Archive for May, 2008

Ergui Shuaijiao 二贵摔绞

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

I stumbled upon these videos on Youtube posted by Gustavo Thomas on his blog.

They are street performances from 1927 Shanghai. In this particular performance you can see what is called Ergui Shuaijiao. It is a traditional form of street thetre that depicts a Shuaijiao battle between 2 Chinese men wearing everyday Qing dynasty-style clothing (i.e. no dalian)

In the next video you can see the same art performed during a Temple Fair in modern day Chengde by Gustavo Thomas

I have to say that I prefer to watch the real thing, but it’s a good bit of Shuaijiao culture.

Keep Smilin’

Michael

LEARN THIS: THE Most Effective CMA!

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Don’t even think about throwing this guy Shuaijiao people; Boxers, you won’t land a rear cross on him either;  Muay Thai elbows are useless too. Check it out.

The most interesting thing about this video is how westerners are as easily fooled by this crap.

Makes me wonder what the science is here? I suspect a hypnotic cocktail of natural gullibility, wanting to believe, peer pressure, and stage hypnosis?

Reminded me of Derren Brown’s Mind Punch

Keep Smilin’

Michael

The World Shuaijiao Network

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

 

The World Shuaijiao Network

In collaboration with the Chinese Shuaijiao Development Council, Shuaijiao Nation,  and YOU, Shuaijiao.TV is compiling a comprehensive list of Shuaijiao training venues worldwide.

This list will be made available to all freely as a networking resource that you can use to make contacts, find training venues,teachers, and partners, and importantly find athletes to compete in your tournaments.

I need the following information about Shuaijiao people/places:

  • Region
  • Country
  • City
  • Address
  • Website
  • Phone Number
  • Contact Person
  • Email
  • Additional Background Information

This will add tremendous value to all of our efforts in learning, promoting, and developing China’s oldest and most effective martial art and fighting sport.

I cannot do it without you!

Please send your info to: michael@shuaijiao.tv

Many thanks
&
Keep Smilin’
Michael

Ps. Please forward this message to people you think might like to be listed in the network.

Pps. Did you donate to the Sichuan Quake victims yet? Every penny helps :-)

Beijing Naadam

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

The Ethnic Minority University in Beijing hosted this year’s Naadam for Mongolians living in Beijing. A couple hundred people turned out despite the sporadic downpours. Among the many activities and competitions was what I had turned up to watch: Bökh.

And i wasn’t disappointed at all. It was an stellar line-up with ex and current Olympians mixing it up on the grass.

As you know there is no weight classes and we saw some David and Goliath fights. I was thinking that instead of weight classes there should have been two categories: Professional and Amateur, but that is not the Mongolian way. Everyone gets in and has a go. It is all about courage after all.

Courage or getting in there and having a go was not on my list of things to do today, but that didn’t stop my mate Shuanghai trying his best to enrol me. I managed to keep my clothes on and take some photos instead of eating grass at the feet of these awesome athletes. But looking at the photos now I kind of regret it. It was an awesome atmosphere.

The event was won by Mongolian Wrestler turned Olympic Greco-Roman competitor Sai-Yin-Ji-Ya who is a true warrior. He walked through the competition calmly winning all but his last match with ease… and he won the last match without breaking a sweat. We swapped numbers so I hope to learn a trick or two from him and share them with you here.

In the meantime, here are some photos…there are a lot!

Enjoy!

Michael

Art of War’s Zhang Tiequan helping a current Freestyle national team member warm up

The result of awesome timing. A violent downward yank at just the right time sent this chump face first into the pitch. We all felt the earth move too so it had to hurt.

Semi Final

The Final

My favorite photo of the day: Saiyin Jiya supremely cool in the finals just as he had been all morning.

Jiya’s Genghis Khan tattoo.

Jiya won again, and reasonably easily…

First prize was a bike…

But i think they preferred the female attention…

Buddies win or lose.

Hope you guys enjoyed that.

