Sal Bertucci wrote:I've never studied sword&dagger, but I have looked at sword&buckler, but I had a question. I was sparring with S&D and since I didn't know any correct stances I used S&B stances. Mainly Wrath and the one where you hold the sword under your buckler arm. I noticed that I had a lot of success. So my question is: Is this a sound theory, or was this "something that happened to work b/c the people I was sparring weren't vary good?"
It's probably a bit of both. You'll discover when you start looking at various manuals from across different centuries that there are only so many guards. When you think about it, this makes sense, because there's only so many ways to use a sword. And while some masters seemed to have more guards named and listed than others, most if not all of these guards are some sort of variants on Liechtenauer's basic four plus the tail guard. So it's natural that sword and buckler wards will function for sword and dagger.
That having been said, sparring inexperienced people makes a significant difference too. You can often get away with things against untrained opponents that will not work against someone with more skill. And so I'd suggest that this was also a contributing factor too.
Try keeping your sword and dagger paired together, and using one to parry an attack while counterattacking with the other.