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Wing Chun's Kicking Secrets
By
Si-Fu Scott Baker
As with most of the fighting arts Wing Chun
employees kicking techniques as an important part of it's weapons arsenal.
However, there are some important and significant differences between the
kicking method of Wing Chun and the many other arts. These differences set Wing
Chun's kicking skills apart, making them a distinct tool within the system. We
will list and discuss five key aspects of Wing Chun's kicking methodology in
order to generate a deeper understanding into this unique fighting system.
1. Kicking Seeds
It has been said by some that Wing Chun only
has one punch and three kicks. Although this is not completely accurate it is
easy to understand how some people may have developed such an opinion. Wing
Chun does rely heavily upon the Sun punch, but it also possesses other punching
techniques like the lifting punch and the hooking punch found in the second and
third boxing forms. The perception that Wing Chun only has three kicks is also
inaccurate; it comes from a limited understanding of the three foundation or
"seed" kicking techniques within the system. These three kicks are
NOT the only kicks Wing Chun employees, but rather are the basis upon which all
of the Wing Chun kicking motions are built. These three seed kicks are: front
kick, side kick, and round kick. Each of these techniques are basic to any
martial system that employees kicking. They are not unique by any means.
However, Wing Chun uses the distinct body alignment and motions of these three
kicks as building blocks from which to create an unlimited variety of potential
kicking techniques. Let me illustrate.
The basic front kick requires that you face
your opponent, lift your kicking leg at the knee, and thrust the ball or sole
of your foot straight out striking your target with a straight front kick.
There is nothing special about that. Now let us look at the round kick. The
round or hooking kick can be thrown from any body alignment with your opponent.
You can be facing him, standing sideways to him, or even have your back to him
and you can still deliver an effective round kick. Depending on what part of
the foot you are using to strike with a round kick may look like a different
technique each time. A spinning heal kick is a round kick, it comes in a curved
line of attack rather than a straight line like a front kick. A crescent kick
is also a round kick, in fact all kicks are either straight or round in their
line of attack. In Wing Chun all kicks that arc or curve into the target are
considered round kicks. Now if you combine the round kick principle of arcing
in with the simple front kick we get some interesting, and somewhat unique
kicking techniques. One example of this is the Wing Chun "facade"
kick often seen towards the end of the Chum Ku boxing form. The facade kick is
a front kick that arcs to the outside as the body turns to face the target. You
strike with the sole of the foot with a straight thrusting motion, but the line
of attack is definitely an arc. So by combining the three simple kicking seeds
Wing Chun can create many possible kicking techniques.
2. Kicking Principles
In combining the three seeds Wing Chun takes
the principles of alignment, motion, and striking area represented by the three
seed kicks and recombines them to create any number of different kicking
techniques. Remember Wing Chun is a principle based system, not a technique
based system. Therefore, we have an endless variety of techniques we can use,
so long as they conform to correct kicking principles. Those correct kicking
principles are represented within the three kicking seeds. These principles
include lifting, thrusting, stomping, straight line and circular motions. The
alignment principles of facing and standing sideways to your opponent, or
turning towards or away from your opponent are also represented. The weapons or
striking areas of the sole, heel, and top of the foot are clearly illustrated.
But the seeds also include the side of the foot, the toes, the ball, back of
the heel, inside of the foot, the shin, the knee etc. The striking area used
depends upon you alignment with your target and the principles of motion used
to get your foot onto that target. Once those have been determined it is simple
logic that determines which striking area or weapon will be used to make
contact with the target. Other general Wing Chun principles also apply to
correct kicking. Principles of economy in motion or closest weapon to closest
target will often be illustrated in the kicks used. Also principles of
continuous attacking will show up as Wing Chun fires off multiple kicks instead
of only one or two.
3. Soft, Internal Kicking Power
Principles of sticking, and using motion are
also heavily relied upon to help the Wing Chun practitioner determine which
seed principles will best respond to the current situation. To be able to utilize
the characteristic Wing Chun sticking skills one will need to learn to kick
with a very relaxed leg. The principle of relaxation is inseparable from the
skills of flowing and feeling. Here Wing Chun is different from many kicking
systems in that most systems use strength and tension in the leg to generate
great power. Wing Chun however, must remain soft and relaxed while kicking so
as to feel and flow effectively. Therefore the Wing Chun kick releases soft
internal power through the leg rather than kicking with physical strength. The
power of Wing Chun kicks come from the correct releasing of chi through the
limb, just as the power of the hand strikes use the release of energy through
the hand to damage the opponent internally. It would be incongruent for Wing
Chun to emphasize soft-relaxed motions with the hands and arm strikes, but then
employ hard, tense motions with the legs and feet! That does not make sense,
and does not work. As an internal system the whole of Wing Chun is soft and
filled with energy. That includes the kicks. When practiced correctly the soft,
fast kicking motions of Wing Chun are extremely powerful. The student must
learn how to relax and release energy through the legs, just as he did with his
arms. However, with the legs there is a great deal more mass to relax, so to
some it is easier to just kick the tense, hard way. This is a grave mistake as
it will not only result in damage to the kickers legs in time, but effectively
isolates him from the important rooting energy skills that give stability and
power to the rest of his art. A tense Wing Chun kicker essential stops doing
Wing Chun when he kicks. He is employing two completely different systems of
attacking and generating power. In doing so he will use neither of them fully or
effectively.
