Stacy Clifford wrote:
All free-play of any kind in these arts, whether for points or just for learning, relies heavily on the honor system to determine hits.
It won't in these rules, fighters will be warned for repeated shows of honour, it is up to the judges to call the fighters should fight. Sometimes as you have stated the hits will not be seen, it is better and more even for the judges to make that mistake rather than the competitors calling out(as you very rightly said some people abuse the honour system terribly).
agreed as said above, judges must call, competitors must display skill clearly.Stacy Clifford wrote:There is no way a judge can possibly see everything that happens every time, especially when the fighters are allowed to circle each other. Padding and body armor sometimes mean one person didn't feel a hit and can't acknowledge it even when the attacker is sure his blow landed. The attacker can also think he missed when he actually scored a hit because the concussion of strong on strong masked the simultaneous thump of weak on flesh, requiring the person who got hit to be willing to admit it. Competitive jerks will purposely ignore blows, as you already know.
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Agreed that should be the practise, comes down to education judges.Stacy Clifford wrote: And then there's the issue of slop.
Fighting is of course a messy business, and many times in free-play I've gotten tied up in a flurry of half-blocked blows and slices that make light contact but wouldn't really do serious damage, even though they looked quite hard. There can be a lot of incidental contact that looks worse than it really is to someone watching the fight, such as a judge. At crossed sword range a lot of slicing off the bind can happen really fast on both sides, and if it doesn't have undisputable pressure behind it then neither fighter may be sure what just happened. Most of the time we throw out such indecisive exchanges and tell the fighters to keep going until somebody lands a solid hit.
Stacy Clifford wrote: You would need to make clear in your rules that either the judge or both fighters together (ONLY if both agree) can agree to call some contact incidental and worth no points.
This I disagree on, there should be no input from the contestants, the judges rightly or wrongly should make the call.
Stacy Clifford wrote:
Basically, since this is not a true combat sport where you can keep fighting as long as you can take the damage, then to keep it honest and relatively accurate I think you have to have the participants involved in their own judging, with a high premium placed on honesty and being forthcoming when you've been struck. We usually stop our bouts after the first good hit because if you go to multiple blows, you risk arguments over an incidental slop hit followed by a good hit and whether the first one should count or not. A judge may or may not be in a position to determine who's right, and the more blows involved the stickier it gets, so resetting after one good hit makes it much easier for all involved to be decisive about what just happened in the exchange.
It looks like we are looking at 3 to four judges and 1 referee. any things they don't see, sadly never happened. The honour system is too open to abuse so the judges judge...
On the reset, rather than an auto reset the establishment of space or control(needed to score) does seem to work well to break the fight naturally without the need to reset each time, try it see how you get on.
Stacy Clifford wrote:
What all this boils down to is I think fighters have to acknowledge hits against themselves, no matter if anybody saw it or not. Any other way and you will have people exploiting the rules and gaming the system to see what they can get away with, and it will devolve into a mockery of what it's intended to be. Anybody caught being willfully dishonest should be disqualified immediately. If you do things that way then I think you can afford to have a lot fewer rules and wind up with much more realistic fighting in your tournament, but only if personal honor to play fair is at the forefront.
again as stated I don't think the honour system can be relied on, better judging and more observation points should deal with the blind spots to a large degree, many thanks, good post.


