Postby Jake_Norwood » Wed Jun 08, 2005 1:53 pm
Flat out, honestly, this doesn't seem control his weapon, his angle, or his range. It doesn't cover any lines of attack. If he closes his eyes and stabs forward at my stomach, I die. I might hit him in the head in the process, but it failed to displace--and it is one of the "four displacements." Even if it did make contact with his weapon, because he thrust at your face or because he's pflug is "too high," then a simple durchwechseln would counter it effortlessly and immediately, because the range on the described schiel is not sufficient to threaten the opponent's upper openings.
Forgive me if I'm being hard-headed, but also believe me that I've been around this track a few times now. Conducting the schiller as one of the vier versetzen vexes me horribly. I have seen probably 4 or 5 interpretations at this point, and none of them is suitably simple and effective.
For example, looking at the other 4:
Krump breaks ochs. It also breaks all strikes that come from ochs (which is why it works). Although there is some discussion about how krump works, I think that there is a preponderance of evidence allready. It is frequently illustrated. The bottom line is that it covers possible lines of attack while either gaining the Vor or striking the opponent.
The Zwerch covers all strikes that come from above (including other zwerchs and mittelhauwen), and either gains the Vor (should it come to a bind) or strikes the opponent. You are able to "forget" what your opponent does because the attack is geometrically sound, as is the krump.
The Schaitelhau bothers me a bit, I must confess. It is said to break Alber, and clearly does so out of range (the whole right-triangle principle). It allows one to attack the head without fear of being struck in the foot. When combined with a triangle step it removes the alber-guy's ability to thrust into the belly or cut upwards to the hands. Thus my lines are protected while I strike.
But the schiller, in every permutation I've seen, fails to cover lines of attack while hitting the opponent or gaining the vor, regardless of his counter-action to your attack. But that's *not* what the masters say it does. They say that it counters pflug and buffalos. The buffalo part I got. Pflug, I don't.
Make sense?
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director