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MT & SanShou differences applicable for street defense

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  • Rebiu
    replied
    SanShou fan

    Originally posted by Clooneytkd View Post
    first of all veterans are veterans because they are old.
    I thought it was because of their military service. I know veterans who are 30 years old.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post
    they were not put into the environments of today. they weren’t storming buildings they were in trenches.
    I know veterans form the second gulf war.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post

    Many cops are fat, therefore they cant lift there legs. what happens if he doesn’t have a baton and or flashlight?
    I would assume he has a gun and backup.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post
    Most cops lack any real fighting period.
    Cops are horrible undertrained and underskilled but they do have at least some real experience.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post
    Most all cops are never put to the test.
    Bullshit people resist all the time.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post
    No one wants to go to jail because of the fear of having you being their when they drop the soap. If the cops ever pulled over someone who wasn't drunk and actually had some teeth and common sense they wouldn't be in good shape. Evidence? Yes.http://youtube.com/watch?v=BmjDaR-fqQM
    3.vs.1...I think that could have ended a lot faster.... But they had there batons....so it was ok.
    First you say no one resists then you show a clip of someone resisting. They police subdue the person in a few seconds and you say they could have done it faster. The police in you video do not try to trade punches they use their equipment just like all police. You are prooving my contention that police do not use martial arts or general fighting training they use training specialized to their equipment and purpose.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post

    What art isn’t a compilation? What art doesn’t try to be complete?
    Arts are defined by a set of moves that are taught. Sports are defined by their rules.
    Originally posted by looneytkd View Post
    as for no fighters with takedown defense, you might need to look into that a bit more. Wrestling is involved just as much as boxing and muay thai seeing as how that’s a means to score points.
    I can't find it maybe you could show me the evidence.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rebiu
    replied
    Mensa Candidate

    Originally posted by Ello View Post
    All chinese martial arts summarised: Kung Fu. The last time I checked San Shou/San Da is chinese.
    If you could understand context you would know that San Shou was not the Kung Fu that was referenced by the term Kung Fu.
    Originally posted by Ello View Post

    Do you really think soldiers aren't taught how to fight without weapons? So according to you a soldier is defensless when they're out of bullets and lost their knife.
    He is defensless and stupid. You think he is going to take on the enemies guns with his roundkick defense?
    Originally posted by Ello View Post

    Duh, just because something is called a spinning elbow doesn't mean it always executed the same way. Of course there's a name that generalizes it, but that's why when we talk about a particular one, we put they exact name in front of it(this case: MT spinning elbow, Tiger style spinning elbow).
    So you recognise they are two distict techniques.
    Originally posted by Ello View Post

    Cung le is not that chick from SF II. That's Chun li. Why don't you just admit that Cung le is one of the best fighters these days.
    This guy
    Cung le is lame
    Originally posted by Ello View Post

    You are forgetting that San Shou is based on chinese martial art systems. So the roundhouse is probably based of a chinese system, but defintly not MT.
    I dunno San Shou acknowledges its MT influence and MT has had the side kick(straight thrust) for the last 500 years.
    Originally posted by Ello View Post

    BTW some minor points: you are avoiding the point saying wrestling is not san shou and sanshou is not kung fu. According to you if someone invented a move and 5000 miles somewhere else someone invented that one too. The credit goes to the first dude.
    That is not how it happened "dude" The Chinese have a history as claiming to have done everything under the sun one thousand years before anyone else.
    Originally posted by Ello View Post

    Basicly your post is flawed and it's enough to wipe my ass with
    You have some peculiar hygene. Considering your capacity to understand what is said to you I suggest that is may be the best us you will get from this or any other written word.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rebiu
    replied
    Dense as mud on fence