4. Kicking Targets
Wing Chun utilizes the principle of economy
in motion. With kicking the application of this principle guides the student to
attack lower targets with his kicks while using his hands to strike at the
higher targets. To put it simply we attack the open target with the weapon that
is closest to that target. It is seldom that the head of your opponent is
closer to your feet than to your hands. Unless of course he has already been
knocked down. To raise your foot from the ground up the approximate 6 feet to
your opponents head makes little sense when your hands were only two or three
feet from his head! It would be unthinkable for most martial artists to bend
down and punch their opponent in the foot, rather they would simply stomp on
that foot with the heel. That is sensible. Well the same logic applies to
hitting him in the head with the hands instead of your feet. Wing Chun seldom
will kick above the abdominal cavity. Most high kicking systems developed high
kicking techniques around a set of rules that forbade someone from kicking them
"below the belt". This rule makes it safer to kick high, until you
get into a real fight where there are NO rules!
The most vulnerable target on a high kicker
is his supporting leg. It is wide open, he can't move it while his other leg is
waving around in the air, and his knee is the most commonly, and easily injured
joint in his body. A short fast snapping kick to this target will finish the
fight instantly! Wing Chun works to both attack and defend the lower gates with
the legs. We stand on the rear leg leaving the front leg to float, freeing it
to attack and defend the lower areas with the same ease as the hands have to
attack and defend the higher gates. By skillful application of the sticking principles
learned within the chi gerk practice the student can flow with and defeat the
kicking techniques of his attacker. There are many effective targets to strike
on the legs, and because many fighters put weight on the forward leg they are
unable to move to defend these open targets. Wing Chun employees the one legged
stance so that our forward leg is free to attack and defend with comparable
speed to that of the hands. Some may feel that using the closest weapon to
attack a target sounds fine with regards to being economical, but sacrifices
the devastating power that kicks can generate. This criticism is valid for
those using tension weight, and strength to generate power. But Wing Chun does
not generate power in this way. Wing Chun's short power has been well
illustrated in the one-inch punch. The same explosive short power can be
generated with the Wing Chun kicks. We do not sacrifice power for seed and
economy.
The defense of the lower gates also employee
the principles in the three kicking seeds. The chamber positions for the front
and side kicks make up the basis of the Wing Chun leg defense techniques. These
blocking or parrying skills with the lead leg are learned in the chi gerk
training. By keeping either the foot or knee on the centerline the Wing Chun
kicker learns to control his attackers legs and can devastate them with
repeated chain kicking techniques.
5. Kicking as Stepping
A final significant distinction between most
kicking arts and the kicking methodology of Wing Chun is that Wing Chun uses
the kick as a step. This is well illustrated in the Chum Ku boxing form and on
the Wooden dummy. In Wing Chun you do not kick then retract your leg, rather
you kick then step down and advance forward. The kick is part of the step. We
seldom will stand in one place and throw kicks. Wing Chun prefers to press in
on the opponent, and when kicking that means advancing with each kick. To do
this the foot is put down on the ground where it strikes the target. It is not
retracted and put back where it started from. In advanced kicking skills one
can step after the kick without putting the leg down, thus enabling them to
chain kick while still stepping forward. This skill requires strong presencing
and use of energy in both the kicking and standing legs.
Conclusion
The kicking skills of Wing Chun are often
understated and under utilized. Most students work so long and hard at
developing the intricate feeling skills with the hands that when they get to
kicking they gloss over this training. The truth is the kicking skills of Wing
Chun are as equally complex and sophisticated as the hand skills. If students
would devote equal time and effort to training the legs as they do to their
hands Wing Chun would probably become better known for its devastating leg
skills! But the truth is that the legs tire easily, they are heavy and
difficult to work with, and we have not learned to feel as well with them as we
do with our arms. Because of these reasons most students do not give the legs
the training time needed to truly develop the deep kicking skills of Wing Chun.
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