If the original source is to be trusted, here is an interesting passage from the French prose version of Lancelot (FPL) that a French Arthurian scholar, Anna Korczakowska, posted on an academic elist:
"It's when the Duc of Clarence fights against the four swordsmen at Pintadol. Once he gets rid of the first of his adversaries, we read:
li autre troi enragent de duel et moult volentiers saisissent le duc as bras, se il oissaissent, mais ce n'estoit mie la costume, kar il ne pooient par droit home saisir as bras, se cil qui a els se combatoit nel faisoit avant
Translation:
"The other three become furious with grief and would gladly grab the Duc with their hands if they dared, but that was not the custom, because according to the rules they couldn't fight a man with hands unless their adversary did so first."
Anna also writes that "elsewhere in the FPL there are knights dropping their arms and fighting with fists - that always seemed a bit bizarre to me, but no comments are given anywhere and the above passage is the only insight that the text provides. I don't know much about the medieval and chilvaric rules of combat and I'm wondering whether this rule is specific to Pintadol or should be considered as a general rule of chilvaric combat, in which case fighting with fists would be transgressing the code of chilvaric combat practices. Any ideas anyone?"
This might be a good opportunity to introduce our own research to more academics. French Arthurian literature is notorious for espousing extreme interpretations of the chivalric code, and politely waiting for the opponent to strike first is not martially sound, so I suspect this is an artistic device specific to Pintadol. Is there any evidence to the contrary, perhaps in formal tournaments? Suggestions on how I should respond?