    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    Ok, here we go. What proof will convince me? The proof in those videos. And what does those videos show? That San Shou is a good fighting style in the ring.
    Then why does it require special rules to win?
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    Because you don't know anything about San Shou and you don't know anything about Chinese Kung fu for that matter.
    I saw the clips you provided. I witnessed San Shou in action. I met Felix Mitchell in a show in Iowa. He defeated Clayton Miller and lost to Travis Fulton. He really talked up San Shou but he looked like a boxer and was easily beaten by Fultons wrestling. Mitchell had been defeated by Ken Shamrock in the UFC.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    The rest of your post is even more laughable. Let's go through them shall we? You know a couple of veterens that never engaged in hand to hand combat? How does that prove anything?
    It prooves that hand to hand is not a signifigant part of military training as several of these veterans had used guns and other weapons systems in combat.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    A couple means everyone? Nope.
    It is more evidence than you provide as you evidently have either known no veterans or none that have used hand to hand fighting in combat.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    Second, just because they never engaged in hand to hand combat doesn't mean that they don't train for it.
    Some said they had a two hour seminar from some Judo guy or a sargent who knew something, most had nothing. There was no consistent systematic effort to teach them to fight hand to hand
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    That police do not train in roundhouse kicks? Maybe not your police unit. Chinese police do train in roundhouse kicks and countering.
    Maybe they are just stupid. Why would they spend time and money training without equipment? No guns, batons, tazers, or irritants? Maybe they just needed some propoganda for San Shou.This is not training for police work it is a propoganda video.This looks like the two hour seminar stuff used here not a fighting style, no defense against round kicks, just some basic tips.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    Again, now who is the idiot here? You I think.
    You live in your own world dude.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    Ok, next: What system does the US army uses? Kali, Wrestling, BJJ, Muay Thai. You need proof they train hand to hand? Watch this video here:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Lo4fMMrrg0
    This is a special forces video. There specialized mission may call for more knowledge of hand to hand. My BJJ instuctor rolled with Seal Team six and they were instructed by Marc Denning of The Dog Brothers. They however spent very little time on it. It was the same two hour seminar type situation. There is not comprehensive San Shou type style used by the military as you are claiming. They get just a tiny bit of everything with no testing of advancement.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    Again, now who is the idiot here?
    You
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    You I think. I said a bulk of training is for using weapons. Does that imply that I think they don't train hand to hand? Nope. I think you need to learn how to read. A bulk doesn't mean all.
    For the tiny bit of exposure some get it may as well mean all. Your contention was the San Shou was developed by the Chinese Military for use in combat it ridiculous. It is for propoganda not real application.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    As for whether or not Muay Thai is a product of the military, it doesn't matter. Muay Thai is used in the military. San Shou is used and trained in the military. And if you insist otherwise, you are just plain dumb. Which you are.
    It does not matter if Muay Thai is used in the military because it existed independant of that use. You are saying San Shou exist because the military created it not just that the military uses it. That notion is evidence that it is crap not that it is "combat effective"
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    And your answer to Cung Le shows me you don't even follow San Shou. You don't know anything kid. Retard, lol. Your creadibility on San Shou or martial arts in that matter is zero. Proven over and over again.
    You mean this guy
    Cung Le V Altman MMa
    Pretty lame. He has previously beaten this guy in San Shou and the guy mounts absolutely not offense. Looks like a worked fight. If he is such a big name why is he fighting such a nobody? He also says he trains in kickboxing translation Muay Thai and Wrestling.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    "Bajiquan is a joke, a fake style. Ancient chinese secreat."

    Hahahahaha. You don't even know what Bajiquan is. A fake style? That is like saying Muay Thai is a fake style.
    I would not say that Muay Thai is a fakes style.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    LMFAO. Next time, if you can't refute what I said, exit the debate gracefully. Footwork is different? What is the footwork of Bajiquan?
    I said the footwork was different from Tiger Kung Fu's spinning elbow.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    It is a fake style remember?
    Moron.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    So how can there be footwork? Kid, give it up. You know nothing about martial arts. Vertical elbows are not exclusive to Muay Thai.
    I did not say they were exclusive. I said Muay Thai has unique techniques that other style borrow but do not use as effectivly.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    Where are San Shou mma champions? What does that have to do with anything? So if there are no MMA champions, that means the art is not complete? Your logic is that of a six years old.
    Is this a substitute for an answer. Where are they.
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post

    I think you should go learn more about martial arts and then talk, kid.
    Three years Machad Jiu Jitsu, Muay Thai from; IMB, Emerald Mongoose, Thin Kong, Boxing from; Kawinin Mau Mau(BJ Penns Boxing Coach). I have been training and sparring for 14 years in California, Iowa, Hawaii and Nebraska. What have you done dumbass.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom Yum
    replied
    Originally posted by MSand114 View Post
    hard to palm with a boxing glove on
    Its hard to grapple as well.

    Leave a comment:


  • MSand114
    replied
    hard to palm with a boxing glove on

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom Yum
    replied
    I see what you mean.

