 Top 13 Wing Chun Techniques. I'm gonna show you the best Wing Chun techniques that you're gonna learn. Everything from strikes to kicks to controlling techniques. You're gonna learn it in this video, so stay tuned. By the way, if you like these videos, make sure you subscribe to this channel. Click the button right now. Click the notification bell so you get all the newest lessons coming from me every week. And make sure to like and comment and tell your friends. With that said, let's get started. Let's talk about striking. The most common attacks will be hand striking in Wing Chun. So one basic one is the first hit punch you learn, which is a straight punch. Like this, or like this. It comes out straight, like this, okay? So either, if you're a close friend, you can be like this. If you're further away, like Bruce Lee kind of uses like this as a straight punch. But it's a vertical fist instead of a horizontal fist. So you can do it like this. You can use it to slice into his attack. Let's boom, slice in. See, this deflects him this way and then this goes into the attack. Or you can slice in this way. Boom, slice it in like that. So this deflects his punch. See how it's aiming at me right now? I use this to deflect it. Now he's aiming that way and now I'm aiming at him, okay? So that's one way of using the straight punch. It's not just a punch, you're actually using your forearm to deflect. Or you can even use your forearm to control. Okay, another way to use this is to use this in a chain blast like this. So punch consecutively. So you see each little movement is actually controlling his arm. If the other arm gets in the way, I can grab this and then do another punch, okay? We punch the face, but there's another really good target which is the solar plexus, okay? So you can punch him in the solar plexus like this. If you're further away, boom, like that. Left hand, boom, solar plexus, okay? Or if you're in the side here, you can punch on the ribs like this, boom, like that. Especially if he's opened up like this, you can punch him in the ribs. Or if he's got his arm over his arm trying to block you up here, you can grab it and punch his ribs here. So that is the straight punch. Technique number two is the fox out or the whisking hand, okay? In the technique, I mean in the forearm, we do this, right? Or in the Wing Chun tummy, we do this, okay? So what this is really good for is for chopping the neck. Let's say he didn't remember the block while I can easily chop him in the neck, in the throat, very sensitive area. Even big tough guys like this won't condition their necks and their throat. So all this muscle is, if you hit here, nothing happens, right? If you hit here, nothing happens. If you hit the throat, boom, like that, that's pretty painful, even for a big guy like Will here. So very effective. Another way you can use it is use it on this part of the nose, which is very sensitive. And what you do is you can go like this and then push it backwards to get his head back. And then you can make him do a takedown. I won't do it all the way today because there's glass on the floor, so, okay? So either use it really quickly or you can use it, hit it in, and then push it back like that. So we want to roll it up the nose like that. So that's called a fox out, whisking hand, or just a chop, okay? Other ways you can use it is you use the reverse of it like this, okay? Which brings us to the technique number three, which is the technique number three, which is the palm. So sometimes you want to hit the jaw like this. Like on this side, you want to hit the jaw like this. And this technique, the diagonal palm, fits perfectly on the jaw here. And there's a lot of nerves, a lot of nerves on the jaw here that cause knockout. So if you go hit, boom, like this, right on the jaw, you're using this part, the hard part of your palm, you're not using the middle because that's soft, okay? So using the hard part, especially this little bone here, this little bone in the corner of your palm, and you're aiming that downwards, boom, onto the jaw here. And that can cause a knockout if you do it hard enough and fast enough, so boom, like this, okay? So many people think that the palm is just for pushing and pushing. You can use it for that, but the palm is actually, you can use it for snapping down with the bottom of this thing, snapping down like this. So you snap down, boom, boom, okay? Instead of going pushing in, you're snapping down with your wrist, okay? So that's a third technique, which is the palm. So you're not just pushing out, you're actually snapping down and out at the same time, boom, like that, right onto the jaw. So another way to use this is on the ribs. And I've actually accidentally broken some of these ribs doing this before, so you gotta be careful, all right? So this is called a stamping palm. It's like a stamp, you know, I don't know if people use stamps anymore, but you have a stamp, you put it in the ink, and then you kind of stamp it down, right? So you kind of roll it over the paper. That's what you wanna do. You wanna start with your fingers and you roll it down. And what that does is that when you make contact with the person, the person's muscles kind of tend to relax because it doesn't feel a sudden impact. So when you touch somebody like this, they kind of relax, and then boom, and then you put it in the