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david welch wrote:There was an experiment a while back. I'll try and look it up, but what they did was this:
They took a bunch of police and ran them through a "safety program". At the end of the program they did a force on force evaluation.
The policemen went through an escalating encounter with a guy in a bulletman suit. Once they actually got into a fight at clinch range, the guy in the padded suit took out a training knife, held it in front of the policemen, and yelled "I am going to stab you, pig!"
Of the policemen, after the exercise was over, over 85% still didn't realize a weapon had been used in the encounter.
The adrenaline dump tunnel vision syndrome is worse the closer you get to your opponent. I don't think they really cared all that much for the clinch.
Aaron Pynenberg wrote:In the clinch you are standing directly in front of your opponent
Aaron Pynenberg wrote:I am looking for that information in the source works...some kind of advice to stay out of directly in front of the guy...but understandably sometimes you cannot help it, and most likely end in a clinch-AP
david welch wrote:Of course, we are always armed even in ringen, so when somebody wants to "fight from the clinch" they pay a very heavy penalty for it.
Brent Lambell wrote:david welch wrote:Of course, we are always armed even in ringen, so when somebody wants to "fight from the clinch" they pay a very heavy penalty for it.
There is indeed a great amount of danger in fighting from the clinch, which is exactly the point of Stewart's original assertion that ringen lays a high priority on control of the primary (weapon) arm. In a perfect scenario the clinch would be brief and transitory, but in lieu of a perfectly executed maneuver it seems logical to control the most dangerous limb - the weapon arm. Plus, control of an arm seems to be a good start to a lock or throw if your first technique fails or is countered.
Thoughts?
Brent Lambell wrote:Some of the issue here appears to be the definition of "clinch." Perhaps my use of it is incorrect and probably too broad, but I am applying it here to anytime you have laid hands upon your opponent at ringen range with the intention of applying grappling techniques on your opponent. Arm control with or without under/overhooks falls under the clinch by my understanding of the definition.
That is the definition (perhaps incorrect) that I am working with when I argue that dagger uses the clinch in many of the techniques, mostly seen as control of the wrist, elbow or shoulder. To back up with primary source material, we have been working the Codex Wallerstein mostly and plates # 34, 35, 36, 39, 40, 43, 44, 50, 52, 55 (as a partial list) all use some amount of wrist, elbow or shoulder control for the ringen and rondel techniques.
If Stewart and I are off in the theory of arm control, how do we explain what appears to me to be a recurring theme in the limited number of manuals with which I am familiar? And what is a good working definition of clinch for our European martial arts purposes?
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