    So each style of gung fu has its own version of chin-na (grappling) and san shou (free fighting).

    Leave a comment:


  • Mephariel
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom Yum View Post
    Maybe you've got more depth in the art, so my ears are open.

    I understand one of the goals is to slam your opponent into the ground from the greatest height possible and that most of the techniques for doing so come from shuai jiao.

    Other than the side kick, spinning kicks/backfists from generic gong-fu what other techniques are there that aren't borrowed from muaythai/boxing?
    Plenty. Open palm techniques, ground sweeps, Chin Na, finger strikes, etc. Many Chinese styles like Tai Chi or Pakua also have their own San Shou styles. Again, I think you are confusing between San Shou sport and San Shou style. Karate for example, have plenty of open palm techniques. But do you see Karate fighters in the ring use them? In the ring, you always have a unified style of fighting. But sport fighting doesn't define the art itself.

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  • Tom Yum
    replied
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    But to claim that San Shou as an art itself is mostly Muay Thai is inaccurate. San Shou I would say doesn't even have the same focus as Muay Thai.
    Maybe you've got more depth in the art, so my ears are open.

    I understand one of the goals is to slam your opponent into the ground from the greatest height possible and that most of the techniques for doing so come from shuai jiao.

    Other than the side kick, spinning kicks/backfists from generic gong-fu what other techniques are there that aren't borrowed from muaythai/boxing?

    Leave a comment:


  • Mephariel
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom Yum View Post
    The original San Shou Lei Tai matches were between various gong fu masters of different styles. Check out this clip of a San Shou Lei Tai match in 1986. Its fought without gloves, head gear, groin cup and the throws are done on solid ground (no matts). It hardly resembles sanshou of today. You do not see low thai-style kicks or boxing punches from these fighters; you do see side kicks, spinning back kicks and some high/hard throws.



    Fast forward to today.

    Modern Sanshou is a style created by Chinese coaches who studied muaythai and added throws from shuai jiao. The matches are fought in a boxing ring, with practitioners wearing boxing gloves. The style borrows the round kick and push kick from muay thai and the punches are from western boxing. That's a fact.

    The other strikes and takedowns are from shuaijiao.
    I saw that Lei Tai video many times and quite frankly I thought it was too short to show anything. Those fighters are not modern San Shou fighters anyway. San Shou has been in development before 1986 depending on what you considered to be modern San Shou. I think you got confused between San Shou as an art and San Shou as a sport. San Shou as a sport borrow many ideas from many arts including Muay Thai. This is the same for all arts like Karate, etc because they want a uniform system where it is easy to score points. But to claim that San Shou as an art itself is mostly Muay Thai is inaccurate. San Shou I would say doesn't even have the same focus as Muay Thai.

    BTW, push kicks and roundhouse kicks are not exclusive to Muay Thai as I said before. Pushing strikes are done in many styles of martial arts.

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  • Tom Yum
    replied
    Originally posted by Mephariel View Post
    So Tom Yum, jab, cross, hook, uppercut are also in boxing. So does that mean Muay Thai's top game is just boxing then? Since when is push kick and roundhouse kick Muay Thai exclusive? Karate have roundhouse kicks too right? They don't necesarry contact with the shin, but you get what I am saying. A lot of arts have overlapping techniques like you said it yourself.

    The original San Shou Lei Tai matches were between various gong fu masters of different styles. Check out this clip of a San Shou Lei Tai match in 1986. Its fought without gloves, head gear, groin cup and the throws are done on solid ground (no matts). It hardly resembles sanshou of today. You do not see low thai-style kicks or boxing punches from these fighters; you do see side kicks, spinning back kicks and some high/hard throws.



    Fast forward to today.

    Modern Sanshou is a style created by Chinese coaches who studied muaythai and added throws from shuai jiao. The matches are fought in a boxing ring, with practitioners wearing boxing gloves. The style borrows the round kick and push kick from muay thai and the punches are from western boxing. That's a fact.

    The other strikes and takedowns are from shuaijiao.
    Last edited by Tom Yum; 12-04-2006, 01:40 AM.

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  • Mephariel
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom Yum View Post
    Ello, Sanshou is mostly muay thai. The only techniques that I've seen that are arguably gong fu are the side-kick, spinning back kick and spinning back fist. Everything else - jab, cross, hook, uppercut, push kick and round kick are muaythai.