rest of the palm. Again, this part then it actually lets the impact sink deeper into the target. So we can use it here, you can use it here, or you can use it at the ribs, like this, okay? Don't do it in the stomach, nothing happens because there's no vital areas here. Okay, do it around the ribs, okay? So knock the wind out here, that's what you wanna do. Technique number four is the thrusting fingers or the beauty. So this is very lethal because it's very fast. It's your longest reach because you have your fingers extended, but you have to be very precise because if you do this, then you're gonna miss, do this, doesn't do anything to the body really unless you train for 10 years to condition your fingers. But most people, you can condition your fingers to a point where you can cause some damage to the eyes or the throat, okay? So those are the two targets for beauty. Beauty means thrusting fingers. So you can go directly to the eyes, directly to the throat, to the artery, or it's called like stomach nine I think. So there are many soft points here, or you can go directly and do the throat, the wind pipe, which is here, the soft part, okay? So those are good places, the wind part, it's very soft. Even big guys like that can't condition them right here, okay, right here, the arteries here, okay? And obviously the eyes, okay? So this is very fast. So this is very good for a first attack like that. Okay, it's very hard to see. My hands are down, he doesn't expect me to attack. I'm talking to you and then boom. So far we talked about a lot of hand striking techniques. So those are the four hand strike techniques that are very common in Wing Chun, they're very practical and very useful. There's another technique using sort of the arms, but not the hand, it's the elbow, okay? So the elbow is used like this. Because his elbow is shorter, I can't reach him. You can reach him with a punch at a palm, but I can't reach him with elbows. The elbows are used for really short, close range, okay? Where I'm too really too close to do anything here, especially if my hands are here, okay? I can easily just bring the elbow up, boom, you see? It goes right over, okay? So elbows are very useful, boom, or if it's really high like this, boom, boom, right into the ribs here, okay? So you can elbow across like this, or you can elbow from up to down, okay? Or you can elbow from down to up, okay? For example, you wanna elbow the underneath of his arm, which is another pressure point here. You can go, boom, okay, bring it up. See, it's pretty painful. So across and up and down, and then also you can go up like this, up, okay? But if you're close to this one, you can go across, you can go across, up and down, or you can go up. Up, you can hit the, if you go up, let's say you're here, you can actually use this elbow, boom, and go inside like that, boom, all right? So there's many ways to use elbow, and Wing Chun mostly is actually across and down. Wing Chun doesn't really do this, but actually it's pretty effective as well. So you go, boom, right into the chest, or boom, right into the ribs, right? Use this sinking and spear action, the elbow spear, boom, like that. Wing Chun technique number six. We talked about some hand attacks, elbows, and now we're gonna show you some kicks. So in Wing Chun, there's not that many kicks, there's only a couple. So first one is just a, just a tango, okay? So it's not a kick that I'm going to start here and then, boom, like that. I'm not going to have that much time to go take this leg and kick them. I'm just gonna raise it from here, boom, right away, right underneath like that, okay? Boom, very fast, or boom, on the groin like that. Or I can go, boom, and then into the body, okay? So it's very hard to see, especially if you're farther range, right? I can't reach him with my hands here, see? Even if I lean, it's kind of hard for me to reach, but look how close my foot is, boom, there, okay? So I can reach him, and then what that does is it drops his attention to the knee and hopefully his guard drops and then I can set it up for another attack up top, okay? Same thing goes for the groin, boom, he doesn't expect that, it's very hard to see, and then he's like, oh, right? It's very natural reaction for guys. If somebody like just touches me even just near the thigh, it doesn't even have to be on the groin, somewhere near there and they're gonna try to protect it, right? And then when that happens, boom, boom, boom, boom, chain punch, okay? That's the first kick. Technique number seven is the side kick. So this is used a little bit further distance because my straight tanga reaches this much, but my side kick can actually reach farther. I can step back a little bit more and I can still reach his knee because I can lean back a little bit, okay? And if I turn even more, I can reach him even further like this, if I lean back more. So this is a long distance kick. In Wing Chun, most of the time it's used diagonally. We don't, in the form, we don't actually go sideways all the way like this, but this is really useful too. Bruce Lee really loves this technique, the side kick. But it's used like this, same thing. So you'll be a little bit further apart. You can't reach him with the tanga, then you can reach him with the diagonal side kick. Especially if you're kind of standing not square to him, you're standing a little