cloudz wrote:and full of himself.. not in a good way like me anyway..
Well done, kind sir, well done.
cloudz wrote:and full of himself.. not in a good way like me anyway..
windwalker wrote:
thanks for a well reasoned reply.
Not a big fan of showing combative things in a ph format as shown.
With Mo's clip, my only comment on it.
If one is trying to understand what or how something they did would work out of the normal context of their art,
it makes no sense to try it with a person whos skill level is not up to a level to make it self evident of
why either something would work or not.
example of someone who meets and works with others outside of the normal range of
their art with in the context he expects to use it in "the street"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CX8BKQFvp8c
aamc wrote:
It must be application monday?
Ian C. Kuzushi wrote:"So the first thing I do is I give him an armbar."
Yeah, why does it make sense to do this well-intentioned exchange with a "rusty" white belt? That is not a reasonable way to see how things stack up.
Here is another exchange. Note that Marcelo is playing the Chen guy's game and not doing ground work.
Ian C. Kuzushi wrote:"So the first thing I do is I give him an armbar."
Yeah, why does it make sense to do this well-intentioned exchange with a "rusty" white belt? That is not a reasonable way to see how things stack up.
Here is another exchange. Note that Marcelo is playing the Chen guy's game and not doing ground work.
taiwandeutscher wrote:Ian C. Kuzushi wrote:"So the first thing I do is I give him an armbar."
Yeah, why does it make sense to do this well-intentioned exchange with a "rusty" white belt? That is not a reasonable way to see how things stack up.
Here is another exchange. Note that Marcelo is playing the Chen guy's game and not doing ground work.
The TJQ guy is from Taiwan, out of a Zheng Manqing school in the centre of the island. He was champ of a so called world championships a few times, a really low level affair. But the guy is schooled and experienced in fixed and moving step Pushing Hands, quite good in that setting, has't trained anything else.
marvin8 wrote:taiwandeutscher wrote:Ian C. Kuzushi wrote:"So the first thing I do is I give him an armbar."
Yeah, why does it make sense to do this well-intentioned exchange with a "rusty" white belt? That is not a reasonable way to see how things stack up.
Here is another exchange. Note that Marcelo is playing the Chen guy's game and not doing ground work.
The TJQ guy is from Taiwan, out of a Zheng Manqing school in the centre of the island. He was champ of a so called world championships a few times, a really low level affair. But the guy is schooled and experienced in fixed and moving step Pushing Hands, quite good in that setting, has't trained anything else.
The guy in the video against Marcelo is "Tuishou" Chen Chi-Cheng from Shi Jhong Tai Chi College.
World Push Hands
Published on Jan 20, 2016
Reigning world champion for over a decade, "Tuishou" Chen Chi-Cheng (Shi Jhong Tai Chi College) wins over Dan Caulfield (William C. C. Chen's US Push Hands Team) for the Gold in the Moving Step Push Hands competition (75kg) at the 7th Chung Hwa Tai Chi International Championship (Tai Chi World Cup) in Taipei, Taiwan 2004.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Px_KPhucYqA
RobP3 wrote:Just watched the OP. Wow. Talk about "grab my wrist".....
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 74 guests