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DustyHuber wrote:Spinning at any range other then "at the sword" would most likely end poorly for the spinner. Once you're inside that range, though, it may be beneficital to spin essentially to roll to a more advantagous position to the side or behind your opponent.
You would pretty much be moving to avoid the innevitable grapple, rolling around them would be more helpful than trying to just traverse past them. Most likely followed by a strike as you finish your turn.
Brian Hunt wrote:Kicks are best used after you have bound his weapon. Talhoffer shows this on one of his plates.
DustyHuber wrote:Maybe our definition of a "spin" differ then. I guess you're used to just calling them turns, to me spin implies rate of speed. With my example, above, if done with speed it would appear to be just a spin and drop.
Ben Strickling wrote:Fiore also shows kicks, including a kick to the groin and a kick to the knee that are made from the bind (Pisani Dossi 20A and 20B). And in Meyer's wrestling section he also suggests stomping feet if your opponent gets too close.
Jaron Bernstein wrote:The only way I envision this working is if the "reversed thrust" is actually a pommel stroke, but this one of those passages that has mystified me. It is the only clearly described "turn your back to him" spin I am aware of
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