Centerline Theory is Fake and Made Up

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024
  • A video for nerds in which I examine why centerline theory does not apply to hand-to-hand fighting by comparing it with longsword fighting.
    (Mostly) Edited by Alexander Thill! His page: www.fiverr.com...
    Thanks to Metrolina Martial Arts for letting me film in their gym! Their channel: / @metrolinamartialarts
    My Twitter: / armchairviolenc

ความคิดเห็น • 611

  • @ArmchairViolence
    @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +216

    Still getting a lot of comments saying, "Um, aCtUaLlY, centerline means this other thing!"
    Every style, lineage, and practitioner of wing chun and jkd define centerline differently. Sometimes WILDLY differently. The definition in the video is the most common definition I have encountered.
    I'm not wrong, you were just taught different terminology. That's why I defined centerline at the beginning of the video! So we would all be on the same page.

    • @sentientmartialarts
      @sentientmartialarts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Indeed you did, but you still have a click bait title which raises the questions whether that is the ONLY centerline theory you are aware of. So I personally just wanted to inform you further. You know sharing knowledge as you do in your videos, which are very well crafted and thought through

    • @kodokudeusotsuki
      @kodokudeusotsuki 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      Your demonstration of Wing Chun just shows you have absolutely no knowledge of what Wing Chun and center line are, all lineages included.

    • @teabrick7384
      @teabrick7384 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      No that's just kung fu people. Point out something about kung fu is bad and they try to change the definition of that thing.

    • @sentientmartialarts
      @sentientmartialarts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@teabrick7384 I agree with you, many things are worthless in Kung Fu. And on all honest traditional wing Chun does not work. BUT if you take the material it gives you and the mentality of the shortest distance, balance etc. It can become very useful. To my student I say this, take Wing Chun apply it with practical movements but same principles and you are good. If you then add basic grappling skills from a trained expert you then have a good self defence

    • @sentientmartialarts
      @sentientmartialarts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If you then learn *

  • @hard2hurt
    @hard2hurt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +440

    The closest thing to a practical application of this idea is probably in some grappling concepts. Fighting for... and capitalizing on head position is one. In a grappling stance, keeping your elbows tucked in and hands out in front of them is probably the closest to the idea of the longsword. The positioning of your arms helps you both actively and passively defend inside position and handfight.

    • @methomps01123
      @methomps01123 2 ปีที่แล้ว +55

      HEMA guy here. Yeah, pretty on point generally with the centerline stuff for longsword though the weapon art that has the greatest focus on holding the center (IMO) is actually the Spanish style Rapier aka 'La Verdadera Destreza.' If fact most treatises from this style literally begin with an extended geometry lesson and it's application to sword and body movements.

    • @katokianimation
      @katokianimation 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Yeah, actually grip fighting from closed guard top looks a lot like wing chun. I want to clean up the center line and pin the shoulders to my escape. While the main target is my lapel.
      If you are not attached together the whole thing fals apart.

    • @wildys6
      @wildys6 2 ปีที่แล้ว +70

      16 years of kendo taught me the centerline is really damn important. 5 muay thai classes taught me this doesn't work without a sword

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +97

      That's fair! The centerline is, ironically, probably more important in grappling than striking. But grappling uses the concept of "inside control" instead.

    • @jestfullgremblim8002
      @jestfullgremblim8002 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Good point, but i really would like to find a (good) application for it on striking...

  • @spoyman
    @spoyman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    WC teaches centre line because the first stance is square as opposed to other stances that are left leading. In left leading you can cover your front with pivoting, where WC you need to cover your centre line because it’s fully exposed. That being said it is only taught in the first form for beginners so it’s like saying boxing jabs are wrong because it doesn’t work against advanced techniques. The jab is just the first thing you learn not what the martial art is about and that goes the same for WC centre line theory.

  • @rangda_prime
    @rangda_prime 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I look forward to your next video about this in about five years. It'll be interesting to see what new insights you'll have then.

  • @kat4na_k1ng13
    @kat4na_k1ng13 2 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    UR TERMINOLOGY IS WRONG!!! My tactical chi eye-gouging kata has won all of my 7,000 street fights!!!

    • @alexthill4218
      @alexthill4218 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      The fact that you made a new account just for this comment makes me very happy.

    • @christianc.christian5025
      @christianc.christian5025 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Only one a day for less than 20 years?
      Amateur.

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Oh no, I'm getting my own jokes quoted back to me! 🤣

  • @HadenParkes
    @HadenParkes 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Great to see some HEMA slipping in (especially Fiore), and interestingly when I saw the title my first through was "what about weapons?" So you got me, good work.

    • @HadenParkes
      @HadenParkes 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I know that Wing Chun also does have some really interesting weapon forms (and strangely often oversized weapons) so possibly it's a principle back ported from weapons to unarmed to keep consistency (to it's own detriment).

    • @corymoore8562
      @corymoore8562 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      He's good at that. Another one of his had me ready to comment, and then it was his next line. Sneaky cheeky bastard. 🤣

  • @vipercrane190
    @vipercrane190 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    As someone that has practiced Wing Chun for 8 years, my understanding of the Centerline Theory was a bit different. The Centerline was an efficient way to teach a variety of concepts in a short amount of time: Short-Distance Power, Hand Speed, Balancing, Pivoting, and Reacting on One Tempo.
    *Short-Distance Power*
    Wing Chun punches were designed for smaller fighters to maximize damage against bigger fighters by striking their center of mass FROM your center of mass. Other styles do this as well, but the vertical fist protects the hand in bare knuckle altercations. (Old school bareknuckle boxers used vertical fists for the same reason).
    It’s the same power behind the One Inch Punch (which isn’t really hard to learn btw) and can be generated from ANY stance.
    *Hand Speed*
    Keeping the hands on the centerline is meant for responding quickly to incoming attacks and increasing the volume of strikes that can be thrown. If you’re familiar with Wing Chun, you’d know that 90% of the techniques are defensive. There’s only so many strikes that can be thrown from the center, but it’s fine since you’re training for short distance power anyway.
    *Balancing*
    The Centerline is essentially your center of mass. Normal fighters use bladed stances to make themselves smaller targets while shifting in and out of range. However, Wing Chun doesn’t get a lot of credit for it’s footwork potential.
    Take up the classic Wing Chun stance, lift up your foot a couple inches from the ground towards the direction you want to go, and press off your back foot into that direction. All Wing Chun hand techniques (and some kicks) can be performed with this footwork without losing balance.
    *Pivoting*
    One criticism that I agree with about Wing Chun is occupying the Centerline making you vulnerable to outside attacks. The answer I was given for attacks that land off center was to take the blow and pivot off into a counter, but my floating ribs taught me this was a very bad idea. I’m thankful it wasn’t my head.
    The answer I came up with was to turn that disadvantage into an advantage by baiting my opponent into an outside attack. I can press on their forearm and shift my centerline off target (side stepping if needed), and realign my hands towards their center of mass. This is really good for chin shots, liver shots, neck chops, sweeps, or (if you give absolute no fucks) one of the coldest hooks you’ll throw in your life.
    *Reacting on One Tempo*
    Wing Chun is designed to maximize a smaller person’s aggression in close range. The techniques don’t look that effective at first glance, because they’re meant to be combined with other principles. When attacks come at you, you always need to respond with One Tempo (attacking while defending). In a self defense scenario, you become someone that your attacker has to respect, or else they’ll get punished immediately. In a one on one fight, it’s an excellent way to keep aggressive opponents on the back-foot and gain momentum without exhausting yourself.

    • @ultmast
      @ultmast ปีที่แล้ว +7

      You won't get a response on this because this represents actual thought, consideration, and practice. Look at the top comment: he's not just arguing a strawman he made up about what "most WC" claims is centerline theory (totally untrue, it should be noted), but is defending that idea with the nonsense rationalization that people have "wildly different" opinions about that. That logic can justify *any* nonsense position or strawman.
      In any case, there's certainly no "center plane", and you're *not* just static and blocking outwards, opening up. *Everything* looks "stupid" and "wrong" when you don't actually learn anything about it and don't actually represent it anywhere close to accurately.
      WC is a criminally underrated *close range* striking system that pairs well with a lot of other arts, and it is successful in its niche *because* of proper application of centerline theory (which was neither demonstrated nor understood in this video). Shame that the people speaking the loudest about everything tend to be the least intellectually honest.

