Hey, most of the fighters have to adapt to the arena they will use their fighting for. The Shaolin monk and the Thai Boxer were fighting under kick boxing rules and in a kick boxing arena.
OK, then this video doesn't have anything to do with your point. You keep on talking about how restrictive the rules are in the
UFC. Why show this video?
Lyoto Machida's main art is karate. If you ask him about it, that is what he will tell you

. That particular video of him winning, showed him winning with strikes. Also, there are karate and kung fu systems out there that use boxing like punches as well. Of course, he has BJJ qualifications as well, but I chose that particular fight to show you that he could win solely by striking and he did win using a karate technique.
If all he knew was karate, he wouldn't survive in the UFC. Period. He is an MMA fighter. Yes and MMA fighters win sometimes with strikes (that doesn't make them karatekas) and sometimes they win with submission grappling (that doesn't make the jiu-jitsu guys)
Another factor to keep in mind is that traditional karate and kung fu styles have takedown defenses. The fake schools will probably not teach these techniques and just go for the flashy stuff to get customers - rather like the flash and trash used by some teachers to attract dance students.
Yeah. I hear a lot about how my art has ground fighting in it. But it turns out that they invariably suck in comparison to BJJ. Maybe they have takedown defenses special to their art but the guy in your video did a standard wrestler sprawl. Maybe this is also known as the "crouching tiger takedown defense technique"?
The Wing Chun guy who fought the Thai boxer in the school challenge did so having in mind that his opponent was a striker. The same goes for the challenge in the karate school. Some BJJ and judo guys may have better ground fighting, but what if they got hit in the face and did not get the chance to do their takedown?
They were slapping each other like teenage girls. Their stance would not have stopped a wrestling shoot. Maybe the
BJJ guy would have taken one punch...then their on the ground and the fight is over. Seriously, I don't think you know
much about grappling.
Furthermore, I will mention again that there are a few Wing Chun (and other kung fu) lineages that practice ground fighting. The notion that kung fu styles never address the ground scenario is a myth. Kung fu has been practiced in China for thousands of years and it is a fact that wrestling arts have existed in that country even before kung fu was developed.
Yeah. Even Judo claims they ground fight. (Which in general they don't do very well....I've rolled with lots of
judo black belts and have not had much trouble submitting them). I've never seen or heard of anyone being submitted at the Abu Dhabi submission grappling tournament by someone using Wing Chun ground fighting. Please enlighten me if I'm mistaken.
In some combat scenarios, it is difficult to recognize the individual art being used, but sometimes the principles of the art there. Wing Chun itself is an art that is based around principles, such as the central line theory; jaming theory, etc. Even so, I will agree that the first example did not look like WC, but the guy trains under a wing chun instructor - Alan Orr - the chief instructor for the Chu Sau Lei lineage of Master Robert Chu in the UK (possibly Europe).
OK. So we'l throw this video out.
I would also like to mention. During my time in Rio, I would hear about BJJ guys getting in fights and trouble. Sometimes this got into the local news. I don't recall once hearing that one of them submitted or choked out his opponent. I am saying that this never happens in street scenarios, but the fact is people are not inclined to go to the ground in some back allie or during a bar fight, because the cement is harder than the training mat for one. Secondly, third parties can join in and kick one's head in. So, no matter how good one's ground fighting is, if he hesitates to take the fight to the ground, then he is vulnerable to attacks from a striker.
I'm not saying BJJ is the end all. Remember, I'm saying MMA is the end all.
The above videos showed strikers from traditional systems doing their thing. Here is another one of a traditional karate expert against a wrestler in a ring fight setting:
Karate vs Judo:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=1Yn93MdJTUs&feature=endscreen
My point is that whatever your art as long as it is a good one, then you can mostly (not always) adapt it to the sports scenario.
Finally! I totally agree with this. Aaaaaannnnnnddd the evidence shows that in general (with a very small number of exceptions) various arts and techniques DO NOT WORK. Striking is simpler than grappling. Striking has a small number of
effective principles that have to be present.....boxing, kick boxing, mu thai, some karates can teach effective striking. I give you that. Then there are grappling skills. BJJ, Wrestling, and to a much lesser extent Judo are overwhelmingly preeminent. The point is that an MMA artist has to be good at both. There is NO traditional MA that effectively incorporates both. MMA is new and very very effective. Nothing traditional equals it.