Addiction to all forms of martial arts 45 years.
Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
Jason Taylor wrote:Jay Vail wrote:Although BJJ type ground methods are the fashion today, using them in WMA with the sword is probably not authentic or faithful to the methods of the masters. The manuals show few if any ground based techniques and most of those support the use of the dagger to finish the opponent on the ground. Talhoffer (1467) shows a couple of pinnings which then rely upon the dagger. The Gladiatoria shows seven pinning techniques for use with the dagger.
Von Danzig has this to say about wrestling and swordplay:Now you should know that, for the most part, all fight in single combat in harness comes in the end to dagger fighting and to wrestling. Therefore note, when you close with an opponent, then attend to nothing else but the wrestling and let your dagger stay in its scabbard, because you cannot hurt him through the harness as long as he is standing before you and hinders your hand. When you secure him with the wrestling or have thrown him and have overcome him, then work with the dagger to the openings that you will find explained hereafter, and that have already been explained.
Paulus Kal, "In Service of the Duke," Tobler trans. (Chivalry Bookshelf 2007), p. 212.
So while BJJ style grappling is fun and may be profitable for the unarmed man, the dynamic changes dramatically when a dagger comes into play. And since every man of the age carried a dagger, it seems fairly clear to me that ground wrestling, to the extent there was any, was brief and ended when the dagger was drawn.
Try this yourself. Arm yourselves with daggers and then try ground grappling and see how long that lasts before somebody gets "stabbed."
I've done this, and I timed it. .078 seconds.Just kidding (though it's not much of an exaggeration).
When I've had beginner students below me in my EMA school who think that BJJ is the end-all be-all, and who want to take me down and "submit " me in sparring, I have been known to strap a rubber knife in a cardboard sheath to my leg with strapping tape, and then let them do it. The result was not only comedic for my watching instructor, but enlightening for my student, who had lost a kidney and a chunk of his intestines before he even knew what was happening.
And before that, I'd never really fought much on the ground with a knife. No skill is required really to inflict serious, serious damage in that situation.
Jason
Mike Cartier wrote:I agree with Jay, but thats also a great reason to train ground fighting.
Anythime you try to throw someone or defend from being thrown you can both end up on the ground, BJJ just gives you some options on the ground when you are in a bad position.
I have pulled of great throws before but ended up underneath as we hit the ground, in which case i was much better off to remain standing but thats where the BJJ training kicks in and you should then be using it to get to a more favorable or neutral position.
I like throws but i find that as a small guy when i open up my base by trying to throw someone i can get thrown myself alot easier so i tend to prefer less dramatic type takedowns.
JeffGentry wrote:
Hey gent's
Last night at practice Myself and one of our guy's(Jaron Bernstein) were doing our sword thing as we usualy do and he went to take me down with a body lock and I stuffed it so it didn't happen and the first thing he did as usualwas drop his sword and try again and so I called a halt because i still had my sword.
Now the reason I tell this story, I have told our guy's on numerous occasion's to not be so hasty dropping there weapon, becasue at the point he dropped his weapon I wanted to take him down, I stopped the bout and then demonstrated how difficult it would be to even defend himself with a weapon when I was sitting on his chest.
I had him lay on his back and gave him his sword, I then mounted him ( I had no weapon) I then told him to defend himself he tried valiantly until I pinned his arm and hit him in the face (he was wearing a Brian Hunt helmet) he then dropped the sword and tried to free his hand's to keep me from hitting him, if he had a dagger in a sheath I bet me hitting him repeatedly would stop him from accessing it and if I am choking, hitting, and twisting an arm I do not see him accessing a knife I see him trying to stop me from choking, hitting, and twisting his arm.
We need to keep in mind that the guy in a dominant position is in just that a Dominant position and if he can strike, choke and break bone's we need to deal with all that before we can access any weapon, dealing with the attack can be anything up to and including escaping to regain distance ie escape and stand up, gaining the dominant position or what ever.
Introducing a weapon does change the dynamic, when the weapon is in a pocket, snapped into a sheath or whatever, you need to be in a dominant position in order to access it, and if your not you need to get there before deploying a weapon or it is may just be stripped from you and used on you.
Just my opinion.
Jeff
david welch wrote:In fight weapons access is probably them most important, and least practiced, weapons skill to have.
In any type of self defense, the attacks are mostly ambushes and you will not have your weapon at the ready but will be trying to draw it while under attack. It's hard to do even when you have practiced it a lot, pulling a knife or a gun for the first time while somebody is punching you in the head is an eye opener.
Jason Taylor wrote:david welch wrote:In fight weapons access is probably them most important, and least practiced, weapons skill to have.
In any type of self defense, the attacks are mostly ambushes and you will not have your weapon at the ready but will be trying to draw it while under attack. It's hard to do even when you have practiced it a lot, pulling a knife or a gun for the first time while somebody is punching you in the head is an eye opener.
Agreed.
It's a skill I've been trying to work in more to my training, but since my class is at a college campus, I have to be careful not to tick people off--if they see me as training a bunch of students to Cuisinart each other....![]()
Jason
Return to “Unarmed Skills Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||