IMHO,
To make it simple and general,
Long fist art is fighting in the range of 40cm away in front of the body . One close gap so that one strike other. Is western boxing. Hitting target to damage is the basic focus.
Short strike art is fighting in the range body touching the body and different part of contact of the body can do strike. One enter the body to get to that range. Ie bjj. Damage center line axis or based is the basic focus.
Two distinctive concept, technics, power generation or engine needed.
Wck is specialize in short strike.
IMHO, martial art is not a random spray, but a calculate predict snip short. Those who is good at it is a snipper. Thus. One needs to know ones specialty and develop the engine. For no one and no art is ever complete. And a snipper don’t need to know all weapons.
Why do I keep put the following video up?
Because everything has pro and con and level of development.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtube_gdata&v=jji2LOBAHHU
IMHO,
Wck is not taiji, not hung gar, not white crane from fujian, not emei, not western boxing, not CLF. It has it s characteristic and sweat spot and engine.
Even different lineages of Wck evolve differently today.
[QUOTE=Faux Newbie;1271045]I think one of the things that comes up, I’ll use long range as an example (while acknowledging that it is not a discrete and separate range in reality, using it just as describing conditions where the only options are long range attacks or closing), is that at long range, as far as I understand it, wing chun has a limited number of strikes. The kicks are generally shorter range kicks, and the pole punch.
If facing someone from a style like boxing, muay thai, long fist, etc, they have a larger number of offenses they can make at this further distance. You are correct, to each of these, there may be a response.
BUT, this also means that they have a larger number of moves to feint, whereas an easier ability to read the feints from the wing chun practitioner, because they only really have to concern themselves with a small number of moves at that range.
If the feint draws a response, then the wing chun practitioner may be in position for what the feint is trying to set up.
My point being, response is not always the answer. Even closing at that range may be walking into someone stepping back while striking.
I’m not saying that wing chun practitioners do not train to read feints, but that, at long range, a strict wing chun stylist has a narrow set of strikes, and narrow sets of responses are quicker for an opponent to read, remember, and capitalize on knowing. So it seems to me that a wing chun stylist would need not only to respond, but make sure not to respond by always shutting down a particular long range strike one particular way, but a diverse number of ways, so that it is harder for another to read them and capitalize on their trained responses to know what areas will be opened because of the response.
Would you say this is accurate?[/QUOTE]