Added: 4 years ago
From: trenoops
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  • This is one of the longest wooden dummy form I ve seen.

    

  • the mook yan jong is designed to act like an opponent. the form is demonstrating some of the techniques transmitted through the 3 empty hand forms, and incorporates all the footwork techniques as well. the purpose of the dummy is to get you used to " mapping " your way around an opponent and applying the simultaneous attack and defense principles. you don't necessarily need to know the form to use the dummy, but is definately recommended to gain full efficiency.

  • @trenoops Where can i get it from?

  • I'd love to see this at full speed

  • @79Skater You can see it at full speed on the DVD.

  • good

  • why is his legs so wide open?i thought u have to have an inward v shape so u can shift ur body from left to right n vice versa to prevent getting kick in the groin???

  • @RonLarhz when a martial artist has reached a certain advanced level, the outlook of a technique (stance, punch, blocks, etc.) doesn't matter anymore. They can do well in whatever position. Also, everybody has different body structures and shapes, so one technique position can fit a person does not mean that it fits everyone. Cheers!

  • Thank you for showing the wooden dummy techniques.

    Excellent video instruction!

  • DE-VA-STATING MOVES... Definitely can kill.. Damn.. you see those kicks right there?? Best demonstration so far i guess..

  • kill? lol don't know about that

  • Did it occur to everyone that this an instructional video, deliberately done slow to show the steps and attacks for a form?

  • suck

  • thank you so much! but I don't see here a triangular footwork, and I don't see here the work of articulatio coxae! It's more like karate technique! In general not bad at all!

  • I like that.

  • dont know how you dont see it,he go's from from left to right/right to left then forward along the tri to the point of attack. hope that helps.

  • this guy thinks wing chun is karate..

    more fluidity china man or you will die..

  • Everyone has to start somewhere.

    When first practicing, things look choppy because you have to be slow and deliberate. Later on it becomes a smooth motion.

  • he's Yip Man's disciple's disciple lol...

    are YOU teaching him wing chun?

  • This is the best wooden dummy video I've ever seen.

  • Very nice and authentic. My regards.

  • Wait till you get beaten up by someone who does what you call "very stupid" every day...

  • i dont understand what this is. is it like karate? if it is supposed to demonstrate how to defend yourself against an attacker, it does not look very effective

  • Too sad ,no Wing Chun school where i live :(

  • Comment removed

  • Asshole

  • Y0U SUCK HIHIHI.. <3

  • Everyone should just empty their cups!

  • what the hell is this? is he trying to mount the dummy?

  • i think so

  • i think its a brilliant version. there are supposed to be 116 movements in the wooden dummy and kept it strictly to 116 movements. however there are gaps where it can be filled with extra movements to make it whole but it will be more than 116 movements, but still valid as they are wing chun movements and w/in the wooden dummy context, and still flowing. plus you can practice your own thats what the dummy is for esp. when u dont have a partner to practice w/. many thanks 4 sharing us ur version.

  • Hi...everyone,

    Can anyone please help me (new to the arts) is wooden dummy form ok to start if am a beganer? I got both sifu chow wooden dummp 1-10 section but it seem like to movment that he's showing to very fast for me to catch wondering if this is normal? please help thanks you.

  • Hey you should really only practice the wooden dummy under supervision of a Sifu. They will then tell you at which point you should train. I say this because I am sure the timing may differ from one system to the next. My Sifu under the IWC introduces the wooden dummy after you have an understanding of the Chum Kiu (second form of Wing Chun).

  • "Fook Sao" translates as "controlling hand" and should be relaxed. "Hooking" the hand like a cranes beak is horribly common in the US, but completely wrong. The "high kicks" you see are applied to the sternum and are only used before closing distance and obtaining bridge contact.

  • Leung Sheung didn't add anything to the form. He was Yip Man's first student in Hong Kong and was taught a longer version, which Yip Man later refined into the version most commonly seen today. Actually, I have seen additional movements by Leung Sheung lineage guys that it appears Sifu Chow has removed as being "unessential."

  • "Actually, I have seen additional movements by Leung Sheung lineage guys that it appears Sifu Chow has removed as being 'unessential.'"

    What moves?

  • is that karate? or is he just mad at the dummy?

  • it wouldn't put out like his blow up doll

  • Sifu Chow is the real Deal, His Wing Chun is excellent!

  • Yeah... that one kick was kinda high, but he never taugh us to actually kick that high in a real fight, never above the stomach. However he has that high kick in the form just so we can practice balance and control while throwing a front kick.

  • Most people don't use enough stepping in their dummy form. Sifu Chow is one of the only teachers that put the triangular stepping to good use. Momentum force is perfectly safe to use after cutting the angle first, and good for trapping the opponent, especially larger guys.

  • There are only seven sections in the form Ip Man taught. Where did the extra three sections come from? Did Leung Sheung add the last three sections or Chow? A lot of the movements seem redundant although there were a couple of moves looked interesting. It could be distilled down back to the original seven sections. Oh please secure the MYJ so it won't slide.

  • The "Extra" movements are really just Leung Sheung adding balance to the Wooden Dummy sets. He made it so you do the right side and the left side of each sequence. Some of the moves towards the end of the original sequence have right side hand techniques and different left side techniques. He seems to have extrapolated the different techniques for each side into their own sets and then added a Right and Left mirrored sequence.

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