China’s Deadliest Quake in a Generation: Please Give

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

I’m such a selfish p@#$%. I’m sitting in my comfortable Beijing home glued to CCTV’s 24-hour coverage (Chinese version of CCTV site here) of the Sichuan quake recovery. Out of a mixture of sadness and disbelief I’m shaking my head at the 5,000,000+ homeless, and 50,000+ dead in China’s deadliest disaster in a generation. (If you haven’t heard about it read this) (To follow the latest check here)

Everyone has been doing such a great job of getting in and helping - including the Chinese Government , Jackie Chan and Jet Li, and so many others - and my efforts apart from donating have only gone to the extent of encouraging my friends to donate at the local bank or via mobile phone. But I want to do more. One small way I suddenly thought of was to make a post consolidating some ways to donate and getting all you guys to donate a few bucks each. Every drop helps.

After about 10 minutes of searching for various ways to donate (The Mercy Corps) (MSN) (Half The Sky Foundation) (American Red Cross) I came across a blog post on CN Reviews called “China Earthquake Guide:24+ Ways to Give - UPDATED”

They have done a splendid job of pulling together a menu of different ways to help the lovely people of Sichuan. The land that gave us Gong-bao-ji-ding (Kung-pow Chicken), The Giant Panda, and the original Spice Girls.

Check it out and find a way to give that suits you.

Remember, EVERY penny you can spare is appreciated.

Please give

Warmest regards,

Michael

Shuaijiao Encyclopaedia Question

Friday, May 16th, 2008

It’s Friday night and I’m in front of my Macbook becasue i don’t have a life. Well, it’s really becasue i crawled home at 0530 this morning from yesterday’s cocktail binge, and I’m still feeling the effects… and of course I have Shuaijiao first thing tomorrow morning.

A small achievement today: I have just finished working with my small team here on the first draft of Master Li Baoru’s Shuaijiao Encyclopaedia. An English book on Shuaijiao’s fundamentals, fighting, and power training methods.

No time to celebrate as I need to get this ready to publish ASAP. This leads me to a question that I’d appreciate different perspectives on…

It is to do with the names of techniques, movements, and equipment. Should I translate them or leave them in Chinese?

My instinct is to leave them in Chinese.

My thinking is in order to stimulate the creation of a common language among Shuaijiao fighters around the world that using the offical Chinese names for each technique would be better. Of course they would be written in English so we could read and pronounce them. Just like Judo athletes today, they might not speak a word of everyday Japanese but they know the name of techniques and can communicate with Japanese fighters and coaches quite smoothly.

What’s your perspective?

Keep Smilin’

Michael

Tim Cartmell’s New DVD: Ground Proofing

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

thanks to William A for finding this gem and sharing it with us!

Tim Cartmell has been doing Chinese Martial Arts for a long time. Read about his background here.

He has also published books on Chinese Throwing techniques: Principles, Analysis, and Application of Effortless Combat Throws, and a translation of Dong Zhongyi’s Shuaijiao classic -  Method of Chinese Wrestling

He has also been a practicitioner of Brazillian Jiujitsu since 1994. In addition to a black belt under Cleber Luciano, Tim has many accomplishments in Jiujitsu and Submission competition.

I thought the video that William sent us was interesting and worthy of separte post because it contains a lot of well-demonstrated Shuaijiao techniques as well as some Judo/BJJ ones too. Evidently, the DVD is about basic/essential ground fighting techniques for fighters. Sounds like a must have for most. I hope you enjoy it as much as i did.

Keep Smilin’

Michael

PS: “Personally, I believe that for the vast majority of people, although it is vital to be able to punch and kick, a foundation in the wrestling/grappling-based arts is the most important for martial proficiency.”  - Tim Cartmell

Li Baoru & The Chinese National Judo Teams

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Bit of news for you all.

I just got off the phone with Master Li Baoru. I wanted to arrange a meeting between him and a publisher interested in publishing his latest Encyclopedia of Shuaijiao. He is fully booked all week. At 75 he is a busy guy!!!