    • @vipercrane190
      @vipercrane190 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@ultmast I’ve been thinking a lot about Wing Chun becoming a sport for the past few days.
      Wing Chun has never been thoroughly tested in the one environment where it markets itself for: close in spaces.
      Put two WC fighters in a ring half the size of a wrestling ring and let them duke it out for points. Landing blows, sweeping, throwing, and pressuring each other out the ring can rack up points, or they could go for the knock out.
      It’ll put these half baked theories about WC to bed, and allow WC practitioners to test their application.

    • @ultmast
      @ultmast ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@vipercrane190
      > Wing Chun has never been thoroughly tested in the one environment where it markets itself for: close in spaces
      I would say *sport* is where it hasn't been thoroughly tested, and that's an important distinction. It *has* been tested in real situations, including by me, but in sport it's only been tested by a limited set of people (ex: Alan Orr's Iron Wolves or Qi La La). I would not describe that as "thorough", as you say, just some good data points.
      > Put two WC fighters in a ring half the size of a wrestling ring and let them duke it out for points. Landing blows, sweeping, throwing, and pressuring each other out the ring can rack up points, or they could go for the knock out.
      I mean we used to do that, 20 years ago. Full gear, full out. Knockouts, broken bones, concussions. Technique was pressure tested. It wasn't intended to prove anything, though. I'll admit, I'd pay to see it, like Karate Kombat. Good WC strikers fighting in a Sanda format would be fun as hell to watch.
      > It’ll put these half baked theories about WC to bed, and allow WC practitioners to test their application.
      I think the problem is that people like OP don't ever actually experience most of what they bullshit about. An entire generation gets their information from TH-cam, not the mat. Without *feeling* it they'll just see what they want to see. It's the same thing in every thread:
      Throw a punch? You're a Boxer. Grab someone? You're a wrestler or do BJJ. Show *any other MA* working? They're just doing bad kickboxing.

    • @joh_kun5530
      @joh_kun5530 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@vipercrane190 I don't like the idea of a purely points system in any martial arts, as I think that it severely waters it down even more than it already is (I mean, look at what happened to Taekwondo and point Karate). A points system would bias itself way too much to the guy with the faster hands or longer reach (This happened to Rokas back in his Wing Chun training for example) an not necessarily the guy who can land the finishing blow or time himself a good counter. My suggestion is ring outs and knockouts only, or a limited points system that only counts damaging strikes.

  • @Jughead885
    @Jughead885 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In a WC straight punch you bring/pull your elbow from the side into the center line, so your forearm and fist is on the center

  • @redezwang4977
    @redezwang4977 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    is there a similar concept which is called centerline in boxing as well?

  • @slipstik
    @slipstik 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Your centerline is always changing. If you think fighting on your centerline means, "run in a straight line attacking", your wrong. Your centerline is your core, your balance, the thing you should protect. Beyond that, In Wing Chun you can see the centerline relatively affects where it is most efficient to push or pull when trapping. Wing chun teaches a technique called trapping where from bridging a block or strike you maneuver your opponents weapons away from you and or trap them against their body. If a right punch is thrown and deflected with the left wrist w/o crossing eithers' centerline each person can use their adjacent arm to push and free the first arm to strike. If the centerline is crossed then the adjacent arm can more efficiently pull, trapping the arm and freeing their initial arm. You can try to pull when you should push but you'll be wasting effort and energy or you may have to change arms or positions and reestablish a centerline. Wing Chun trys to be as efficient as it can using as little energy as possible. This is just one example of how knowledge of your centerline affects the efficiency of your fighting. Wing Chun and the martial arts are a complex manipulation of time a space.

  • @DarkHorizons13
    @DarkHorizons13 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Dude was literally going to say I learnt centre line for broad sword. I did Wing Chun, prior to MMA, your example in the video was so apt, got my nose Booped when trainer showed me the flaws. So like you pointed out centre line became a either a danger zone or a position you move to create exploits. But mostly was taught to forget it. Thanks for these videos

  • @trapdoorbeaver
    @trapdoorbeaver 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    i once killed a man? using the centerline alone not a single strike was thrown, my control of the centerline was so dominant they had no chance of surviving i send flowers to their family on the anniversary of my centerline only victory

  • @Windrider784
    @Windrider784 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is it possible to defeat wing chun just by circle strafing?

  • @themichaelthing
    @themichaelthing 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Duuude, I was just about to yell "longsword". Didn't know you also did historical fencing :^D .

  • @mynameismynameis666
    @mynameismynameis666 ปีที่แล้ว

    the main application problem is that wing tsun was not invented for indivdual self defence in open space but for civilan monastery defence in tightly packed stone fortified village alleyways and buildings, shoulder to shoulder and with the problem of potentially getting trampled rather than anyone having the space to move off line. under these circumstances, moving off line with your head is hard, swinging almost impossible and leaning on the back foot means you ll be held by the guys behind you who strike over your shoulders from behind. it also explains the rather improvised choice of weaponry. the chain punch and the basics of the system can be taught to civilians in a short time and with a few drills, you have a wall of punching and kicking farmers blocking the pathways of a monastery/palace village

  • @Projectdarksource
    @Projectdarksource ปีที่แล้ว

    Lol I love the song at the end, this needs to be on Spotify

  • @flavvsdasilver6442
    @flavvsdasilver6442 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This one is gonna ruffle some feathers

  • @journeyingdeeperinward
    @journeyingdeeperinward 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    When I trained with an indoor student of Garrett Gee's branch we only heard about "the box" for theory. Basically, the shoulders and hips make a rectangle and the hands can move toward or away from the center within the box. Also, moving out of the box typically leads to power loss. I have only heard about centerline theory from the Western students whose line goes back to Ip Man. Anyway, this Baguazhang nerd is more than happy to spar within agreed upon rules if anyone comes to Phoenix, Arizona area for a visit.

    • @Limemill
      @Limemill ปีที่แล้ว

      Yep, it’s of Yip Man’s doing. Not the same in continental wing chub, absent from Vietnamese vingtsuan

  • @jorel80
    @jorel80 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Interesting take! I think the centerline concept is a valid, as just that, a concept. It's not the end all-be all of position. Advanced WC teaches that the center line is constantly in motion and you have to move and adapt, attack the opponent from differerent angles (just like every other martial art). Check out this vid: th-cam.com/video/HqtswfxpjH0/w-d-xo.html A WC instructor explains centerline application and presents many of the same problems you identified and shows how to deal with that from a WC perspective.

  • @katokianimation
    @katokianimation 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Why is that I learned more about sword fighting in few seconds from hand 2 hand martial art channel then from watching the actual Hema channels for years?

    • @KevinTangYT
      @KevinTangYT 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You're probably watching the wrong HEMA channels, not to take away from OP

    • @katokianimation
      @katokianimation 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KevinTangYT Metatron, Skallagrim, Shadiversity. But as I getting more experience in martial arts and because I live in an age where i can watch instructions from high level grapplers from all around the world,
      I have more and more doubts about their skills and how legit they are, as time goes.

    • @Vlad_Tepes_III
      @Vlad_Tepes_III 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@katokianimation Blood & Iron HEMA, Academy of Historical Fencing, Scholagladiatoria, London Longsword Academy, Zac Evans, Adorea Olomouc and Akademia Szermierzy and a few others are HEMA channels run by actual instructors that train for a living, maybe check those out.
      The channels you mentioned are mostly history enthusiasts interested in HEMA but more interested in its history than combat skills; with all due respect to them, while their knowledge is vast and deep in their chosen fields, pure combat skill is not one of those.

    • @KevinTangYT
      @KevinTangYT 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Vlad_Tepes_III This. They're more commentators than martial arts channels. You wouldn't learn to play sports from watching sports commentators.

    • @katokianimation
      @katokianimation 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Vlad_Tepes_III thank you unironacally, i saved this list and i will check it out them. The only person I familiar with is Matt Easton from Scholagladiatoria. I know he is very skilled. But his videos are not for me. Don't know why I have hard time to sit trough his videos. The sparring sruff he uploaded is cool though. Mad respect for his art and his skills.

