Postby Jay Vail » Sat May 21, 2005 5:33 am
I tried SCA after joining ARMA thinking it would provide a venue for sparring and testing ARMA material, since I have trouble finding skilled sparring partners where I live, but gave it up as ultimately not very helpful. Their sword and board is unrealistic. Because the leg is not a target, because you are not allowed to use the shield as a weapon, because they often do not use the point, and because their “sword” does not handle like a sword, they fight within distance, mainly trading headshots. There is no zufecthen or maneuver to win the place. They just line up toe to toe like boxers and generally the first guy to throw a “shot” gets the hit. Like boxing. This is not always true, of course. I was treated to many stories about the amazing abilities of some fighters to creatively win the place, but none of the guys I played with did anything other than the same-old-same-old.
The same is largely true of their “great sword” fighting, at least with the group I played with. As someone above mentioned, the “great sword” fighters largely hold the weapon vertically and make oberhauen, although the people I played with didn’t rely on that technique exclusively. (I once started an engagement in von tag over the head and was told scornfully that this wasn't kendo and that guard was soooooo predictable; little did they know . . . )
However, that said, there is room in “great sword” combat to practice realistic technique, particularly against the greatsworders. Interestingly, ARMA training proved itself many times. Even poorly trained a swordsman as I am (especially then), I was able test real techniques and they worked very well -- the triangle step, the oberhau followed immediately by the returning unterhau, winding and binding, the thrust from ochs, and so on. The SCAers were amazed at some of this material, particularly the triangle step, but when I tried to show it to them, they brushed me off. They seemed willing to listed to outside techniques, but only from someone who has proved themselves in the SCA arena.
One problem though, is that most SCAers prefer the sword and board to the “great sword” so you end up fighting the sword/board guys more than the great sword folks. That too can be fun for a while because they are so predictable: they are taught to rush a great sworder on the theory that it’s so easy to get past the point. For most SCA trained great sworders this rush seems to work, but it never worked on me because I just used ARMA technique to neutralized the rush: stand on ochs and threaten with the point, and at the rush triangle step and deliver an oberhau. Never failed.
Got tired of SCA eventually, though. Sparing other ARMA trained people is so much more challenging, and you learn more.
So, use SCA people as moving pells if you must, but beware of the limitations imposed by their restrictive rule set and remember that you will not grow and learn much from playing with them.