Fake chisau
Mat sez: Then I would argue it isn’t chi sao! Chi sao, the way I’ve been taught in different lineages, is sensitivity drill for developing forward energy, reading weakness and openings in your partner’s posture, responding by reflex, working set-ups to create weakness and openings etc., and on occasion going over the things you got wrong or working particular patterns with your partner. Using Mat Thornton’s criteria I would say it’s a semi-live drill… there is resistance and it’s not usually in a set pattern but it’s not usually full resistance.
Chisauking: You can argue all you want, Chisau, in the context of wing chun, encompases dan-chi, luk-sau, gor-sau, etc., and there’s no restriction on resistance or techniques at the highest level. I can’t help the fact that large % of practitioners haven’t reach that level, and their chisau has to be governed by the limitations of the lower levels.
Mat: After that, if you are working with an opponent not a partner, and you are including factors like ‘ruthlessness’ and ‘how much do you want to punish your opponent’ I would say you are not doing chi sao, you are sparring. Using the chi sao positions to start, and as a rough framework, but sparring.
Chisauking: See above regarding chisau and gor-sau. Also, only beginers would think that chisau has to be applied in a particular position and place.
Mat: And sure, I can mix it up in chi sao… I can get brutal, and have ended up injured in chi sao… but I would argue that it was at that point [bad chi sao… the structures were failing, the sloppy techs were coming out, it was ending up like bad grappling. So sure, fighting isn’t pretty, but my point is at that point it was less like chi sao and more like sparring.
Chisauking: Again, see above regarding gor-sau. Just because YOUR chisau starts to fall apart at a higher intenisity doesn’t mean other people’s chisau are the same.
Mat: And as for the live training clip, they’re ways of making your training more and more live, and still being able to train for a long long time without having serious injuries. You have to draw the line somewhere or you don’t have any training partners left.
Chisauking: you missed my point completely. Some of the FIGHTERS on this forum is repeatedly advocating that you have to fight to get better at fighting, and they pointed to the Mat Thorton clip as an example. I merely observed that lots of wing chun practitioners already practice to that intensity, and for some, far above that intensity. Although I love fighting, I would be the first to admit that what I’m doing isn’t realistic fighting as such, and I don’t feel you need to fight in order to get good at fighting. There are excellent methods to improve your fighting skills without actual FIGHTING and getting badly injuried, and that framework is CHISAU within the style of wing chun. All the so-called fighters that laugh at this statement and start to talk about BJJ and how realistic the training is compared to chisau is simply deluding themselves. NO style in the world actually fight for real in training, no matter how intensive they SPAR.
Mat:Why do you keep asking this? Originally Terence Niehoff put ‘best’ in quotation marks, obviously alluding to not really thinking THE best but ‘of a generally high level’.
Chisauking: I asked twiced, and still no one has given me a name yet.
Mat: Of course, there is no THE best. And I would agree with Terence, that many I’ve met who have been good at chi sao have not been able to hold their own in sparring.
Chisauking: Your chisau may not be my chisau, and our standards obviously differ
Mat: Here’s a question back to you: I usually spar and chi sao (to many levels of resistance and ‘liveness’) in army boots, trainers, civvies, and no gloves, and although I’ve had a biu jee in the back of my eye, several broken noses, bruises, scrapes, cuts etc, I’ve never put anyone in hospital and never been put in hospital… Tell us some of the times when you or your training partners have had a free meal courtesy of the NHS…!
Chisauking: As I have said, it’s no big deal. I have been training for quite a long time now, and I love to train with everybody and anybody, to whatever level they like to go: rules, no rules, grass, tarmac, stop when down, continue until one is unable or knock out. All I ask people is that if they are better than me, show me a little mercy. The point is, when it’s time for the fist and legs to “talk”, and my opponent tries to knock me out, I’m not holding back. In that moment, anything can happen. Over the years, people have gone to the hospital with dislocated joints, torn ligaments, damaged knee, concussion, etc. No big deal, it is all part of the game. As the Chinese saying goes: Kune Guerk Mo Ann (fist and legs has no eyes)
Mat: I’m not calling you out on this one, but I’m genuinely interested… I will probably argue that I think it’s a daft way to train, but let’s see!
Chisauking: Training for years and years for maybe 2-seconds of use is daft, so what? Besides, if you face violent people, you have to train in violent ways.
Happy new year to everybody. I may have to cut down on my participation on this forum soon, because I’m resuming on training and flying, so I may not be able to respond to replies
Your fighting may not be fighting; your chisau may not be chisau