  • @demonderpz7937
    @demonderpz7937 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is similar to martial arts using “centrifugal force” in their techniques (centrifugal force doesn’t actually exist and is only used for mathematical simplifications in physics calculations. It is a theoretical force that is easily disproven. I have yet to see a martial art use a real force such as centripetal force)

  • @joshs8860
    @joshs8860 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I don't think this properly represents Ving Tsun's conception of the centerline. I think a more representative explanation would be all the components of what you discussed including those you claimed were a refute of ving tsun centerline theory.

  • @tacticaltemplar875
    @tacticaltemplar875 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Had no idea you did HEMA. Very cool. 😎

  • @trandyan
    @trandyan ปีที่แล้ว

    Have you studied WCK? You seem to know so much about WCK, enough to be an expert on what CLT is. Who did you study with?

  • @chrisbailey622
    @chrisbailey622 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I would argue that most WC practitioners and teachers out there misunderstand what centre line theory is about. If you stand with your hands down the middle and attempt to block you are asking for trouble. Wong Shun Leung never taught this, and he wasn't an outlier. He was one of Ip Man's best students (some might argue the best). He taught, and my Sifu teaches the kind of guard you show in this video. If your opponent attacks you have to MOVE. And it's not about chasing hands, but attacking your opponents centre of mass (whether the head, throat, solar plexus etc..) because they then have to absorb the full force of your attack. The WC you are trying to demonstrate here is nonsense and of course doesn't work.

  • @bartangel4867
    @bartangel4867 ปีที่แล้ว

    I always thought that the idea is to get off the center line. especially if fighting opponent with opposite stands in which case you put your lead foot outside his lead foot to step off line and continue to move towards the direction of your lead leg. if he doesn't move with you and manage to pass you with his lead leg outside of yours (there fore be off the center line) then you are outside from his side and you have a target and he doesn't (because you are off his center line) and you are in superior position.
    I don't know about the longsword but using rapier or a saber you also want to move outside the center line in most cases (I think I never used a sword) once again if you are to his side and he is facing forward you have a superior position.

  • @blackpowderkun
    @blackpowderkun ปีที่แล้ว

    to be fair like most kung fu forms wing chun would eventually transition to weapon usage.

  • @dynamicworlds1
    @dynamicworlds1 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'd argue that fencing (and by extension spear fighting) is an even better comparison to Wing Chun's centerline-controlling method....which, incidentally, would be a great way to teach people to fist fight if your real objective was to train future soldiers how to use spears without making it obvious that you were training people how to use spears.
    That would make Wing Chun BS, but deliberate and useful BS, and it would be far from the first sport that was designed to train combat skills transferable to the battlefield. They may not be good at fistfighting, but they're mere hours of training from being above average spearmen.
    I don't have evidence of this, but it fits absurdly well.

  • @tavtav3526
    @tavtav3526 ปีที่แล้ว

    You just give me the understanding of a bridge between centerline and sword fighting thank you.

  • @markmessi9020
    @markmessi9020 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This channel is the Ryan Jansen of Martial Arts YT channels

  • @johnouellet4099
    @johnouellet4099 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think you confuse centerline theory in central plane theory. The central plane fighting concept is only to teach somebody basics in training. The center line only refers to yourself and where are you position your arms in relation to your body. You were supposed to move off the central plane when you fight and attack from the flank, cannot stand there and fight in the center. You’d have to study wing chun to understand what I’m talking about but if you’ve ever seen anybody performing basic wooden dummy form, you will see that they constantly shift to the side and move off of the center plane to attack.

  • @bob67497
    @bob67497 ปีที่แล้ว

    Yeah, the idea of controlling and advancing on the centerline is pretty obviously silly, and I can accentuate that point by telling you where it worked REALLY well for me- a LARP game I played as a teenager that uses VERY light weapons that you only need to land a solid tag with to score a hit.
    With the VERY lightweight weapons in Amtgard (for those who want to go whack people with foam bats) any amount of spatial occupation is going to work to guard (especially since the tech has gradually gotten lighter and lighter so that powering through blocks is no longer viewed widely as a legitimate tactic). So you can just keep your weapons on the centerline and twist your hips slightly to guard any angle, and as long as you're quicker than your opponent, you can do that and counterstrike REALLY easily.
    But since this has only ever worked for me in a situation where I am wielding weapons that weigh less than a pound at 36 inches total length (even a dagger in real life will normally weight about a pound, more if it's got some heft) I don't think this really applies for actual combat, or even just combat sports (again, not including Amtgard in that because it's gotten so soft that it doesn't really qualify, though it was legit a soft combat sport when I started, a decade ago)
    I also know for SURE having trained extensively with my real knives, axes, spears, and so on, that I would not be able to easily absorb shock from real weapon strikes the way I could with those foam sticks (duh) and if I tried, I would probably end up with fractures or breaks in my hands, and also probably lose my grip on my weapon pretty immediately.
    Any system that tells you that you need to JUST DO THIS ONE SIMPLE THING REALLY WELL is lying to you, even if Bruce Lee invented it.

  • @pbrown5191
    @pbrown5191 ปีที่แล้ว

    Centerline is best for close quarters when rounded movements are hard to do like being pinned in a corner or small space but still standing. The closer you get the more centerline you need to become . To some degree no matter what art u are using you in up creating a centerline and that is usually the opponents weakest areas or wounded places or just your best advantage in a situation you're in.

  • @jonathansalvador5037
    @jonathansalvador5037 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You want a practical application of center-line theory? I have occupied the center line of your attention by provoking you into reading this comment, while I’ve been sneaking up behind you the whole time.

  • @jerediahgonzalez2315
    @jerediahgonzalez2315 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think you need to talk to a Wing Chun Master and maybe spar with one to see what it's all about. Seinsei Seth just did a video with a wing Chun teacher. Go ask him. Izzo Wing Chun and Greensboro Martial Arts Academy are 2 other good channels to reference. But what you said at the end of the video about the long sword seems more in line from what I was taught when I briefly studied Wing Chun. You have to control and move your center line to attack their center line. In my opinion it was another way to describe footwork and hand trapping.

  • @rotweiiler
    @rotweiiler 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Did WC ages. Never used it to spar with. It's too static. Bruce Lee realized this- used its flaws to increase his knowledge. As a 'concept' WC is a good style - but never spar with it ..as said here there are way more angles to a brawl than a centre line. Be fluid - like water- so true. Secondly WC wastes too much time standing toe to toe talking theory - get the gloves on & grapple.
    Lee invented MMA . He was ahead of his time

  • @jake_with_the_BIG_snake
    @jake_with_the_BIG_snake ปีที่แล้ว

    i trained wing chun like 15 years ago for 1 year and idk where you went for training? my training was with simon lau which i believe is quite legit system for wing chun. the only concept i remember from that training was to get off the opponents centerline so you can dodge the attack, disrupt their balance and then do whatever the heck you wanted. this is obviously not easy during sparring but anyway we practiced this with only drills. if you try this by just trying to push someone to the floor from different angles you realize you want to get at like a 45 degree angle from THEIR centerline where the balance is most easily disrupted. ideally outside their stance or lead arm, you want to get to the right of an orthodox so he cant hit you with anything. you can then trap/grap their arm easily if you want. there was a lot of grappling practice i saw from the advanced students with trapping of the arms, trips, foot sweeps. etc which surprised me.
    the drills were good if your opponent only was doing 1 very committed attack with no followup. but this is not very realistic. since there were only drills and no live sparring i kinda got tired of it and didnt train another martial art for like 10 years ish. tried wrestling, jui jitsu and boxing for various amounts of time and eventually found MMA which i regret not starting earlier. its so free and varied and there is a lot of sub-wrestling at my place which is the most fun, most importantly without a friggin pyjamas.
    tbh all martial arts where you learn to generate power with your punches works to stop somebody. its just a matter of effectiveness and the opponents level. i have seen some silly drunken "street fights" where for instance a karate dude walks around with his punch "chambered" at the hip and just waits for the other dude to walk within range and then blam, 1 hit and the fight is over. obviously mma or other arts with sparring is more ideal than traditional martial arts that dont spar.
    if you want to break it down a perfect self defense oriented training is found within MMA, more specifically in order of importance wrestling, then add thai clinch with elbows, knees and sweeps. boxing for footwork then lowkicks to shin/knee/calf and finally some subs from BJJ. no friggin way i am going down voluntarily and pulling guard in an outside scenario or start roundhousing muh way to victory. i think prioritizing BJJ above other skills makes more sense if you are a woman, especially leg triangles, if you know what i mean.

