Tai Chi as Sport

Tai Chi as Sport

In order to standardize tai chi chuan forĀ wushu tournament judging, and because many of the family tai chi chuan teachers had either moved out of China or had been forced to stop teaching after theĀ Communist regime was established in 1949, the government sponsored the Chinese Sports Committee, who brought together four of their wushu teachers to truncate the Yang family hand form toĀ 24 postures in 1956. They wanted to retain the look but create tai chi as sport routines that were less difficult to teach and much less difficult to learn than longer (generally 88 to 108 posture), classical, solo hand forms in tai chi classes.

In 1976, they developed a slightly longer form also for the purposes of demonstration that still didn’t involve the complete memory, balance and coordination requirements of the traditional forms. This was theĀ Combined 48 Forms that were created by three wushu coaches, headed by Professor Men Hui Feng. The combined forms were created based on simplifying and combining some features of the classical forms from four of the original styles; Chen, Yang, Wu, and Sun. As tai chi as sport again became popular on the mainland, more competitive forms were developed to be completed within a six-minute time limit. In the late-1980s, the Chinese Sports Committee standardized many different competition forms. They developed sets to represent the four major styles as well as combined forms. These five sets of forms were created by different teams, and later approved by a committee of wushu coaches in China, and disseminated for tai chi instruction. All sets of forms thus created were named after their style, e.g., the Chen Style National Competition Form is theĀ 56 Forms, and so on. The combined forms areĀ The 42 Form or simply theĀ Competition Form. Another modern form is theĀ 67 movements Combined Tai-Chi Chuan form, created in the 1950s, it contains characteristics of the Yang, Wu, Sun, Chen and Fu styles blended into a combined form. The wushu coachĀ Bow Sim Mark is a notable exponent of the 67 Combined.

These modern versions of tai chi chuan (sometimes listed using theĀ pinyin romanization Tai ji quan) have since become an integral part of international wushu tournament competition (tai chi as sport), and have been featured in several popularĀ Chinese movies starring orĀ choreographed by well known wushu competitors, such asĀ Jet Li andĀ Donnie Yen.

In the 11thĀ Asian Games of 1990, wushu was included as an item for competition for the first time with the 42 Form being chosen to represent tai chi as sport. TheĀ International Wushu Federation(IWUF) applied for wushu to be part of theĀ Olympic games, but will not count medals.

Practitioners also test their practical martial skills(tai chi as sport) against students from other schools and martial arts styles in pushing hands and sanshou competition.