1997 British Open Chinese Martial Arts Championships: -80Kgs Final |
Friday, 7 July 2017
On push hands competitions...
A common phenomenon at competitions is the
sight of those on the sidelines shaking their heads and criticising the
competitors. These armchair experts
quote Taijiquan ideals such as “using four ounces to uproot a thousand pounds” and
“using softness to overcome hardness“, to pour scorn on the contestants, none
of whom measure up to their standards of what Taijiquan should be. The criticism is often unfair. Firstly, most of the critics have never put
themselves into the competitive arena and experienced for themselves the
performance-sapping effects of nerves and pressure.
Secondly, the sayings represent a perfect
model that all Taijiquan exponents aspire to.
For example, “giving up yourself to follow others” requires an
individual to remain circular within their postural framework, sticking and
following an opponent without losing contact.
At the same time maintaining agility and sensitivity throughout with the
ability to assess the opponent’s attacks and determine the distance, direction,
speed and power of any threat. All the
while maintaining the ability to assess and respond to minute changes. Following the opponent’s posture and
borrowing his strength rather than resisting reaching a stage of being able to
react according to the situation. To
reach a stage where you can do this is no easy task, so perhaps it is a bit
unfair to criticise the average competitor for not living up to these ultimate
standards. After all, no one would
expect a club runner to keep up with Usain Bolt, so one should not be too
surprised when an average competitor does not live up to the standard of the great masters.
It is important to make the distinction
between modern push hands competitions and the hitting or connecting hands of
the past. Before techniques such as
throwing, seizing and striking were used, not dissimilar from today’s sanda and
sanshou. Much of what Taijiquan uses for
self defence is prohibited in tournament style competition, and whenever a
fighter’s arsenal of techniques are restricted, inevitably what they can do is
weakened and diluted. For this reason
competitions are viewed as sport rather than real combat.
Competitions are best viewed as a testing
ground to see what does and does not work for an individual and then, with this
feedback, to adjust their training accordingly.
If the competitors have trained hard and developed some degree of
rooting, balance and neutralising skill then they should not be too worried
about being taken or thrown by an opponent.
Without ever being tested many practitioners continue to walk around
with a false sense of their true level of martial skill. That said, you
shouldn’t put too much importance on sporting competition. At the end of the
day push hands competitions take place in an arena with rules and referees and
is not the same as real combat, and techniques that win a point may be less
effective in the unforgiving real world.
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Right, and those are the critics who actually show up to the competitions! A vast number of others are also snubbing them from afar.
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