I've been reading a lot of stuff online, about Tim Cartmell's martial arts since 2 decades ago, but this is this first time I see him in a video. This is fantastic!
@nicerperson1
2 жыл бұрын
Tim has some great videos and a book about "Effortless Combat Throws" which is excellent. I like Tim, he has won many full contact matches. He can fight, unlike most kungfu "masters"
@airforceallie
4 жыл бұрын
this was awesome! in just a minute in a half he shared so many excellent takedowns
@fabianoaq4777
3 жыл бұрын
I practiced Wing Chun and got to know Bagua through the Grandmaster movie, and I realized that it is a very interesting style, with very diverse movements just like the Bajiquan, are my favorite styles.
@seinundzeiten
Жыл бұрын
I trained with him in jiu jitsu, he is deceptively fast...
@Tianshanwarrior
4 жыл бұрын
Tim is awesome
@stefanschleps8758
2 жыл бұрын
He is a dedicated student. His skill is smooth. He is a master of throwing techniques. Complete respect. Laoshr 60 Ching Yi Kung Fu Association
@mdub2000
3 жыл бұрын
Wow that was a short video but there was loads in it... very cool thank you.
@polyronin
4 жыл бұрын
Nice! Thank you for sharing.
@DanielMrozPhD
4 жыл бұрын
Bravo Erwan. Je suis bien jaloux...
@tbishop4961
3 жыл бұрын
One of these days tim is going to have to start eating
@mdubb4855
Жыл бұрын
Probably one of the most interesting people in the world to take push hands lessons from, given his experience with jiu jitsu which is at the opposite end of the practice spectrum, with actively resisting, fully resisting training partners. Sometimes I think BJJ is the ultimate evolution of push hands (as is judo), and that if BJJ students weren’t obsessed with steroids for recovery, tai chi sets would be better for their longevity in the sport, recovery and de-stressing, and well being. Tai chi without BJJ imho is just chi gong, and BJJ without tai chi brutalizes the body. There’s no doubt in my mind that the Mendes brothers, for example, have perfected “natural flow” (especially visible in seminar rolls) more than any self-claimed grandmaster of tai chi (with perhaps the exception of Cartmell, who straddles both worlds).
@JamesWalker-ky5yr
7 ай бұрын
With martial arts, it always gets down to my style or my teacher is better than yours. Most of the older arts are lost in translation. Tai chi was the most fierce fighting art in old China. Do you think it was the slow practice form? BJJ is the current fad, but old Japanese systems all had locks, grappling, ground fighting and throws. Now, BJJ is discovering that mat practice doesn't prepare the body for cement. Going to the ground has long been known to be a bad idea in many situations. Many old arts harden the hands and develop powerful grasp which doesn't happen with wrapped hands and boxing gloves. The real world has never been divided into weight classes or had referees to break up the fight or assure that it's even one on one. My experience is that a martial school may have a good fighter or two, based on many factors, such as size, strength, youth, skill, but most are delusional and some even go out looking for fights suffering head injury or other tragic results. A lot of enthusiasts are better at talking. I'm old now and glad to be done with that journey.
@georgesabitpol
4 жыл бұрын
So clear and concise. Please let me know if you come near Hong Kong. Mr cloarec, si vous vivez en Bretagne j aimerai bien vous rendre visite la prochaine fois que je visite la famille
@erwancloarec3241
4 жыл бұрын
Hi ! I'm living in Brittany indeed ! N'hésitez pas à me contacter si vous passez par là ! Merci !
@lewislyles2342
2 жыл бұрын
Cool Tim
@alekx58
2 жыл бұрын
Mu Zen wo Jiang ying yang Yang Shie tui
@TaiChiGhost
3 жыл бұрын
The first 3 applications have _extremely_ easy reversals.
@stefanschleps8758
2 жыл бұрын
Show us. All chin na have counters. So what. If push came to shove Tim would have you tied up in a knot. But please, educate the rest of us with your talents. Make a video, and share like the rest of us. Bless your heart.
@michaeltaylor8501
2 жыл бұрын
It's good to learn reversals. 😎👍 A reversal can get one out of trouble if... • ...it's done in time (some techniques give one less time to react than others; & at full speed some reversals are extremely hard to pull off*); &... • ...one's reversal isn't reversed in turn [while hypothetically reversal upon reversal upon reversal can go on-&-on ad naseum; but in practical non-sport application, someone will lose - & usually fairly quickly (as anything goes)] * = Example: In that first technique, if one were to bump into the foe's ribs quite fast & hard - &/or if the foe's thigh was knead-pinched during the process - then the foe might not be able to counter the rest of the motion in time (having been dazed or otherwise distracted) [it's also quite possible that that particular technique might not even be initiated until after the foe has been dazed/distracted by some other technique(s) like striking,** for instance, making a reversal less likely to happen]. ** = While striking can make a good distraction, not all distractions need to be percussive in nature; a feign can work as a distraction, or even a thrown object - whether inheritently dangerous or not (or whether it touches the foe or not) - can also work to distract (giving one the opportunity to pull off a technique that might have otherwise been reversed by a more clear-headed foe).
@andrewblack7852
Жыл бұрын
Master wangs observation “ he who is proficient at technique is poor at technique”. You seldom may apply technique. The student craves it because the talu ( forms), seem mysterious. The talu are what the ancestor moved like. It was the talu that gave the ancestor the ability to actually create the phenomenon of real use. The ancestor did not apply talu. The ancestors body moved like that from their experience and their personal characteristics. In ba gua zhang we have yin fu and cheng lineages, the first two students of dong hai chuan. They each moved very differently. Indeed the two lineages seem distantly related. Dong had no desire for them to each do the form exactly like him, but moved down a generation or two and we see all faithful imitation of the exterior of the art. In other words “ chasing the corpse”. Internal martial art is internal. To externalize it is the most foolish of all. This statement does not reflect upon Tim cartmel at all. Tim obviously has personal ability. But the truth of master wangs statements are obvious.
@erwancloarec3241
Жыл бұрын
Ok... I suppose you're refering to Master Wang Xian Zhai... I'm with you on the ancestors, as I'm on the trap of "applications" and imitation... (it also applies to Yiquan believers, though...) As for "technique", it may not be the end of everything, but it's certainly a fundamental step to access "internal", wathever that means... martial arts without technique is also an illusion...thanks for your comments
@adelhartreisig9020
9 ай бұрын
You're so full of sh.., babbling, useless c...
@adelhartreisig9020
9 ай бұрын
@@erwancloarec3241🤣🤣🤣🤣
@ShredST
3 күн бұрын
What a clown
@user-tf2qr9ty1n
2 жыл бұрын
Если мастер всегда дрался в замедленном действии, с глупыми ударами противника, то он всегда будет мастером в глазах своих глупых учеников....
@davidboyer4554
2 жыл бұрын
you broke your power when you stooped down by bending your waist instead of squatting lower or being honest with yourself and striking higher. wassah.
@erwancloarec3241
2 жыл бұрын
🤣 I'll tell Tim Cartmell he should be more honest with himself...thanks a lot for the advice...
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