The mass combat Sunday morning at the International Gathering was very entertaining but left me a bit frustrated. Afterwards, John C. showed us a few things to keep in mind when fighting in groups. What stuck in my mind was that he would be thinking "one against many" while was outnumbered whereas the others would generally be fighting "one on one" even though they would outnumber him. And so, John showed us different ways to tie up multiple opponents and remove their advantages.
Looking back, the whole time we were fighting it seemed like just about everyone was fighting one on one. Some succeded by being better fighters. Some were able to employ "one against many" techniques. But I did not see anyone fighting as a group.
The one against many should not have the advantage. The group should have the advantage. Instead of "one on one" or "one against many" we should have been thinking "many against one" or "many against many." We need to learn how to fight as a group.
John showed us an example of how he might fight a group of three my rotating around their flank. Essentially, he only fight the one guy on the end as the rest of them have to walk or run to swing around to join the fight. This makes sense and is fairly intuitive. It works well as long as the three are fighting "one on one." But what should they do instead? When the lone fighter engages the person on the end and starts to move around the flank, let the end fighter rotate back. The middle fighter becomes the fixed point which the other two can move around. This should continually present a line formation to the individual fighter. If the individual fighter is too fast and has already stacked the three, let the engaged fighter become the new center and the other two take up positions on his or her flank. This was, the three fighters work as a cohesive group instead of as individuals trying to take out a lone person.
