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Welcome to the Central Wing Chun KZread channel. This is where we share tutorials, training methods, concepts and discussions demonstrating our way of expressing Wing Chun kung fu as taught by Neil Parris. While staying true to the art, our approach to the traditional art of Wing Chun is to incorporate some modern training methods with an inclusive mindset.
As always, the journey is the reward, and we welcome you to share this journey with us here on our channel. We'll be posting a new video every Friday with some surprise uploads in between. Please get in touch if there is a topic you'd like to see as we love to hear from real people like you!
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You can also find information about training with us here:
Website: www.centralwingchun.co.uk
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This is a great video.. I did wing Chun and now doing boxing now. I think overall close range principle as the guy preaches and showed are very similar… but I find that my reaction timing was very different doing both arts… if I use wing Chun to fight boxer, it’s the inward finger jab type of punch that they are not used to , you will have the take a step and pivot otherwise coach will call foul… if I fight wing Chun with boxing… I throw a lots of feints and hit their ribs for days… I think there are very similar principle.. in the deeper root of the Wing Chun it come from fighting much bigger opponent.. that’s why the biu chi and everything had that contract and expand upward motions… which is why the rib is more open….I would say if a shorter boxing spar a bigger boxer he would loved that he learnt a bit Wing Chun…
This is pure gold
This is the best wooden dummy instruction video I have ever seen.
Is this for street application or for competition? Just concerned with boxing rules since they only allow hitting with what’s essentially the “fingers” of the boxing gloves
Did 2 kinds of kung fu before boxing, and this was obvious in my first month of boxing. Inside fighting was easier for me to learn and felt natural based on years of kung fu. I think kickboxers could also benefit from the leg striking and control techniques from Kung Fu. I stopped calf kicks with the sole of my foot in real fights and I've never seen kickboxers or Muay Thai people do that. There's lots to borrow but traditional Kung Fu isn't as useful standalone. It's fantastic to see people like y'all who are pressure testing and updating these traditional styles.
Bullshido vs the real sport
after demo,why dont you demonstrate on a actual person
THX!
I'm late to watching this video but I just want to say that the techniques of the all time great 'Roberto Duran' is one of the best live examples of what Wing Chun looks like in a practical context, boxing at the highest level in which your opponent is truly resisting your offence and trying to hurt you back. Wing Chun practitioners should study him, let alone boxing enthusiasts/practitioners.
Thanks so much Sifu!!!
I really enjoy watching both of your videos. I used to know this form, but, haven't done it, in a longtime. These videos will certainly help refresh it for me. Thanks!!
👍
Thank you
Great share - thank you for sharing your experience
I can’t wait for more videos! Thank you very much
I just started recently; I believe this channel will give the best guidance!
9:13 (reminder)
loved it! and u make it Fun...
and I wish you great success, I sometimes see your videos on KZread and they are one of the few that show the real Wing Chun technique
you are right and wrong at the same time. I'll explain. you showed the standard distance for the wing chun technique, where it is effective, this is true. At the end they showed a “street” version of a direct strike (similar to a cross, overhand) in this strike the elbow is raised and it is more difficult to control the strike with the help of a bong sau from a longer distance. this is also true. and the truth is that these are the kind of blows you are most likely to receive in a modern fight. for such situations you can use pak sao and man sao and many other techniques. this is provided that you are ready for the attack and your reflexes, but reflexively the bong sau is often a blocking action in which you missed the moment of the start of the attack. and an attack at a longer distance comes as a complete surprise. so raising the elbow higher is a completely normal solution for bong sau both in wing chun and in other fighting systems. you really screwed it up in your example. and you can even perfectly check the correct boxing cross by choosing a longer distance from which such direct blows are delivered. and here the elbow at shoulder level in a bong sau will not save you from a blow, because this is a different blow and the elbow rises when the forearm is twisted. Raising the elbow just above the shoulder solves the problem very simply. and from an even longer distance, when the enemy’s direct blow fails, we have just a short distance and effective control of bong sau with the elbow at shoulder level, this is where kwan sau techniques and similar variations are based. or use an overhand elbow throw from the elbow techniques bil dze tau so a slight elbow lift may be completely normal and depends on the distance, but certainly works at closer distances. and no less important... the fact that when raising your elbow into a bong sau, you will not be able to protect the body - this is not true, be sure to train the correct return of the hand to the position (bai jong / jong sau) through a similar jute sau or sau ken (returning the hand to forms) and thus we get, after any variant of the bong sau, an immediate change of hand through the center (lowering the elbow). all this is easily visible in the development of forms and is staged like Chisau techniques, in a wooden mannequin and as a bonus. look at the forearm block in boxing. it is close to the bong sau in wing chun, I think that in wing chun this technique is more perfect. I mean that such a block with the forearm in boxing does not prevent them from effectively fighting, although it is done a little differently, but raising the elbow in a stand does not prevent them from closing the body afterward.
To see it from the side makes it so much easier for me, thank you!
The best tutorial i found, thanks! 🙏
YOU good?:-)
From what's im seeing wing chun is formless it doesn't fellow particular formula it all about application of the basis expanding it to fit into a particular situation
MMA fighter here. Learning wing chun to add to my arsenal. Very interesting and practical uses of these elbows
Elegant! Good work.😊😊😊
Oh shit! It's Leroy Smith!
very informative video very helpful, My Wing Chun teacher called the stance Lok Ma
What happens to this guy??
Thank you sir
Well explained thank you sifu
they all makin these type videos now bro good work
I first studied wing chun 30 years ago. This is the first hand form and is exactly how I learned it …. Except I call it sil lim tao
The real defination of there is not BS
Great Review!!
Excellent video, I greatly appreciate ur time
🙇♂️
Interesting concept. It just might catch on. You could always put some foam sleeves over the springs to reduce or even eliminate injury.
Thanks for this. Feel like I'm cheating by using KZread, but WTH, it's the 22nd century not the 19th.
Thank you kindly for posting this. I am a very new student and it is hard for me to follow at usual speed.
Thank so much. Did the first two forms years ago a a good school and needed a refresher!
🙏
awesome very good explore it will help a lot for my learning Great!
I would like to know where they are where people hold a specific arm position when they get into a real fight? Do you say oh stop you moved your arm out too much with that hook punch now we got to stop and reset our positions? I myself own a different type of spring arm dummy as well and love moves with force applied like a real person would. If you use a rising tan very few people are going to be able to fight that you must learn to stick to them. Otherwise you lose the feel. I think people who only use Ridgid dummies probably have poor sticking abilities.
Sorry for late comment, just seen this. Thank you for the review and especially for the follow up review. I have never understood people who complain about any of the spring arms moving messing up your structure if your not a beginner.
Hi Neil, it’s Andre from fitnessfirst I love this vid please keep making more vids
Neil! Can u do a video series of “Focus Mitt training” for Wing Chun. Or the difference between Jeet Kune Do. Thanks
Toto je pekná forma...
Good teacher