  • @ives3572
    @ives3572 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    "Absorb what is useful, discard what is useless, and add what is specifically your own." - Bruce Lee

    • @randombencounter263
      @randombencounter263 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Stop quoting a movie actor who never fought anybody.

    • @ives3572
      @ives3572 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@randombencounter263 Keep yapping man!😁

    • @institches2750
      @institches2750 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@randombencounter263 Famous, wealthy, successful, well-liked. What's not to admire?

    • @trapdoorbeaver
      @trapdoorbeaver 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      just magically analyze stuff correctly its ez

    • @christianc.christian5025
      @christianc.christian5025 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@institches2750 I feel like this is a trick-question because anyone who answered with “Life-span” probably wins the game.

  • @captain_ares
    @captain_ares ปีที่แล้ว

    Alright alright, let's stop with centerline and start with hairline

  • @kevink.7678
    @kevink.7678 2 ปีที่แล้ว +162

    I see your well reasoned, logical argument and raise you a "nuh uh!"
    *sprints out of room swirling hands across head in a befuddling Keysi system tactical whirlwind of impenetrable three dimensional Dark Knight defensive gesturing

    • @trapdoorbeaver
      @trapdoorbeaver 2 ปีที่แล้ว +54

      dont fear a man who did one elbow once fear the man that did 10000 elbow variations like a windmill

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +44

      🤣 This is art!

    • @buckcherry2564
      @buckcherry2564 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Hey, if you ever had a bee come at your face, Keysi works really well! (also applicable against bats in a cave......wait a minute!!!)

  • @BusterReeko
    @BusterReeko 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Any chance we can divide the comments into two groups?
    1) Commenters that spar
    2) Commenters that don’t spar but know everything

  • @RamseyDewey
    @RamseyDewey 2 ปีที่แล้ว +104

    Have any of the wing chun nerds said “Chinese butterfly swords, not English long swords!” yet?
    If you want to witness one of the most pedantic nerdy arguments ever (next to who would win, Superman bs the Hulk) get a wing chun nerd and a Bagua Zhang nerd in the same room. They’ll never spar with each other, but they’ll argue all day about wing chun center line theory vs Bagua off-center theory.

    • @WernerBroennimann
      @WernerBroennimann 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      As a former wing chun nerd I actually thought: "this would apply to the butterfly swords/knives as well."
      I assume that this is where the idea comes from.

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      They have 100% brought up butterfly swords. But they're dumb weapons, so I ignored them 😆. Centerline is far more applicable to longswords than butterfly sword!
      What's Bagua's off-center theory? Just the concept of getting OFF the centerline?

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @@ArmchairViolence Yep, Bagua is pretty much a couple of simple footwork and hand fighting patterns to get off the centerline and flank the other guy.

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      Bagua: 1
      Wing Chun: 0

    • @seadawg93
      @seadawg93 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      …Bagua all day! 😂

  • @locky7443
    @locky7443 2 ปีที่แล้ว +199

    This lends evidence to a theory that I have had for a while now that most of wing chun's unarmed fighting is actually training drill for armed combat whose context has been forgotten. It just looks so similar to may of the warm up drill we do in HEMA and even the theory seems to match that of armed fighting.

    • @SwordTune
      @SwordTune 2 ปีที่แล้ว +48

      People often forget the double knife and staff aspects of wing chun

    • @sasoriko
      @sasoriko 2 ปีที่แล้ว +32

      All pre modern kung fu was based on melee weapons. You only fight with your hands when you're unarmed and the only position worse than being unarmed in armed combat is being grounded.

    • @squirrelbong
      @squirrelbong 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      As a long time WC practitioner in my youth I found this {WC evolving from weapons}theory ridiculous until recently, now it seems fully plausible. I think that hand to hand fighting was so localized and rudimentary that it only took a light change/advancement in theory for a 'new' style to be successful. This change in theory was WC's utilization of weapons and fencing theory applied to fighting. Look how quickly a single move {legs kicks?} in the UFC can change the meta and invalidate older skillsets. Just as new western styles have emerged {head movement!}and invalidated the majority of WC...sadly.

    • @peytonlacroix9331
      @peytonlacroix9331 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      It is. Did you watch ip man? When they fought with those big double knives. Yea that's what most of that is about . All of this we see is just garbage none of it comes from anyone who has fought

    • @jeffpartridge6454
      @jeffpartridge6454 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      This is also applicable to Xing Yi which focuses its movement down the center as it evolved from spear training techniques.

  • @metrolinamartialarts
    @metrolinamartialarts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    "Get your head off line!" is the extent of my motherline usage. lol

    • @anonperson3972
      @anonperson3972 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yeah, get off the centre line once someone attacks is the version I learnt from multiple traditional and modern martial arts

  • @alexkehoepwj
    @alexkehoepwj 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Your girlfriend is a saint for playing swords with you on youtube

    • @corymoore8562
      @corymoore8562 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Isn't she like a fencing or hema efficianado?

    • @institches2750
      @institches2750 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@corymoore8562 There's a video that says she was on a collegiate fencing team.

    • @alexkehoepwj
      @alexkehoepwj 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Damn im not caught up on the armchair lore

  • @silver_tongue9644
    @silver_tongue9644 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Bjj girl here
    The centaur line control is actually a grappling thing
    They move linearly to close the distance faster, u get in close and get your hands on the inside for collar ties and wrist fighting
    That’s what wing chung actually is, it’s what wrestlers call handfighting!
    If your opponent throws hooks and your fast enough (and very importantly close enough!), u can obtain inside elbow control which is crazy powerful
    It allows u to push them and the only way for them to disengage gives u a free strike

  • @katokianimation
    @katokianimation 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    You are 100% wrong. My win chung sensei who teaches center teseract theory totally teaches you how to defend yourself from infinite center planes while attacking the groins of your eyes and the eye of your groin.

    • @holeephuc007
      @holeephuc007 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Your wing teacher is japanese?

    • @Shiresgammai
      @Shiresgammai 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      My Wing Chun Sifu told me that if I train it for 20 years, I will become impervious against bullets. I wish I was kidding.

  • @vetrean
    @vetrean 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I'm a bit confused--yeah I'm sure there's strict and useless ideas of the centerline, but I always assumed it was just a way of thinking about and managing space? It's not very different from "straight punches hit fastest" and occupying that space with guards/smothers/your own blows. Even just throwing out a mummy guard, if you're not being an idiot with it. That's without talking about stepping off and footwork generally. It seems like there's lots of ways of understanding the centerline/direct paths that work just fine?
    Yeah, something something shoulders are off-center anyway, but that seems a deliberately narrow and uncharitable way of interpreting this. Lot of narrow and uncharitable ways practitioners apply this too, but. Y'know.

  • @jomess7879
    @jomess7879 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I haven't watched this yet, but I'm already excited for the comments and fallout

  • @justas423
    @justas423 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    It's both very annoying and very amusing how many Wing Chun practitioners comments are like "Center Line Theory is actually this" or "Wing Chun teaches you all about moving off-line".
    Wow, it's almost like there's no one consistent curriculum to your ancient chinese knife-less hand-trapping martial art. I'm not gonna learn 10 years of bad grip fighting when I can just practice the same concepts anywhere else but without a ton of bullshit attached.

  • @SMGstudios259
    @SMGstudios259 2 ปีที่แล้ว +134

    When I did chinese martial arts, my instructor de-mystified the center-line theory a bit by saying "the center" actually just refers to the opponent's spine, and that you have to disrupt his balance first in order to have a shot at making any of the techniques work. Kinda similar to making Judo throws work against a resisting opponent. I think wing chun should be looked at as more of a grappling art than a striking one. If you just stand still, stiff as a board and try to slap your opponents punches out of the way, it's not gonna end well.

