Postby Jake_Norwood » Wed Aug 24, 2005 5:19 pm
I will sometimes run "10-second" bouts, where someone on the sidelines counts down to 10, by the end of which one of the two combatants needs to be "dead." It adds a great deal of intensity if your sparring is beggining to become a chess game instead of a fight.
I'm largely with the Poland guys on the idea of using many different forms of sparring. Just going to one hit teaches you to stop when you get hit--not a good habit for a real fighter. Ignoring too many hits, or going for a predetermined time, can lure scholars into a false sense of security about the weapon.
This helps, too. After a few bouts that are clearly not with the right kind of intent and attitude, take away the padded swords, give both parties steel sharps (or even blunts) and say "Kill each other."
Now (and this is important!), don't let that fight happen. But watch the fighters eyes when you say it, and watch their starting range increase, and watch the fear of the other guy's weapon. Take the steel swords away, replace the padded ones, and tell them to remember what they just felt as they fight.
After all, if you both get hit, you didn't both win--you both lost!
Jake,
who does lots of push ups, and thinks that they work as a great incentive, but only in multiples of 100.
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director