BJJ and WC?
hello tsb,
> I spent some online time over at the Ving Tsun
> Athletic Association forum last week and I
> think it has made me a little defensive.
Hahah, yes, that is a very inflamatory board. Considering that most of the posters badmouth more than they train, I wouldn’t let their babble bother you. I’m all for living and let living, learning from all approaches. Although a handful of WT people I have met have tried to shove the “WT is better because it is more modern” down my throat, the majority of the ones at least keep their sentiments to themselves.
> We are taught to jam kicks or move forward
> inside the arc of the kick if possible.
In my previous post, I said chain punches don’t always unbalance someone, but a thrust kick to someone who is already up on one leg usually does (in my experience). Sounds like a good strategy (and one that has been used by WC people for quite a while). One thing that I get nailed by sometimes is the short range knee, which I am supposed to feel from constant chi sao practice… well, I don’t feel it, so I guess it means I need to practice more 
> Another question for you: Your profile states
> some BJJ experience. Do you incorporate
> takedowns and grappling into your sparring?
No, not really. I learn whatever I can from other styles not so much to incorporate them into my WC (with the exception of standing chin-na), but to understand how to defeat them. My groundfighting is probably enough to overcome a larger, untrained opponent, but a smaller guy with a decent foundation in grappling could easily tie me into a pretzle on the ground.
Luckily, our group also has one groundfighter, a sanshou fighter, and a former judoka who work with us on takedowns and anti-takedowns (plus my sambo/BJJ instructor, who is also visiting for the summer… happens to be the girlfriend of the MT/WC guy). Just like with the boxing, we all work on these basic things so that the feeds are a little more realistic.
One drill we use is: starting with two partners in a right lead stance with right arms crossed, one will do a lap sao, then come back to the starting position; then the other will do the lap sao; this pattern repeats, until at sometime after the lap, one will shoot in for a double leg or single leg takedown; the other person will defend by using chain punches, footwork, whatever, to prevent the attacker’s hands from getting a wrap. (This is something I learned from one of Sifu Francis Fong’s student.)
When you are comfortable with this, you can also do it from chi sao, where one partner can go under an attack and go for a takedown, while the other person attempts to keep them off.
We also practice positioning as we are being taken down (just in case our previous defense failed), which involved not ending up in someone’s guard or mounth, and leaving hands free for chain punching. One of the beauties of WC punches is that they don’t require torque of the hip, and can still work quite nicely on the ground.
JK-
“Sex on TV doesn’t hurt unless you fall off.”