So, what is he doing? I was curious.

Oh just coaching the Chinese Olympic Judo Team…

Has been for a few weeks already. And it is a normal occurance for him I have come to understand.

Holly Moley! (I’ve always wanted to say that out loud)

Now I know China is expecting some gold in Judo . Especially in the Women’s. (Photos of Xian Dongmei - 52kg Gold Medalist from China in Athens) China has a chance in the Men’s too if they are lucky. So, I thought it interesting that Shuaijiao is part of the Olympic Team’s preparation. Hopefully their secret weapon!!!

Of course Master Li is not the official coach. He is the official coach’s coach probably.

Amazing. After 50 years of coaching…Shuaijiao, Judo…A throw is a throw

Keep Smilin’

Michael

ps. The training sessions are closed to the public. Master Li said that he will get a photo or two to me to post here later

Shuaijiao: Combat Tested, Combat Effective… 5,000 Years and Counting

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

It’s good and bad that Martial Arts history doesn’t mean too much these days.

It’s good in the sense that we now have a fair platform that allows people citing history as evidence of their martial art’s effectiveness to put their money where their mouth is: Mixed Martial Arts.

It’s bad in the sense that the religious fervor about some of those arts – I’m thinking of China’s so-called “internal” martial arts here - is, like the Flying Spaghetti Monster, flying in the face of recorded History (read these articles).

Although the comparisons between the MMA vs. IMA debate and the Science vs. Religion debate are interesting, I’m not here to talk about religion. I’m here to talk about Chinese Martial Arts, specifically Shuaijiao.

Now, I’m not going to prove that those so-called “internal” arts work against an aggressive, resisting opponent. The onus is on those who claim their “internal” style to be effective to prove that. However, I am not shy to rub feathers the wrong way by saying this: Shuaijiao provides pretty much the ONLY traditional Chinese Martial Arts techniques that you see used consistently in MMA in China today. I qualify my statement with China, because there are skilled Shuaijiao practitioners fighting in MMA in China.

Here is proof. Watch this. It is a clip from Greater China’s premier professional fighting promotion: The Art of War (In terms of viewership, the largest MMA event in the world).

The most spectacular movements were Shuaijiao throws and take downs from fighters trained in a mixture of disciplines including Shuaijiao along side other great fighting arts like Sanshou, BJJ, Muay Thai, Boxing, Freestyle, etc… In fact, most of these fighters have grown up in Shuaijiao cultures, i.e. the grasslands of Inner Mongolia where you wrestle as soon as you can walk, or Sports Institutes where Shuaijiao is an integral part of Sanda training.

Did you see any Taiji, or Bagua, Longfist or Wing Chun? No. Did you see Shuaijiao? Yes. Why did we see Shuaijiao and not see the “internal” arts?

It would be too easy to conclude that the reason is that Shuaijiao works as my friend and BJJ Blackbelt Chet Quint did… but is that the real reason?

Perhaps it’s that these professional athletes who train between 6 and 8 hours a day are not skilled/dedicated/intelligent/spiritual enough to master the “internal”? Or perhaps it’s that Communist China has long lost its real “internal” martial traditions? Or perhaps it’s that all the real techniques and “internal” strength can’t be used in MMA because they are lethal or would do too much damage?

Like Chet and many others in China, my experience is that Shuaijiao works in real life. Shuaijiao is combat-tested, and combat-effective, and has been that way for thousands of years…And that doesn’t fly in the face of recorded history. It is the ONLY traditional Chinese Martial Art that can stand along side the world’s other great fighting arts. (Modern Sanshou can stand on equal footing but it is not a traditional art. Interestingly, it’s effectiveness is largely a result of the Shuaijiao incorporated into it)

I could step over the line by saying that I think “internal” arts are a mumbo jumbo concoction on a par with the Flying Spaghetti Monster but that would be going too far.

Well, I encourage you to weigh in with your opinion/evidence.
Keep Smilin’
Michael


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