The advantages of a Tai Chi boxer are good balance ability, stable lower body, and strong abdominal resistance to blows. As long as the arms are in contact with the opponent, they can use various methods of tapping, stroking, squeezing, pressing, picking, etc. Attacking with techniques such as thrusts, elbows, and leans provides you with a continuous threat; the disadvantage is that it starts slowly, and you are afraid of hitting with broken points. The impact is cold and quick, and you often cannot keep up with the rhythm when "fighting" quickly. Another point is that Tai Chi focuses on the mid-section attacks of the hands, arms, shoulders, hips, etc., and rarely uses the legs, knees, and feet to attack, and it is easy to avoid high legs, so it is not difficult to prevent the opponent's lower body attack. Technical and tactical countermeasures: When you are not familiar with the opponent's details, use more jabs to test. Once the opponent shows a flaw, be brave enough to attack and punch in quick combos. If the opponent is already in a hurry, it proves that the opponent is a "novice" and simply Take advantage of the victory and win in the chaos; if the opponent is more sophisticated and your attack fails to succeed, you should retreat quickly and avoid being "tangled" by the opponent. When fighting against an experienced player, you must maintain your shape and strength, control your "center of gravity" at all times, avoid double-crossing, and not attack rashly. In addition, you must use false moves to test, lure the enemy into making moves, and look for patterns. After figuring out the opponent's "path", use your own Sanda techniques to attack. If the two sides are in a "stalemate" and you always suffer losses in "hand-to-hand combat", you must change your tactics, dodge more, use more kicks to volley the opponent's middle and lower plates, and seize the opportunity to control the distance with side kicks to prevent the opponent from "sticking" upwards. If you are "hanged" by the opponent, don't be afraid, let alone break away forcefully, otherwise it will be easy for the opponent to "borrow your strength" and simply get close to you and use strong methods such as uppercuts, knees, and elbows. If you are good at wrestling , it comes in handy at this time, and the chance of knocking the opponent down is very high. Tai Chi emphasizes preemptive strikes and rational attack and defense. You need to change the rhythm more frequently, tease the opponent, and disturb the opponent's mind. If the opponent is emotional, he will attack blindly and ignore defense. You can seize the gap and counterattack decisively... The techniques and tactics I mentioned can be handled by ordinary Tai Chi practitioners. If you encounter someone with a high level, it is another matter, because when there is a huge difference in strength (similar to the principle of adults beating children), no matter how good the techniques and tactics are, they will not be able to cope with it. Determine the outcome of victory or defeat. The purpose of exchanging skills is to make friends with each other and improve together, not to be brave and ruthless, let alone to easily form enemies. In a private contest, the best strategy is to "submit", which is to go all the way, to defeat the opponent with "literacy" and save face for the opponent; the worst strategy is to "subdue", to defeat the opponent with "force" and not save face. You can use the best policy when dealing with people who communicate sincerely, but you can only use the worst policy when dealing with arrogant and arrogant people.