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Thanks for sharing the clips Jeanry. That park you spar in looks great to me. Seoul lacks a little in that regard... unless you want to practice under the baffled eyes of a few thousand spectators.
I watched each clip three times. I don't know about you, but I find it hard to watch both fighters at the same time in a real clip [as opposed to the movies]. I have to watch each fighter separately to see if they hit or to see if they get hit.
Thanks for the expanded description of the action on the page. That sped up the process of reviewing the clips immensely.
Here are my thoughts:
Skip-Jean-C3: Long, as you said, but fun to watch. Was the grass wet?
What was happening mentally as the fight "dragged on" for you? Was stress building as the bout went on beyond normal bounds? Did that change the way you approached re-engagement?
Lenny-Chris-c1
Liked the Second bout: Nice, quick and decisive. Attacks extend beyond the current movement, and show signs of tactics over reaction.
Lenny-Jean-c5 & 6: More bouts here like the second in c1. Both fighters are aware of possible counters and have a good interplay of tactics. I like the different dynamic here. Isn't it interesting how style can change drastically when facing certain opponents?
All: like to see the staggering and twitching prior to some bouts. Glad it's not just us that do that. Rather like exorcising the frivolity, eh?
Weak areas: As you indicated, the half-swording seemed experimental. I tried a little myself a few weeks ago and
ended up getting well-struck on the head for my trouble. What I had wanted to do seemed clear enough, but unlike you, I couldn't get it together in real time.
In your clip, you were able to parry Skip quite easily while grounded I thought, but when it came time to close the distance, his retreat put you at a disadvantage. It was one you overcame regardless, likely because Skip couldn't/didn't try to interrupt your charge, desite his range advantage.
Thanks again for sharing the clips. I look forward to reading some knowledgeable commentary regarding them.
I especially liked the last clip.
Jeanry: Will check the videos out later. Thanks for posting.
Jeanry,
By the way, can you raise the resolution up a bit? It's a bit hard to see...
Care to elaborate?
November 6 was even more interesting in some ways, we were visited by a trained rapier fighter named Dave who lives a few hours drive away and can't normally make it to our practices. He fought several bouts with our own resident rapier fighter, Lenny, using steel schlager blades and some del tin steel sparring rapiers.
Later, Dave tried his hand at the padded weapons, which he had little experience with, and did very well, fighting briefly with longsword against Jean, then sword and buckler and sword and dagger against Jean, Skip, and Chris, and Jean again, followed by more sparring with Lenny using the steel rapiers.
Dave was the master of the thrust with any weapon he used, and forced me for one to adapt my tactics. He was so effective at curtailing my normal charge with painful, jarring stop-thrusts that I largely abandoned that approach and relied instead on distance fighting and cuts to the arm and hand, including some one handed sling cuts similar to the technique Lance Chan uses a lot. Dave, in spite of his "advanced years" (compared to us spring chickens!) is faster than most of us, but he doesn't yet have a lot of experience dealing with cuts of the type delivered by longsword or arming sword. This was the only reason I was able to pull off my modified tactic with some success.
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