Postby Jake_Norwood » Mon Jan 16, 2006 2:17 am
I think it's interesting that you should point out the pflug issue, because the primary locations we see the "hands close together" are mostly all pflug in the early Liechtenauer sources.
Why? Note how far back the hilt is--can you do that with hands far apart? Not really. But what of pflug on the other side, with arms uncrossed? In the illustrations that come to mind the hand is usually down butting up against the pommel.
Part of this, frankly, is an issue of simple biomechanics. Your hip and your hand can't occupy the same space at the same time.
But what of striking? Yes, sometimes when letting out a whopper of a hit my hands slide together like they might on an axe when splitting wood, but here the forward hand slides down, not the backward hand sliding up.
Is much of what we're seeing here really an issue of "liquid grip?" Yes, definitely. But some of what we're seeing here, too, is "Dobringer's old, so he must be right! I can feel it." Humbug, I say. Do I believe Doebringer's wrong? No, but I'm not ruling it out, either.
Again, if the heart of the art is in winding, then the wider grip is the grip most closely associated with the heart of the art.
As for the baseball bat anlogy--I wasn't rebutting it because of some kind of clumsiness, but out of the range of activities done with one tool as compared to the other. One does not wind or bind or change-through or twitch with a bat. Try any of those activities with a close grip and you will lose speed, power, coordination and--at the heart of the art--leverage.
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director