    The throws look like they are straight from freestyle wrestling, but I've been told these throws are the same in Chinese wrestling, shuai jiao. Makes sense since there's bound to be overlap between styles.
    So Tom Yum, jab, cross, hook, uppercut are also in boxing. So does that mean Muay Thai's top game is just boxing then? Since when is push kick and roundhouse kick Muay Thai exclusive? Karate have roundhouse kicks too right? They don't necesarry contact with the shin, but you get what I am saying. A lot of arts have overlapping techniques like you said it yourself.

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  • Mephariel
    replied
    Originally posted by Rebiu View Post
    What proof would convince a little commie groupie like you.Wow you really have lost you decorum. I have known several veterans and none of them have ever engaged an enemy in hand-to-hand combat. How many veterans have you met that say they killed the enemy in this way? I used to train the Kansas highway patrol in hand to hand. There were no round kicks. The focus was on gun retention, knee on the stomach ground control. Striking was done with the, baton of flashlight. I trained with a navy seal in BJJ class. He said the only application used in the military was in control prisoners on the ground.This statement verifies that you are an idiotEvidence please.Please elaborate. What system does the US Army use.You understood a few sentences ago when you said the bulk of training is with weapon systems.Muay Thai is not a product of the Thai military. San Shou is not Kung fu.Wrestling is certainly not San Shou.That is an overgeneralization and inaccurate.That is an overgeneralization and inaccurate.She is that Chinese fighter on streetfighter IIBwahaahahah. Bajiquan is a joke, a fake style. Ancient chinese secreat.The footwork is different, therefor the techniques are not the same.What does San Shou do that is not a cheap ripoff of a much better style for doing it?There are no San Shou fighter with good takedown defense.San Shou is a compilation of arts meant to be complete. Where are the San Shou mma champions?I do not think you are capable of seeing in as it is right there in front of you.
    Ok, here we go. What proof will convince me? The proof in those videos. And what does those videos show? That San Shou is a good fighting style in the ring. The question is, what proof will convince you? Not a damn thing. I already show you proof, but you refused to accept it. Ok. Because you don't know anything about San Shou and you don't know anything about Chinese Kung fu for that matter. The rest of your post is even more laughable. Let's go through them shall we? You know a couple of veterens that never engaged in hand to hand combat? How does that prove anything? A couple means everyone? Nope. Second, just because they never engaged in hand to hand combat doesn't mean that they don't train for it. Again, your point is moot. Second, you said that police do not train in roundhouse kicks? Maybe not your police unit. Chinese police do train in roundhouse kicks and countering. You need proof? Watch this video:



    Koreans:





    Russians:



    Again, now who is the idiot here? You I think.

    Ok, next: What system does the US army uses? Kali, Wrestling, BJJ, Muay Thai. You need proof they train hand to hand? Watch this video here:



    Again, now who is the idiot here? You I think. I said a bulk of training is for using weapons. Does that imply that I think they don't train hand to hand? Nope. I think you need to learn how to read. A bulk doesn't mean all.

    As for whether or not Muay Thai is a product of the military, it doesn't matter. Muay Thai is used in the military. San Shou is used and trained in the military. And if you insist otherwise, you are just plain dumb. Which you are.

    Muay Thai fighters generally do not focus on throws in the ring. Most Thai fighters are strikers, not throwers. If you need proof, watch any Thai fight videos and ask around the boards. Go to the thread called, "Muay Thai weakness," and learn something buddy.

    And San Shou is not kung fu. Please explain to me why it is not kung fu. Please. I'll love to hear it. And what does that have to do with whether or not it is in the army? The fact is, armies do train in San Shou hand to hand combat. Give it up fool. You lost.

    And your answer to Cung Le shows me you don't even follow San Shou. You don't know anything kid. Retard, lol. Your creadibility on San Shou or martial arts in that matter is zero. Proven over and over again.

    "Bajiquan is a joke, a fake style. Ancient chinese secreat."

    Hahahahaha. You don't even know what Bajiquan is. A fake style? That is like saying Muay Thai is a fake style. LMFAO. Next time, if you can't refute what I said, exit the debate gracefully. Footwork is different? What is the footwork of Bajiquan? It is a fake style remember? So how can there be footwork? Kid, give it up. You know nothing about martial arts. Vertical elbows are not exclusive to Muay Thai.

