Postby Jake_Norwood » Mon Sep 05, 2005 10:49 am
Hi Jeff.
Good stuff. Really good stuff.
You need to practice with masks. Something that both parties have confidence in so that you can hit the face either on accident or on purpose without fear of injury. "Waster bounce" will interfere a little, but not so much.
This is also easier to practice than you might think. This technique, if I'm not mistaken, comes from the "Czornhau-ort" section, right? The agent strikes any oberhau, the patient strikes a zornhau against it with hands high, aiming not for the sword but for the opponent's head while stepping forward and offline. One of four things happen:
1. The strike hits, either with or without contact am schwert. End of drill.
2. The strike whiffs totally, missing. Recover to another guard and try something else or simply end the drill.
3. The strike counters resistance (binds) and doesn't hit with the edge. This resistance is weak, meaning that a thrust is easily achieved. Stab him in the face or breast. End of drill.
4. The strike counters resistance (binds) and doesn't hit with the edge, but this time the resistance is substantial (hard bind), and the point is moved off-line, away from the face or breast. Pull the weapon so that the point goes up, allowint the opponent's blade to move off to the side (to your right, since he's binding hard), and strike down on the other side.
Number 4 is where the passage from Liechtenauer comes in. He says that you counter attack with a zornhau, that you bind, but the bind is hard and the point can't hit, so you change over to the other side. He then gives a follow-up move if that changed-over strike fails as well, by raising the hands to strike the legs.
Practice all four outcomes artificially, slowly but with intent. Then speed up to half, 3/4, or faster, and simply let the agent attack with an oberhau, and you counter. Any of the 4 outcomes could happen, but don't decide in advance which one (well, don't do the "whiff" option...and because the agent knows what's coming, the simple "hit" option, no. 1, probably won't happen either).
Thus you will learn fuhlen in the proper context, you will learn to keep your point aimed at your opponent, and what to do when you opponent won't let you. You learn to fight "am schwert," which Dobringer calls the "heart and soul" of fencing.
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director