    • @watamutha
      @watamutha 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Yeah that's pretty much how I understood it too...just throw your opponent off balance however way you can. Basically he's off balance and you're not.

    • @budisutanto5987
      @budisutanto5987 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I view it as hand wrestling art.
      One must overcome hand obstruction in order to touch target.

    • @savoirfaire6181
      @savoirfaire6181 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Totally agree. I learned Chinese mainland Wing Chun and my Sifu told me that centerline theory was flat wrong. He said instead to move offline to the outside, as a general rule. Kind of like triangle footwork in Kali. Centerline's only use was as a target to drive traps into since it contained center of mass and force driven into it would be most difficult to deal with. So step off line, drive opponent's guard into his center line in an aggressive attack which may involve striking with both arms at the same time with, one clearing his guard and the other attacking the target. It was all about how to attack opponent's center of mass while also attacking other targets simultaneously.

    • @ninjafeet7915
      @ninjafeet7915 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      But that's not what Wing Chun does or tries to do. We deflect the incoming blow by parrying it (making contact with it and deflecting it) as we turn "in stance" on our heels (with bent knees, and "sitting" down and over the rear leg, which moves you offline of the attack) creating/opening up a "new centreline" while simultaneously striking with the other hand. I think the guy in the video needs to take a few lessons in Wing Chun before he rights it off. He might just learn something 🤔

    • @ninjafeet7915
      @ninjafeet7915 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@savoirfaire6181 you can also get the same effect and stepping offline with turning if done properly. Maybe when you haven't got time to step

  • @jestfullgremblim8002
    @jestfullgremblim8002 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Lol i was going to try and argue but you're fucking right lol

    • @jestfullgremblim8002
      @jestfullgremblim8002 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Alright how about this!! 2:31 if we see how Wing Chun is used in movies (yeah that's stupid but as they use actual wing chun moves, pls bear with me), we can see that this is kind of what happens, yet the Wing Chun practitioners doesn't just mover their arm like that, they will mover the other one at the same time, may it be to block the incoming attack, or to create an attack themselves if their opponents doesn't throw something instantly. And this is basically the point of Wing Chun, because unless they go for a clinch or move away inmediately, you are succesfully trapping! in that specific scenario, things were going to look exactly like in Wing Chun forms, you wait for an attack (which is kind of a bad idea but...), block/parry it and then while you are making contact with them, you are supposed to "feel" their next attack, and then intercept it. Of course this is hard to with someone who is actually trying to hurt you, and even harder if they are trained, but it has it's uses, and in my opinion it can work in self defense against a untrained and violent attacker, as Wing Chun has a lot of block/parry chaining (many blocks that come one after the other) in their forms, meaning that they are meant for someone that is attacking you non-stop. Anyways, i would rather use Judo or something else lol

  • @jc-kj8yc
    @jc-kj8yc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    You kinda mention it earlier in the video: using the centerline approach isn't just getting off of it, but reestablishing it. You use lateral movement, for example a v step, to get off the opponent's centerline and put him in front of yours during. That concept can be found in pretty much all combat sports:
    Cut an angle in (kick-)boxing and hit with a straight punch, duck under in wrestling and take the back, side step in fencing and thrust, etc.
    It boils down to: don't stand in front of your opponent and try to face a side of him, that he can't defend.
    So technically Wing Tsun is correct. The method is just taught in an often unpractical way. The armed techniques make a little more sense though. The centerline guard you showed, is kinda neat when dual wielding short swords. You can establish range, constantly threat thrusts and parry most incoming blows with minimal movement.

  • @Almosteasyese
    @Almosteasyese 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I came to the realization in a longer path. Day 1 of Pekiti Tirsia Kali, " If you stay on centerline you are going to get hit/cut. "
    The footwork reflected that and took my striking to a new level.
    The next time I saw it emphasized to the same extent, was when people started to teach me how to box. The way my friends brother showed me to box, the centerline is fucking precious. Everything is a battle of positioning where you don't even wanna give up your shoulder line. The closest to pekiti tirsia footwork I've seen in empty hands, is boxing footwork used by guys like Willy Pep, or Tyson's D'Amato shifts. Dominick Cruz's ass too.
    I took...one winch chun lesson at a seminar from a dude who I think can use it. The funny thing is, that stuff is more likely to work when you're off their centerline. Which is why kali arm trappy stuff is more viable, bc it's closer to fighting for a wrestling two on one or arm drag vs trying to close off arms while you're in front of all his weapons ( and in position for him to shoot on you ).

    • @cold2thatuch
      @cold2thatuch ปีที่แล้ว +2

      kali likes to be on the outside and have constant movement too with grappling and head movement. wing chun gets murked by FMA

  • @TheQue5tion
    @TheQue5tion 2 ปีที่แล้ว +74

    Okay so, my instructor teaches wing chun as part of his system, and he has never spoken about center line as being a static central guard. He's always spoken about controlling it as in keeping yours pointed towards your opponent while keeping off of theirs. Or in short, keep them in front of you without being in front of them.
    As for protecting the centre line, you control it with your guard. So if you have your hands either side of your face, your center line is open but that means you dictate what options are available to your opponent, in this case strikes through the middle. If your guard is more centered (not exactly center though), then your opponent is more likely to go for outside shots as straights are easier for you to guard against.
    So being aware of your center line, and how your actions can be exploited, means you are better able to control a fight.
    This whole strike from the centre thing needs to stop too. You may be striking for the center (face, solar plexus etc), but your strikes are not coming from the centre. It's as bad as people thinking the one inch punch is a technique (it's not, it's a kinetic chain exercise) or that piston punches are devastating (they're not, they are weak but they are fast for the sake of overwhelming for a moment and clearing hands).

    • @rikudo282
      @rikudo282 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      As my teacher explained. Bruce and ip developed their theory based around their bodies... The had smaller frames than us, Bruce adapted this by putting on muscle while maintaining an insane regimen to maintain the power in his techniques. We overseas are naturally much bigger usually, wider... So we have to adapt the centerline theory with timing and power usually. Mike Tyson is a prime example of this. Ali as well as with Mike you could say he's swinging his centerline around where as Ali has his on a tilt. Ultimately though the core is the basis of the centerline in my op.... It's easier for a bigger person to focus on how to adapt their core movement vs trying to operate from centerline. Again, Tyson is a prime example. To sing his body around like that with his muscle mass would take a serious amount of core training just so he doesn't hurt himself by throwing his punches. Also he's too big to apply centerline as Bruce Lee did.

    • @rikudo282
      @rikudo282 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      All of that is just my speculation

    • @wynsonrao5177
      @wynsonrao5177 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What's a piston punch?

    • @OverSooll
      @OverSooll 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Go full contact against a thai boxer and see if it works, maybe you can

    • @rikudo282
      @rikudo282 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@OverSooll you'd have to be kyokushin conditioned and ready to face punch like a boxer.

  • @blue0eyes0knight
    @blue0eyes0knight ปีที่แล้ว +4

    i use a long guard for boxing which is controlling the centre line via "defensive traffic" and works very well against straight shots. It forces opponents to use slower and more easily detected hook shots.

  • @PabloTBrave
    @PabloTBrave 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Are you refering to the wing chun guard ( which i agree is a bit daft) or center line theory as they are vastly different? Centre line ( the line in the middle of the body) and central line ( the line bettween yours and your oponents center line) ( different things but usually used together not in isolation) is in Many many martials arts to one degree or another not just wing chun based ones

  • @GrizzlyHansen
    @GrizzlyHansen 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I know basically Jack shit about the striking part, but the HEMA was right. I love hearing the word Gambeson outside of the HEMA community. The long sword stance chosen is really only used for beginners or when fighting someone vastly better than you, I much prefer fool's guard or plow.

  • @jaketheasianguy3307
    @jaketheasianguy3307 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    "Generating power solely by stepping into your strike often fail to do sufficient damage"
    Shoot the point from Sprechfenster go brrrrr

    • @ehisey
      @ehisey 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Strangely this is almost exactly what Rocky Marciano recommend to do for generating power. He called it a "drop step"

    • @-_ellipsis_-5219
      @-_ellipsis_-5219 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ehisey there are many ways to generate power. As long as you accelerate sufficient mass with your hard parts into their soft parts, it will be enough

    • @ehisey
      @ehisey 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@-_ellipsis_-5219 I believe you missed the snark.