bit sideways, you can do a side kick like this. To distract him down here, boom, like that. Boom, the same thing happens. He drops his guard and then hopefully he can come in with an attack. Technique number eight. Now we can go into a series of controlling techniques using your hands. So for example, we have a controlling technique like this that I showed you before, but now we're gonna just use our hands to grab, it's called a lapsel, called a grab and pull. So I'm gonna grab and pull and attack. So I can grab and pull, attack, grab and pull and kick. So many different ways I can use the grab and pull. Okay, so this comes out and then his hand comes up to block it, they can grab and pull this way again. Okay, and I can attack, I can attack here. So that's the lapsel is another controlling technique. Technique number nine is another controlling technique, it's called tonsel. So what I do is I actually just flip it this way to control it. So I don't actually make a grab, I just use the wrist to control his wrist and then do this punch again. Okay, another way to use tonsel is as a block. Okay, so you're coming in for a hook. I can block it like this, okay, and I can punch like this. So I'm controlling his arm here, controlling his balance with this tonsel and I can punch at the same time. It's called a tat-sao or the yanking hand. So it's very useful if you kind of get up here and then his energy is going forward. So what you wanna do is kind of yank his energy down. See how he commits his energy and now I use it to yank him down and he kind of basically falls forward, okay. So when he's falling forward, use that forward momentum to meet your fist. Boom, like that, so it doubles up the impact. He's falling into your fist and you're punching him at the same time. So it doubles on the impact. So this is called tat-sao like that. So you can use it like this way, so he goes like this, you can use this hand to tat or you can use this hand to tat, okay. So either way is a sudden yanking motion that makes him fall forward. Is the pak-sao, which is basically a parry. Okay, so I can use it offensively. I can go in there, boom, and then take control and punch. I can park in and then punch to control his arm and then punch, or I can use it defensively, right. He comes and just type parry, boom, boom, boom, like that. So it can be used most defensively and offensively. Cool thing about a pak-sao is that you can use it as an attack after you park. So you go park, right. You can continue and then use it as an attack at the same time. So you parried and then boom, you continue it. You continue the block and turn it into an attack and just let it go like this, okay. So you can continue as long as this punch is already redirected, then you can actually, you turn it into attack. So you show on this side, right. I used to block your punch and then see I just continue it, let it slide and then turn it into attack. This could be a bugie that we showed you. This could be a palm or, right. You can turn this into a punch if you wanted to. Are you following? Are you keeping up? Here we go, it's called a gan-sao. So it'll be useful when you did a lap and a punch and then you wanna clear this hand. So you gan and then now you have this gan-sao and then you punch here. So gan means to separate. Another way to use it is for against hooks, right. So gan-sao, okay. This blocks the low hook and lets you attack up here and do another one, boom, okay. So this is useful, okay. So another way to use this if I punch here, I wanna do the gan-sao. I kinda switch it over to move his elbow and then punch him here. So gan-sao is just this motion. It's called the separation motion. It's now combining your hand blocks with kicks. So for example, as you further distance away, he starts jabbing at you. You can block this up here and then do a kick here, okay. So he thinks you're up here blocking, boom, boom, he doesn't see this kick coming. So he could go boom, boom, okay. So go again, block, kick and then punch, punch, punch, punch, okay. Technique number 13 is called the bong-sao lap-sao, okay. So this is pretty useful because if he punches me in the head, right, I can use it to throw this. I can throw this up to block. I have two defenses. If this one misses, then I have this one. So I have two defenses that he has to get through. And the cool thing is that this sets it up so that I can grab and then pull and back fist, okay. So go a bong-sao to deflect. I use the back hand to grab and do a lap-sao and then use this with any technique. I can use the chop. I can use the back fist, which is just like the chop except you use your fist, okay. It can use a straight punch, okay. You can use a kick, whatever you want to do. So it's called the bong-sao lap-sao, bong-sao lap-sao and then attack. And this side, same thing, right. So bong-sao lap-sao attack, okay. So again, I can bong-sao lap-sao and attack, okay. Bong-sao lap-sao attack. So if you do it really quickly, it looks very fast. Boom, boom, okay. It's very hard to deceive. But what's happening is I'm doing bong-sao, bong-sao lap-sao and attack. Congratulations, you just finished watching my 13 Wing Chun techniques. Very dangerous techniques if you practice them. So you can practice them individually and eventually use them in combinations to perfect your martial arts. I'm David Wong, use the chi and prosper.