Hung Gar Tiger and Crane Today

We are implementing a new feature. Each week we will select a question from our forum or social media network: facebook, twitter, etc., and answer it on our blog.

This week’s question is from twurman on our TanDao forum:

Regarding the 1982 Tiger and Crane Shaolin Kung Fu Lawrence choreographed, wrote, directed and was featured in: “In a similar street situation, which of those techniques featured in the video would you still use today? Which did you stop using and why?”

Great question! These applications are still valid since I made sure that over stylized techniques were modified for street realism and adhered to economy of motion borrowed from Wing Chun.  Note: the purpose of this video was to teach Hung Gar, it does not fully reflect my personal style.  The applications are effective – absolutely – but they can be more efficient. Today, I would focus on three points:

1) I would make sure the attacker was incapacitated, not just stunned.  For example, in the first situation against three attackers, I kick the first, then incapacitate the other two.  Against the second attacker I target a crane head to the jaw, then a knockout tiger claw palm heel strike to the attacker’s jaw followed by an elbow smash to the sternum.  With the third, I strike the attacker’s groin and follow up with a double punch, just in case. Today, before taking off, I would also finish off the first attacker (stunned, though not incapacitated) with another kick rendering him unable to chase after me.

2) Hung Gar employs simple, direct and powerful techniques (fine for those who have big, tough and muscular physiques). Since my body type favors speed and deception, I would augment the same hand attacks by adding subtle half beat kicks to the knees and shins or quick knee bumps to the thighs to overwhelm the attacker. This reflects TanDao’s deceptive strategy.

3)  Most significantly, I would amplify the destructiveness by aggressively disrupting  the attacker’s balance as I simultaneously executed the same hand attacks.  This adheres to TanDao’s Progressive Destruction of Balance, which is the single strategic principle that distinguishes from other styles. In short, I am not just hitting (which is universal to all striking systems), I am simultaneously focusing on using my body mass to destroy the opponent’s center.

Keep your questions coming!

Lawrence Tan
TanDao Kung Fu

  • Share/Bookmark

Leave a comment

Your comment

Tan Dao is powered by WordPress | Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS)| Partnerprogramm Theme
© Copyright 2010 Tan Dao. All rights reserved.