    • @-_ellipsis_-5219
      @-_ellipsis_-5219 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ehisey I'll take the L 😂

  • @IndividualfightingsystemsNet
    @IndividualfightingsystemsNet 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have seen several of your videos that I agree with and you are very knowledgeable however and very respectfully your video here misses the entire point of central line you are conflating Centerline and mother line which is a term that not every Wing Chun lineage uses but the idea of central line theory is the line that runs down your body or your opponent's body is where all of the vital targets are and when your Center Line is facing their Center Line that's where you can throw your most effective in plentiful barrage of empty-handed weaponry be it headbutts elbows knees kicks punches you have the widest variety available to you when your opponent is directly in front of you and you are directly in front of them all of your vital Targets on the front especially fall more or less in line with the center line if I worry about that and I keep my hands guarding Center Line then it is hard for you to get anything through and your punches have to come off and come further around if you deliver a straight shot to my face and you are coming at my face unless I move my head out of the way you were coming on my Center Line you may be in a different position so that's irrelevant but if I want to hit you in the bladder or the diaphragm or the lungs or the head I'm going to hit along the center line if hit the groin I hit on the center line if I hit the eyes I'm more or less along the center line Theory and the point that you're missing about Wing Chun is it's not even in punching range it's not in kicking range it's in that weird in between where you can't really punch with a lot of power but you can't quite get into standing grappling range when I am rushing you delivering a barrage of punches or kicks or whatever and you throw your arms up to do any kind of block cover your head whatever you are now on the center line and if we're in close range and your arm goes over the center of your body I can now use that movement of energy to throw you off balance and create my opening you're making it more than it is and Wing Chun doesn't even teach long sword they have a 9-ft pole but that's it I really wish you studied Wing Chun before you did this video I can show you a myriad of videos from almost every lineage that would completely dismantle everything you've said in this video and I washed it in its entirety on my other accounts before posting under my school account please do your research better if you need some videos and some books to read and you would like to find some knowledgeable link to an instructors that you can question and then race you this video I would be more than happy to give you these resources because there are some points to the problem of Centerline Theory and how closely it is followed very few if any of which you've actually hit

  • @CombatSelfDefense
    @CombatSelfDefense 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    You sound like someone who just doesn’t understand the ancient wisdom of Leung Ting and the black dragon wing chun society. I dare you to fight another wing chun practitioner (who isn’t me) and has never won a real fight themselves, but presents themselves as a real tough guy.
    Outside of that though, this is definitely one of your best videos to date. Great work!

    • @sunte91
      @sunte91 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      This comment made me chuckle, have a like 👍🏻

    • @aluisiofsjr
      @aluisiofsjr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That is funny. See you in Ramsey Dewey and Fight Commentary Breakdowns.

  • @notusingmyname4791
    @notusingmyname4791 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    spoken about as well as someone who doesn't understand wing chun, refuses to see his own contradictions about getting off the center line for HIS purposes but doesn't allow wing chun practitioners to do the same (which multiple lineages train to get off the centerline all the time), and doesn't understand how to generate power without a large wind up move to gain momentum.

  • @stephenrodriguez5203
    @stephenrodriguez5203 2 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    I did Wing Chun for a while... Never heard of this version of centerline.... I always thought it was in reference to your opponents and yours individual lines of balance and that the "centerline" was basically a pole in the center of u or ur opponent going from the floor to your head... In my mind the centerline was used to demonstrate balance and how to try and throw someone off balance while maintaining yours... But then my wing Chun teacher always taught us 50/50 stance as opposed to the 70/30 that most traditional wing Chun uses... So idk if other schools did teach this "center line plane" thing... Basically our centerline theory was to make sure we didn't hunch too forward or throw punches that over extended and messed with our balance, basically the main reason we fight up close to avoid that, and then we would as u demonstrated change positions (go off of the face to face line or whatever it's called) but still attacking our opponents centerline/centerpole/balance... basically if the opponent was "pushing" their energy and commiting to one direction we would change angles and let them over extend or get off balance and attack from a different angle

    • @IzzoWingChun
      @IzzoWingChun ปีที่แล้ว +5

      You remember well!

    • @savoirfaire6181
      @savoirfaire6181 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Yeah totally agree. This video is not referring to anything I know of as Wing Chun.

    • @kaoskronostyche9939
      @kaoskronostyche9939 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@savoirfaire6181 Same here. I'm starting to think this guy makes stuff up so he can criticize it. Everyone is wrong but him it seems to me. Cheers!

    • @savoirfaire6181
      @savoirfaire6181 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@kaoskronostyche9939 Controversy is a good strategy for social media algos I guess. He has good points but also burns straw men and chases red herrings.

    • @ninjafeet7915
      @ninjafeet7915 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      We are taught that there are 3 centreline, the one that runs through the body, central axis (you call pole) which we aim to (how deep we punch, to the centre of the opponent) which you have explain. The 2nd one runs down the front of the body. It's really a few inches thick. This is where all the soft spots are on the body (including the knee shin and ankle when the leg is forward. The 3rd one it the one that joins you to your opponent (badly and very wrongly described in this video). The hands to the elbows form more of a triangle (a lot of Wing Chun is based on the triangle because it is a strong shape for distribution of oncoming force). The centreline that connects you to your opponent move with your opponent. So if your opponent moves left or right, you turn to keep facing them so they have to come down your centreline. If they punch off centreline (a slower punch), we know they are going to come back onto the centreline because that's where the target is, eg, a hook. A hook can be beaten to the strike or it can be jammed at the elbow with a good Tan Sau and punch (stepping in) Wing Chun does not...in fact NEVER blocks of parrys outwardly as in this video. We pivot. If it's going to miss, why block. We call this chasing hands. By using a Tan Sau (for example) for the incoming punch, deflecting the force and not taking it all on, and punching with the other hand SIMULTANEOUSLY and hitting before the attack "has finished " as we turn (pivot on the heels) we punch down a "new" centreline. The one I'm looking down as I look at my opponent. The centreline is whichever way I'm facing (were my opponent is) it's not a "fixed" line

  • @Demonstormlord
    @Demonstormlord 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Interesting video! I like that you adressed how classic boxing uses the centerline concept. Even if only as a basic idea of where a counter straight is going to be, it's sound boxing to preemptively move your head away.
    I am curious as to what you make of sport fencing, specifically épée in this context. It's very niche, I'll admit, but when your weapon is entirely designed around poking in a straight line, do you think that the idea of a centerline holds more merit?

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      In the case of fencing, centerline definitely does hold more merit. Even the way I use longsword is very dependent on the centerline.
      In certain weapon arts, centerline can be very important. In fencing, it's actually a very large portion of the game. If you're always on centerline, you basically win lol

  • @areallybigdwarf4560
    @areallybigdwarf4560 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    5:44 As the coach screams "Get your head offline" and i ask myself what he means by it, as i ran face first into a one two, then i got what he meant

  • @matthewfullerton1416
    @matthewfullerton1416 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Centre line theory in competitive combat sports, does fencing count?

  • @marklawrence855
    @marklawrence855 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Question,have you ever trained properly in wing chun, like years of training not just for a short time! ?

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Nope. I wouldn't waste years of my life on something that only looks worse the more information I get about it.
      However, I have spent years learning striking and centerline concepts as they apply to weapons, so I do have good experience on whether you can apply the centerline to striking.

    • @marklawrence855
      @marklawrence855 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I have trained in wing chun now for 37 years, so probably wasn't a lot of my life 😅 😬 😜

  • @kalenberreman8252
    @kalenberreman8252 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Centerline can be good short hand for head and hand placement and movement.
    The real value of Wing Chun is the trapping and sticking, which isn’t going to work unless you actually practice fighting, and is better learned as a part of an overall martial arts game.

