This has all been a great help to me. I've found that displacing with a dagger is very difficult still, since I don't have a lot of blade length to control the motion with. I usually need the aid of my second dagger once my opponent makes the crescent motion with her sword to get away, or it will hit me in the legs. Practice practice practice, I suppose.
I can usually jump in far enough to stop a weapon at point 1 or 2, which works good even when it is being swung fairly quick.
As for that "oh s***!", static block, there is one you can do if you use TWO daggers and it will work on any kind of swing motion against any size weapon. I've found if your opponent is swinging (in this case, let's say overhead) at you, you can position the dagger in your left hand so it is running parallel to the ground, take the dagger in your right hand and brace the tip of the left dagger agains the guard and the blade, and you can effectively *catch* very strong blows from very large weapons in this manner, assuming your arms are strong enough. I've tested this out with my friends and it works very well, but you lose the advantage of being able to parry and strike in one movement, which is the greatest benefit of two-weapon styles. Still, it's much better when you get caught at a distance than holding up one dagger and having the blow just push it aside. Heh
Robert

