Thanks Jeanry,
I was doing some study on the weight/PoB's effect on longsword techniques,
It definately makes a difference IMO, fighting that fast with the heavy longsword takes a lot out of you. The day we did these clips was an intense day for us, I had a lot of muscle pain in my shoulders and arms afterword for like two days (good kind). We were intentionally trying to ramp up the intensity.
anywy it seems that you guys are getting much, much better than before.
Thanks!
Seems that the mass doesn't matter much for you guys.
No, it does matter. Our longer, heavier swords are only a few ounces heavier than the our light ones (48-50" and 3 lbs 4 -6 ounces vs 44-46" and 2 lbs 8-12 ounces) but the heavier ones take much more out of you and are much harder to keep up speed with. We often find ourselves slowing down. I'm trying to make an intermediate weapon somewhere between the two types because the longer ones have the advantage of power and reach while the shorter are much better in speed and agility, especially in follow up attacks. We are also experimenting with our blunts. This is something we are still trying to figure out for sure.[/quote]
to me it comes naturally, but it cant be done against every opponent. unless they are striking oberhau a lot, it's not going to come into play.I did saw those hangen seems to hold up very, very well. It's strange to me as I am barely able to use hangen successfully...
One issue with hangen, is to get good at transitioning into it (or into an ox guard) quickly without telegraphing it. You can wait in plow or tag and transition to hangen when needed... also a passing step is frequently helpful, especially offline or toward your opponent.
I dont know hangen is something we did before we knew WMA so it might be more instinctive to us, but I think it's fairly simple and I teach it to new people all the time. it might be that your opponents are just not giving you good opportunities to use it. Sometimes I might go 20 or 30 bouts without ever using a hangen...
I do advice everyone to grip the pommel... seems Lenny did that.
We do, if you look at the first series between Skip and I, I am grasping the pommel sometimes, it depends what I'm intending to do. I also use the single hand sling-cuts sometimes as lance has noticed in some other clips.
What's the talking about "Hong Kong" in that clip ?
That was me, commenting on Lennys false edge cut to the wrist, I was pointing out it is one of Lance Chan's favorite techniques. You guys are celebrities in New Orleans, we all watch your sparring clips and learn a great deal from them. I know Skip in particular is a big fan of lances site and wants to try out his weapons.
I'm not sure what you mean there, can you explain?Also a suggestion here : Try to practise some walk back counter than having every bout to have both guys crashed in,
more on timing and distining will be nice too... be sure to try out one handed strike from longsword if you want some reach advantage...
I think you mean voiding ? We do that as well, but more so in less aggressive fighting...
Jeanry


