Hello, everybody. Been a while...
In a fight of longsword versus pole-axe, a colleague of mine has been performing a very strong maneuver against a few other colleagues of mine by deploying his pole-axe in the way of Alfred Hutton's "French Head Parry" (akin to the Kron for staff weapons in the German style of fighting) against vertical oberhaus, and then locking the sword behind the back in a bearhug-type hold and maintaining pressure until the pain from the pressure forces the recipient to either submit or until he gets tired of holding him there and throws him.
I personally have found several ways out of this hold ( ie, by pushing at his chin with both hands until the pressure forces him to release his grip, or by head-butting and then kicking him away, or by letting go of the longsword and locking my arms over his and hyperextending them as I push him away at his chest, etc.) but I was wondering just how dangerous the French Head Parry into a bearhug would be in a real fight if the opponent does manage to keep hold of one and maintain pressure on the spine as he uses his opponent's blade to create a bar along his back(thus increasing the pressure). At what kind of risk are the spine and muscles of the back?
Just curious...
Justin



