Sifu Sergio teaching The Bart Cham Dao techniques to his Wing Chun kung fu master class students

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Uploaded by on Feb 9, 2010

Sifu Sergio Teaching The Bart Cham Dao Techniques to his wing chun kung fu master students in his Amsterdam HQ
http://www.sifusergio.com

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  • @heynotnow

    Dude... pause the vid at around 1:51 You can see that he DOES hold it in a way to protect himself from a strike like that, but during explanation he removes it.

  • @heynotnowthen please show us your (correct) version..

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  • great vids thanks

  • @ipmanwck You are more than welcome to apply for my apprenticeship in Wing Tsun. I will interview you personally to see if you are suitable to learn real Wing Tsun.

  • Disclaimer: I love Wing Chun, Sergio's awesome, & the WC knives are cool...

    BUT

    I'd love to see one of these WC masters spar around with someone like John Clements from the Western Swordsmanship community.

    I do WC, and have for years, but I suspect that someone with even a bit of training in the western longsword or rapier would wreck even the best WC Bart Cham Do man.

  • @masterjulianhitch you are a prick. The knives are only good now for strength training. Do you think you will just find some behind a bin on the street to take on the guy with a 8 and 1/2 long pole ! You really are a bigger cock than I thought. And if I recall you called Sifu Sergio a REBEL ! let me know when I can come to your centre of excellence to teach you real wing tsun ££££££££

  • @MasterJulianHitch You talk a load of twaddle. As a Master you should sod off.

  • The traditional Baat Cham Do form is meant for use against pole, knives, sword and shield when I teach it. I like this version.

  • @alittle72 Completely blowing off a type of strategy on the virtue of "someone who's really good will beat that" eventually negates every technique.

    Also, facing a pole with a shorter weapon means coming in, and while it's not perfect, keeping the pole close keeps it from a lot of its momentum-building, and keeping a limb wrapped around it can prevent the shorter power of whipping strikes..

  • @Friedrichwsl As for stepping back, first off this is clearly meant to happen in one swift movement at the BEGINNING of a retreat, so whether you're just pulling back pulling back or stepping back, it can be done. Second, even if the step back is quicker or the counter is too slow to still be in range for a step back, YOU CAN STEP WITH YOUR OPPONENT and remain in range.

  • @Friedrichwsl The way he's teaching it, it looks like it's healing with a committed thrust, and the "catch" would be better described as a deflection, which it must be possible to do unless no one has ever survived fighting against spear, combined with pressure on the other side, which would take about the same amount of time..

  • I like the Leung Ting-Photography...

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