    What art is better at limb clinching than San Shou? Tell me? What art is better at combining strikes with takedowns than San Shou? Tell me? Besides, I never claim San Shou is the best art. No art is the best. They are all incomplete or simply different. There are no San Shou fighter with good takedown defense? That is like saying there are no Muay Thai fighters with good takedown defense. LOL. What does takedown defense have to do with style? You can be a wrestler and not have good take down defense. Again, THAT my friend is a generalization. Funny how you accused me of generalizing but you are doing it yourself while I did no such thing.

    Where are San Shou mma champions? What does that have to do with anything? So if there are no MMA champions, that means the art is not complete? Your logic is that of a six years old.

    I think you should go learn more about martial arts and then talk, kid.

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  • MSand114
    replied
    i think i heard somewhere that to become a policeman or something in china you have to pass a black belt test in shuai jiao

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  • Clooneytkd
    replied
    Originally posted by Rebiu View Post
    I have known several veterans and none of them have ever engaged an enemy in hand-to-hand combat. How many veterans have you met that say they killed the enemy in this way?
    first of all veterans are veterans because they are old. they were not put into the environments of today. they weren’t storming buildings they were in trenches.
    Originally posted by Rebiu View Post
    I used to train the Kansas highway patrol in hand to hand. There were no round kicks. The focus was on gun retention, knee on the stomach ground control. Striking was done with the, baton of flashlight.
    Many cops are fat, therefore they cant lift there legs. what happens if he doesn’t have a baton and or flashlight? Most cops lack any real fighting period. Most all cops are never put to the test. No one wants to go to jail because of the fear of having you being their when they drop the soap. If the cops ever pulled over someone who wasn't drunk and actually had some teeth and common sense they wouldn't be in good shape. Evidence? Yes.http://youtube.com/watch?v=BmjDaR-fqQM
    3.vs.1...I think that could have ended a lot faster.... But they had there batons....so it was ok.
    Originally posted by Rebiu View Post
    Muay Thai is not a product of the Thai military. San Shou is not Kung fu.Wrestling is certainly not San Shou.That is an overgeneralization and inaccurate.
    First, you have never trained in san da, so for you to say these things show that you are pretty inaccurate. secondly, wrestling is san da, so is boxing, Muay Thai, jujitsu.. ect
    Originally posted by Rebiu View Post
    What does San Shou do that is not a cheap ripoff of a much better style for doing it?There are no San Shou fighter with good takedown defense.San Shou is a compilation of arts meant to be complete.
    What art isn’t a compilation? What art doesn’t try to be complete? All martial arts originated then grew, adding different thing from other arts. "San shou" is relatively new in America. What san shou does best is take things like boxing and muay thai and make them more effective, combining and integrating the two making them work side by side rather than against one another. Like blocking a hook into a clinch. and as for no fighters with takedown defense, you might need to look into that a bit more. Wrestling is involved just as much as boxing and muay thai seeing as how that’s a means to score points.

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  • Tom Yum
    replied
    Originally posted by Ello View Post
    All chinese martial arts summarised: Kung Fu. The last time I checked San Shou/San Da is chinese.

    Do you really think soldiers aren't taught how to fight without weapons? So according to you a soldier is defensless when they're out of bullets and lost their knife.

    Duh, just because something is called a spinning elbow doesn't mean it always executed the same way. Of course there's a name that generalizes it, but that's why when we talk about a particular one, we put they exact name in front of it(this case: MT spinning elbow, Tiger style spinning elbow).

    Cung le is not that chick from SF II. That's Chun li. Why don't you just admit that Cung le is one of the best fighters these days.

    You are forgetting that San Shou is based on chinese martial art systems. So the roundhouse is probably based of a chinese system, but defintly not MT.

    BTW some minor points: you are avoiding the point saying wrestling is not san shou and sanshou is not kung fu. According to you if someone invented a move and 5000 miles somewhere else someone invented that one too. The credit goes to the first dude.

    Basicly your post is flawed and it's enough to wipe my ass with
    Ello, Sanshou is mostly muay thai. The only techniques that I've seen that are arguably gong fu are the side-kick, spinning back kick and spinning back fist. Everything else - jab, cross, hook, uppercut, push kick and round kick are muaythai.

    The throws look like they are straight from freestyle wrestling, but I've been told these throws are the same in Chinese wrestling, shuai jiao. Makes sense since there's bound to be overlap between styles.

    Leave a comment:

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