Postby Gene Tausk » Wed Jan 04, 2006 10:08 am
Bill:
If you are talking about Olympic style sabre fencing, then you are talking about a very restrictive sport that has nothing in common with ARMA or authentic historical fencing. There is no grappling, the weapon used in sabre fencing is not a weapon at all but a replica of a sabre that is incredible lightweight and in no way represents a true sabre. All attacks and defenses are on a linear strip which does not allow for traversing movement (hence unrealistic movement). As stated, it is a very restrictive sport far removed from any type of historical fencing or martial foundation. The "advantage" of this system is, of course, that it provides a set of artifical rules that can be impartially "scored."
I have never fenced with any Olympic style weapon (foil, epee, sabre) so I am in no position to judge as to whether "brute strength" will help you in this regard. However, I have seen competitive Olympic fencers and their training methodology seems to focus on linear speed, which makes sense given the rule structure of Olympic fencing.
I wish you luck with your endevour, but I would ask you to remember that (once again, if this is Olympic style sabre fencing) what you are learning has nothing to do with ARMA. Both John Clements and Stacy Clifford (a former Olympic style sabre fencer) have written about the restrictions of sabre fencing and why it has no applications to ARMA.
Also, I want to correct a possible misconception. You stated that "The problem with longsword fighting is that the competition and judging is not standardized, every study group makes its own rules." ARMA's purpose is not to engage in competition. If there is to be competition, then there naturally needs to be rules and restrictions which leads to an artificial structure which does not simulate actual combat. One of ARMA's purposes is the re-creation of European fighting arts as they existed for the battlefield. This means that when ARMA members spar each other, they do so with a full range of techniques which allows for, as much as reasonably possible, open combat. We view such sparring as learning experiences, not competition to determine who is "better" or to get a higher "ranking."
It was the formation and creation of artificial systems such as Olympic fencing that led to the necessity of ARMA in the first place. So, once again, keep in mind that what you will be learning in the sabre fencing class is not related to ARMA. If you find that "brute strength" is of assistance to you in sabre fencing, or if you find that it makes no difference or is a hinderance, please remember that your observations will be limited only to Olympic sabre fencing, not ARMA or historical fencing.
Good luck in any case.
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Study Group Leader - Houston ARMA Southside
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