    • @jorel80
      @jorel80 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Right on. At my own WC school, the applications and techniques that were taught were very solid, but it fell apart due to lack of full movement sparring. Chi-sau became the substitute for sparring rather than a drill to improve sparring and i think that might be the case in alot of WC schools unfortunately. I still believe WC is a rich discipline with alot to offer combat sports if they would just step out of their own box for a minute and take some pointers from said combat sports. Like for example if a WC practitioner would get into some real kickboxing sparring and learn what its like to operate in that space (and get beat up a bit), I believe one could actually make WC shine in the clinch range once they've had some practical experience outside of their comfort zone. The tools are there but we're not really using them.

  • @taiwanontwowheels8214
    @taiwanontwowheels8214 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Off topic, but were you in drum line or marching band in high school?

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nope. Why do you ask?

    • @taiwanontwowheels8214
      @taiwanontwowheels8214 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Drummers spot fellow drummers. It must have been your metronome references.

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@taiwanontwowheels8214 Ah! You'll be glad to know that I have indeed played the drums! But like a drumset! So, you're still right!

  • @SwordTune
    @SwordTune 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Yes, but what about middle geometry hypothesis?

  • @user-ul6bm8pt2y
    @user-ul6bm8pt2y 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    So happy that you talked about longswords. Truly one of the few 'sports' where it really matters.
    But I would have hit through the first block :P

  • @Djimbe
    @Djimbe ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @armchairviolence you seem to know what a centerline IS. Cool. Your assumption that Centerline THEORY is comprised of "Keeping your centerline and that of your opponent aligned/Matched" is hilarious, And in fairness, I HAVE heard JKD ppl say that sillieness, but this is inaccurate and those ppl usually do Escrima and get confused from their mutt system.
    CENTERLINE THEORY IS SIMPLE AND EFFECTIFE IF PROPERLY UNDERSTOOD:
    1a) There are only 2 components: the CENTERline and the MOTHERline.
    now if you think of the human torso as a tube, like a meat filled banana bag...
    1a) the CENTERline appears on the surface of the tube and has the stuff you wish to defend - nutz, throat, solar plexus, chin, eyes, access to air, etc...
    1b) The MOTHERline is a pole running through the core of your meat-heavybag rom top to bottom. from the tip top of your skull to your taint. It is equally reached from the front and back and all sides. it is your longitudinal or vertical "center of mass" as it were, that runs directly from your North to South Poles and cannot be , by nature, on or near any surface.
    2) Managing the optimal relationship between these two distinct lines in combat.
    This is achieved simply, and doesnt allow complication:
    Keep your opponents Centerline pointed away from your Motherline while pointing your Centerline at your opponents Motherline. The Mata Leon position or "Backpack" is the pinnacale of this Idea - put yourself in the greatest position to harm your opponent while keeping your soft bits furthest away from his weapons.
    Thats it.
    And Centerline theory WORKS . In EVERY system.
    If this video was entitled "Most WC/VT ppl dont even understand centerline theory themselves, LOL" I would have had no argument. But just because knowledge has been lost doesnt make the knowledge itself inaccurate - do you realise how many American college students cant name 5 countries??? You yourself seem to demonstrate a decent understanding of how Centerline theory ACTUALLY works in this video alone.

  • @maxanderson3733
    @maxanderson3733 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This video is going to sting a _little_ bit lmfao! This theory actually helped my ADHD brain simply the sometimes(for me)overwhelming complexity of Striking. Hyped to learn and progress regardless📝

  • @Maodifi
    @Maodifi 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Dude, THANK you. Regardless of your style, if you hang out in the “center line” in unarmed combat, you’re just gonna have a shit time. We’ve gotta learn (those of us that practice styles that are based on weapon use) that there are some horrible false cognates when we translate weapons to empty hand. It can’t be done without rigorous testing.

    • @Xur______
      @Xur______ ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Wing Chun doesn't advocate doing that though, they typically teach to NOT he in your opponents centerline, ie get off angle.

  • @BWater-yq3jx
    @BWater-yq3jx ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Of course, WC punches DO originate from and come down the centreline,
    so Wing Chun is excellent against itself... 😆
    like rather a lot of traditional martial arts. 😉
    The weapons perspective is insightful, and reflects my own realisations about the unarmed blocking techniques of TMA's versus the covering techniques used in MMA etc.
    Intercepting someone swinging a staff at you makes more sense than covering and wearing it. Conversely, trying to block flurries of rapid-fire punch combos is a game of catch-up you will eventually lose - covering is better for that.

  • @TonyqTNT
    @TonyqTNT ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The people in Indonesia have effective, practical, and comprehensive fighting arts called Silat. Silat protects the center and outside areas of the body as well! Silat has striking, wrestling, grappling, joint locking movements that provide self-defense and build up the person's mind, body, and spirit!!!

  • @RettyMako
    @RettyMako ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think Wing chun uses centerline because it was originally practiced with butterfly swords. I might be wrong but many of the trapping/sticky arms, etc, techniques were come up with so that you can deflect and control the opponents weapon. Just my theory though

  • @huansitoaguilar9405
    @huansitoaguilar9405 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So from your understanding Bruce Lee , Ip Man & Bak Mei didn't teach to attack the legs from time to time while also attacking { & blocking any offense coming from the opponent } the vital points in the center line { nose , mouth , chin , throat , solar plexus , sternum , stomach , bladder & groin } : I've used center line theory while stduying other arts and it has served me well [ perhaps you haven't been in fights ] unless you can relocate these vital points I would advice you to reconsider this flawed theory of yours . Just noticed your channel name , so you just a theorist of violence not a survivor of violance ; you need to shut that screen off and step outside to truelly live life and actually understand the multiple things that can be learned not just from actually studying martial arts one on one , defending yourself in a fight but the different things learned from martial arts humbleness , tact , patience etc etc etc ; things that can't be learned through a screen or through osmosis .

  • @kickyourfacification
    @kickyourfacification 2 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    “Punches come ur feet 👣 not ur shoulders.”~Jack Dempsey

    • @วิชชากรสุขวัฒน์
      @วิชชากรสุขวัฒน์ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Depend on person sty in Tyson Case Peekaboo use your Whole Body not just feets so it Depend on Sty alone.

    • @sangvi2849
      @sangvi2849 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      But the fist does come form shoulders

    • @chopsueykungfu
      @chopsueykungfu 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@sangvi2849 nope, from the elbow! Power come from the feet.

    • @sangvi2849
      @sangvi2849 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@chopsueykungfu nope, from the wrist

  • @ReneADreifuss
    @ReneADreifuss 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    This is so awesome!! I have said something similar (though not as eloquently as you) for some time, and have mentioned this in my podcast. Bad hand-to-hand concepts sometimes are good weapons concepts. I think this is why so many WC practitioners gravitate to weapons like sticks i.e.Kali etc. as it makes intuitive sense to them, whereas much of modern functional combat sports arts do not. While I can't speak for the Chinese tradition in depth I can say that much bad hand to hand combat from the Japanese tradition is actually weapon combat movements and weapon combat footwork. Wing Chun makes much more sense if you put two swords in their hands. That being said, your points on footwork are very apt and absolutely true. I have heard some stories that arts that do not stress foot work developed in places where foot work was less possible, like tight alleyways or swampy jungles etc. Anyway this video was fantastic!! Thank you!!!!

  • @Zz7722zZ
    @Zz7722zZ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have a nagging feeling the WC centreline theory is not quite what you made it out to be, but then again I don't do Wing Chun, so maybe I'll shut up.

    • @waderogers776
      @waderogers776 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You're correct....there's much more to it.

  • @CashewNuts0
    @CashewNuts0 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    If controling the center line is so effective at defending, why are most knockouts from circular strikes? The kick that knocks out people the most is the roundhouse and for punches there's the hook. None of those come from or target the central line.

  • @Seanobi32
    @Seanobi32 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Interesting points made here. What is the name of the outro song?

  • @aegisprotection4969
    @aegisprotection4969 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Centerline theory the way Armchair describes and illustrate it is not very useful.
    It is also the most simplistic and literalistic interpretation. I have seen quite a few WC schools teach it that way. And at least as many that do not.
    As he said, different lineages. Different teachers within a lineage.
    The differences I see generally depend on how much fighting the schools do.

