Chris Ouellet wrote:Kote hits are only valid in kendo when they hit the forarm protection. The hand pad (fingers) is considered invalid.
The reasons for the specific targets of kendo are completely lost to the mists of time. I've read many books and much literature on the web, if anyone has a clear reason for them, I'd personally much appreciate it.
Kendo rules are even more specific, really ingrained kendoka mentality will ignore direct hits to the head if it doesn't come with a stamp (fuki-omi-ashi), have follow through (zanshin) and even if the shinai doesn't follow a specific trajectory (a full horizontal cut to the head is: invalid). It's a game with very very rigid rules and the best players know how to follow them to a tee.
Now Jason, yes suicidal attacks are difficult to manage but to some degree you are at fault. Since it's your first time sparing kendoka I suggest you think back and analyze exactly what you did wrong to not convince your opponent of the effectiveness of your technique.
The first clear problem you had is explaining that you're going to spar by your rules - hands are valid targets. I always suggest to my opponents we start with their rules, then move towards more free form because it sets people more at ease that you're not trying to screw them over and reduces friction. Have them explain their system to you (fencer, kendoka, kali, whatever).
The second problem you had is from your description you didn't analyze the techniques being used. Kendo is very predictable and the suicidal charge while tough at first can be managed since you know it's coming.
My experience is you have to counter speed with speed and rushing attacks should be negated by fast reverse and side footwork. I don't know the specifics of your training but you must practice footwork intensively at high speeds, otherwise you will get overrun by someone who does, like say kendoka.
Don't give up on cross-discipline sparing because of one bad event, it can be very rewarding.
Actually, he's not the first. I've sparred kendo guys before, but when most of them picked up my weapons, they played by my rules--which I didn't mention in my earlier post, but he came to us wanting to spar our way after our study group meeting. So this isn't an issue of unfamiliarity. I'd also suspect that had you been there you would have recognized it, as we all did, as an issue of ego, at least in part. His bearing and tone gave it away--but I couldn't very well refuse to spar him when I was already sparring other newbie beginners the same day. As far as what I did wrong, I probably just didn't hit him hard enough--but I don't smash people's fingers on day one, because it hurts, and because other people watching think I'm a meanie.
As far as the suicidal charge thing, yeah, I know I could have learned to manage it, but one 15-20 minutes sparring session, I really didn't get much of the hang of it. Also, in my opinion, I
was countering it, because I was destroying his hands at every pass--once with a short edge-long edge cut to the forearms/wrists, both within a second, which he ignored before hitting me in the head. I shouldn't really need to find a more difficult and risky defense because he chooses to ignore the ones I'm using. I'm pretty sure that I couldn't do the equivalent in a Kendo school, where they'd probably tell me to cut it out so I didn't make it harder for the other guy to train.
Jason
I'm impatient with stupidity. My people have learned to live without it.--The Day the Earth Stood Still