. How do you prevent these issues highlighted in this video below at 2:50 when front kicking without chambering? Thanks ruclips.net/video/pMjB6DJ_kdY/видео.htmlsi=PtWA4bcOLoG2cM-f
2:18 Hi Alan how do you throw the front kicks such that you don't jam your toes and telegraph? Do you prefer using the ball of the foot or the heel as your point of contact?
In Wing Chun we kick with the L shape of the Heel and use a small twist. We kick straight to the target. In training we may lift the knee as we are working slower to control etc, but in application we don't lift the knee, so the kick is hard to see.
Chun is awesome spiritual tma but just isn’t good for real Fighting use Bruce Lee found that out to when he came to America beautiful art and I’d love to try it But just being honest
Well, my fight team has had 100" of MMA, kickboxing and boxing fights using CSL Wing Chun as our stand-up art. So, it's been battle tested in combat sports 100%. It terms of street defense then Wing Chun has even more tools.
Yes, its our CSL system of Wing Chun. Styles don't just win fights. No style has beaten everyone every time. We have had lots of success in our system and way of training,
Your students are good practitioners and well rounded individual. I met one of your students in Chiang Mai, Thailand for a Kung Fu seminar back in 2019. During our time training together we spoke about our martial arts and our Wing Chun journey after that we spent some time going over drills we learned from the seminar then after we did a session of light sparring together. The sparring session had giggles, smiles and grunts with the "oh you got me" moments, we were like little kids playing in the courtyard, it was fun like what you did with your student in this live application. Keep in mind nobody else was sparring just us two after the seminar class was over. I was impressed with your students skill and knew right away your students spar like our school does. Your teaching skills is up to the task of keeping wing chun from falling into the wayside like so many other wing chun schools that has become a McDojo/Internal Woo-Woo schools. I hope to meet your student again and to meet you at your school when I travel to New Zealand in the near future. Thank you for keeping Wing Chun relevant 🙏
Nice, who was it you met?
@@alanorrwingchunacademy I had to look it up it's been awhile since we spoke his first name is Jules. Don't want to put his full name on youtube. Cool guy got along with easily.
Oh yes Jules is a nice guy for sure.
I happened to open youtube and see this starting! I’m stoked!
Thanks
Very little WC schools are willing to play like this. Really admire your approach to training WC rather than the traditional methods. Real innovator. Do you come out to Australia much?
Thank you. I have been over a few times.
Please promote anytime you come to Aus and do a seminar. Would love to come and learn.
Thank you
Its not just the teacher but most wc students ‘disappear’ when sparring is introduced. Or whinge and whine that they might be hurt.
Beautiful work!
Thank you very much!
Looks great!
Thanks!
That was cool !
2:04 Hi Alan I noticed you moved your left leg to the outside of your student's right leg when you did your arm drag. Was there any reason why you chose to step to the outside of your student's right leg instead of maintaining inside position with your left leg to go for a takedown?
I like the inside leg position, but I could feel Locky was aware and he ready to counter. So, I changed position so he would have to follow and react rather than be in a ready position as such.
You’ll never see Gary lam or Samuel Kwok interacting with their students in this manner. They will show contrived dummy applications literally lifted from the form that simply fall apart under chaos. In this exchange I can see the dummy PRINCIPLES running all the way through, especially the footwork and distance control aspects
Great Kung Fu!
Thank you
Hi Alan I noticed you don't really chamber your front kicks much. How do you prevent these issues highlighted in this video below at 2:50 when front kicking without chambering? Thanks
ruclips.net/video/pMjB6DJ_kdY/видео.htmlsi=PtWA4bcOLoG2cM-f
2:18 Hi Alan how do you throw the front kicks such that you don't jam your toes and telegraph? Do you prefer using the ball of the foot or the heel as your point of contact?
In Wing Chun we kick with the L shape of the Heel and use a small twist. We kick straight to the target. In training we may lift the knee as we are working slower to control etc, but in application we don't lift the knee, so the kick is hard to see.
@@alanorrwingchunacademy Thanks for your advice Alan, will try this out in training
Welcome
It looks good but is this usefull against elbows?
Yes elbows are use in close range, the defense is to stick stop them from being open.
Chun is awesome spiritual tma but just isn’t good for real
Fighting use Bruce Lee found that out to when he came to America beautiful art and I’d love to try it
But just being honest
Well, my fight team has had 100" of MMA, kickboxing and boxing fights using CSL Wing Chun as our stand-up art. So, it's been battle tested in combat sports 100%. It terms of street defense then Wing Chun has even more tools.
@@alanorrwingchunacademy not saying it don’t work in a way just saying it isn’t Bjj boxing wrestling muay tai shotokan karate and judo
@@alanorrwingchunacademy love ur teaching though
Yes, its our CSL system of Wing Chun. Styles don't just win fights. No style has beaten everyone every time. We have had lots of success in our system and way of training,
Thanks