  • @danidsds
    @danidsds 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The wide eye when she changed the centerline too, lol. Cracked me up

  • @bolsack8902
    @bolsack8902 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Well they don’t call it center line but my wrestling coach (at a bjj school not regular wrestling) talks about a bull rush style double where you use your somewhere on the center line to do a blast double without having to do a full shot

  • @l0rf
    @l0rf 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Guess who just lost all their social credit though. Checkmate, counter-revolutionaries.

  • @warningshotpodcast
    @warningshotpodcast 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m a wing chun practitioner in need of testing my skills. I’d be happy to spar you.

  • @sentientmartialarts
    @sentientmartialarts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Through time the concept of the centerline has become something of a mythical creature were if you conquare it you will become the ultimate fighter. The truth is Wing Chun's theory of the centerline is not what you are talking about in this video. What you are talking about is a bad and common theory that Wing Chun center line comes from the front and refers to the center of the opponent's body. The truth is that the Center line theory is in terms of feeling your center axis (vertical axis) and from there have a peripheral of attacks. So if you are looking dead ahead and you have to punch on the right then if you are still rooted, still in control of the center (of your balance!!!) then that punch is within the centerline. So centerline refers to the center line that passes through your center axis, and all blocks, covers attacks should begin with a good feeling of that center. Even if very correctly you would use a high cover, box cover, chin down type of stance.

    • @waderogers776
      @waderogers776 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you,...someone on here understands what 'centerline' is all about. Real WC is about mobility, using hips to rotate energy into punching, and ultimately keeping yourself centered (while taking your opponents balance). I blame a lot of this ignorance on WC schools that teach 'Franken-chun'...where the fighter stands like Donny Yin in an awful Ip Man movie. Which has done a lot of harm to actual WC concepts. WC concepts are to be learned and 'expressed' based on the individuals size, weight, and personality....it's your WC.

  • @Taekwon-Brando
    @Taekwon-Brando 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I don't think you understand how much lateral movement is used in wing chun

  • @mjolnir9855
    @mjolnir9855 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So in Wing Chun, they do only guard the centerline and bate the opponent to attack their defenseless areas. However, the belief is that when an attack comes in circularly, then your straight attacks will defeat them. Problem is, like you pointed out, one can easily just step off to create a different centerline. So the one they're still holding is now useless. This is why I believe that all Kung Fu was originally 90% grappling, and the striking arts started from self defense, not 1 vs 1 freestyle fighting. For example, there's a lot of hikite (pulling hand) techniques in Karate. But that pulling hand only works as and actual pull when you are in a grappling range and combat starts from self defense. So when someone puts their hands on you and you respond from a natural position, some of this centerline theory stuff might actually be valid. But that's only because you're controlling the fight from a very close position given that the fight started in a self defense situation. But as soon as we start 1vs 1 freestyle fighting, the centerline goes completely off the rails.

  • @hellfrozen9971
    @hellfrozen9971 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think center line people have only played 2d games,never tried 3d😂😂

  • @blynmusic
    @blynmusic 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Funny how an actual TH-cam nerd is calling other people nerds while wearing a Batman t-shirt 😂 somebody please stop this nerd on nerve violence it's getting out of hand

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      "Nerd on nerd violence" is a great phrase. 😂 I feel like I have to work that into a future video

    • @blynmusic
      @blynmusic 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ArmchairViolence your response makes me like you more ...if I didn't know any better I would say that you successfully used reverse psychology on me and if that's the case I'd like to say well played Nerd.(tips hat)

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@blynmusic I call people nerds because it's way funnier when a nerd calls other people nerds 😆

  • @artofninelimbs5930
    @artofninelimbs5930 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Keep in mind that bruce lee decided that traditional martial arts are bullshit after he learned wing chun

  • @AK_UK_
    @AK_UK_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    4:25 Hi AV stepping into your strikes doesn't cause damage? What did you mean? In my experience it definitely does. Interesting video BTW!

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It means that swinging or extending your arm and/or rotating your body is important in gathering enough kinetic energy to matter. Stepping forward without significantly moving your arm results in a very low-speed impact.
      Many wing chun practitioners claim that commanding centerline allows you to simply step forward to hit your opponent. But they advocate relatively little arm movement and almost no hip rotation. That means that the punch might have a lot of weight behind it, but it will be moving very slowly.

    • @AK_UK_
      @AK_UK_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ArmchairViolence makes sense. Thanks Bro

  • @joejoelesh1197
    @joejoelesh1197 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @1:00 , oh... I was about to chime in about controlling the line in my tradition along with how and why it works. Then you immediately addressed my tradition (although vaguely). My tradition includes Liechtenauer & Meyer :-)
    You run that later are you clarified that there's a lot of actions (most) where the express point is to get off the line.

  • @davidviskovich5632
    @davidviskovich5632 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hey man great video. Curious to get your take on Richard Dimitris shredder principle (Sinshiedo)

    • @ArmchairViolence
      @ArmchairViolence  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      After watching a little bit of it, he has some valid views (12-6 elbows do not stop someone from taking you down, grapplers often crush strikers, certain moves are only useful from the right range, etc.) and he's clearly paid attention to actual fights.
      There's nothing inherently wrong with the shredder principle, but he's dramatically overapplying it. He starts to dismiss punches and even the rear-naked choke in favor of the shredder. He claims that a RNC can take 5-12 seconds to choke someone out (true) and that that is too long (false). So he advises using the other hand to shred their face while finishing the choke. All that does is risk losing the actual choke, and gives your opponent an opportunity to escape.
      It seems that his entire concept of fighting boils down to "fight dirty," which isn't exactly new or revolutionary. Plus, it's inherently escalatory, which I've explained in other videos.
      He's trying to sell scratching, gouging, and biting as an entire method of fighting, which it's not. It's a small set of moves with a fairly narrow application in both the continuum of force and in tactically winning a fight.
      And, against a trained fighter, I highly suspect that it won't work at all. Mainly because we already do a lot of those things in sparring. Pushing the face, smothering, chin straps, pulling the nose, cranking their neck, etc. That's a normal part of BJJ rolling, and it doesn't do much. It's either used to bait a reaction in setting-up a specific move, or it's just used to annoy them. I don't think I can remember a single time that any of those moves altered the outcome of a roll/match. Granted that that doesn't include things like eye gouges and biting, but it's still a noticeable percentage of what he teaches. What he calls the "soft shred" is perfectly legal in MMA, BJJ, and wrestling. And it just doesn't do much. The idea that you "can't stop it" is wrong. When you're already on the ground, the shredder puts your hands in a very precarious position, and you need fairly extensive grappling skills in order to keep your arms safe from a trained fighter. There are absolutely times when I would use something similar, but only for very specific purposes and only because I have the grappling skills to keep myself safe against most people. If I put my hands on a black belt's face, I would almost immediately lose my arms.
      I know he's claimed to have used it on grapplers and even BJJ black belts, but I can't find any of those videos.
      Plus, stopping a BJJ guy from taking you down really isn't impressive. Even a lot of black belts have 0 effective takedowns. Doing it to a black belt when you're already on the ground would likely be a different story.
      My disclaimer on all of this is that I might not have the full picture because I could only watch like 30 minutes of his explanation before I was overpowered by cringe and had to turn it off. So, I haven't seen everything, but what I have seen is not great.

  • @quefreemind5698
    @quefreemind5698 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I think positional advantage is a better concept. Putting yourself in a position where are more likely to be able to hit your opponent and they are less likely to hit you. Not being directly in front of your opponent (or on their centerline) is the most simple way to gain positional advantage. It’s a small part of a larger concept

  • @botanicalbiohacking6065
    @botanicalbiohacking6065 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Nailed it, wing chun is a weapon art. Most traditional arts are in fact weapon arts. The rest is just marketing.

    • @jorel80
      @jorel80 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think thats why in traditional WC systems, the weapons are taught last. Those weapons are simplistic so that the techniques can be adapted for whatever weapon you happen to be using. My Sifu said, although he was purposely exagerating a bit, was that the whole system is basically designed to teach you how to use the knives (butterfly swords, whatever), everything else is preliminary.

  • @SwordTune
    @SwordTune 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    How you describe the use of the centre line or centre space is how I think of it for Wing Chun. Now, do many wing chun schools teach it like that? Mmm... I choose not to acknowledge that reality with an answer.