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Stacy Clifford wrote:Based on all the physics and physiology we know, if your sword moves through a position similar to LVT in the process of bobbing and weaving like a boxer, that's one thing because it's dynamic, transitory and unpredictable, and you can get away with it as part of a larger pattern of movement. If you leave it sitting there while you make up your mind what to do next though, you're inviting trouble on defense and weakening your offense. Loose and mobile is the most sensible way to interpret those images that look like LVT when you put it in the context of FIGHTING with all its lethal energy and ferocity.
Keeping the guard low and resting the blade on the shoulder turns it into a wrist cut if you go for a Zornhau or Oberhau. It drastically reduces your range of strike, your options, and your ability to generate power.
How can you defend by counter cutting to the left side without cutting your own head? you only can make a vertical or right to low left snapping cut... or you need to go first to the Vom Tag and then countercut...
How can you defend against a zornhau, the most powerful cut, by cutting from the LVT? you loose reach which makes you try to displace a zornhau with your weak against a stronger part of the incoming blade and you cannot make a strong cut by snapping, so displacing becomes almost impossible... you will not be able to displace it... nor reach with a cut to your opponent by snapping from LVT...
Greg Coffman wrote:Keeping the guard low and resting the blade on the shoulder turns it into a wrist cut if you go for a Zornhau or Oberhau. It drastically reduces your range of strike, your options, and your ability to generate power.How can you defend by counter cutting to the left side without cutting your own head? you only can make a vertical or right to low left snapping cut... or you need to go first to the Vom Tag and then countercut...
How can you defend against a zornhau, the most powerful cut, by cutting from the LVT? you loose reach which makes you try to displace a zornhau with your weak against a stronger part of the incoming blade and you cannot make a strong cut by snapping, so displacing becomes almost impossible... you will not be able to displace it... nor reach with a cut to your opponent by snapping from LVT...
I respectfully disagree with the above objections to the low vom tag position. Independant of whether or not the blade is "resting" or touching the shoulder, that position can indeed yeild strong and effective cuts, to the left and right, that can displace and enter binds with strength.
When you make a cut from here, the first action is to bring the weapon forward towards krom. This is a very strong movement that engages lots of muscles similar to a right punch or a bench press for your right side. As the weapon clears your head, you torque the sword into whatever cut you like with a strong snapping motion.
You can even cut a left zwerchau like this. A zwerchau isn't made at head level, it is made above the head in order to protect the head. Therefore, when cutting a left zwerchau from the low vom tag position you bring the weapon forward and up as you torque it into a cut. This is still a very quick cut with strong body mechanics.
As to whether or not the sword actually is to touch the shoulder, the texts are not clear and the illustrations are not clear. As been already said, if you are in costant motion then you are not resting at all in any guard. If the sword bumps your shoulder as you are in motion and transition through this low vom tag position then that is a non-issue. However, irregardless of whether or not the blade is supposed to or permitted to touch the shoulder ot not, the illustrations do seem to be clear to me that the general position of the sword, low over the shoulder with the crossguard at or below the shoulder, is a viable position and can be included in the range of vom tag positions.
This has always been the transitory position I use when making an oberhau from right pflug. I quickly snap the sword up, "cocking" it, and then send it forward for a quick cut. I don't stand there with it in a guard. But it is a natural position to pass through.
Laslty, for a posta stabile, when I assume a low vom tag position, I prefer to hold the blade more horizontal than at an upright or 45 degree angle and at a diagonal instead of with the blade online . That's basically my version or zornhut.
Doug Marnick wrote:Exactly. It's like someone centuries from now looking at this picture and thinking when you throw a punch, you should rest your other hand on your jaw.
Jorge Cortines wrote:Resting the sword at the shoulder does not guard your head, neck, shoulder
Jorge Cortines wrote:Resting the sword at the shoulder restricts your movement and power generation
Jonathan Hill wrote:If my opponent is able to pin a blade against my shoulder because it was resting. 1. he was able to do so even if it was not resting, 2. He was able to kill me in one strike and chose poorly.
Alex Bourdas wrote:With vom tag, we are told and shown by the masters to either hold the hands next to our shoulder, or to hold them above our head. The hands will circle around these positions, but again, they will not move far away from them.
Alex Bourdas wrote:Jorge Cortines wrote:Resting the sword at the shoulder does not guard your head, neck, shoulder
No, holding the sword at the shoulder doesn't by itself guard anything at all. However this is not an issue. The masters tell us to respond to strikes with strikes of our own.
Alex Bourdas wrote:Jorge Cortines wrote:Resting the sword at the shoulder restricts your movement and power generation
Really? I've never any noticed any problems, movement or power related, from having the sword at the shoulder, resting or not. I fail to see what resting the sword, i.e. the state of the sword before the start of the action, has to do with the power of the strike, i.e. the state of the sword at the end of the action, something which Jonathan rightly pointed out.
Alex Bourdas wrote:For what it's worth, here's how I do a zornhau, which can be thought as having two parts. Part one involves punching the sword straight out from its position at the shoulder, turning with the hips and shoulders, just like a right cross. This generates a lot of speed and puts a lot of body weight into the strike. Part two is to do a push/pull motion with the hands, which you might call a snapping strike.
Why is this weak? It carries all the force of a right cross, which no one would call weak, plus the added speed of a snap at the end.
Roger Norling wrote:The way I see it both variants have their advantages and disadvantages, although I don't see force or vulnerability being very different in degree rather than a difference of characteristics and contexts within those two aspects. I use both depending on the situation.
But, the discussion seems a bit odd to me. Both upper and lower Vom Tag were used, although illustrations appear to show HVT more commonly. I'm not so sure of manuscripts that do not contain illustrations though.
Can you cut and countercut fast and well with the flat or edge resting on the shoulder? Well of course. A zwerchhau a schielhau and a krumphau works quite nicely in both directions if you do it right, as mentioned earlier.
Also, why should supreme force always be desirable? The whole point of most meisterhaus is to manipulate force and for instance a well timed schielhau is designed to counter cuts like the brutal force of a zornhau from HVT.
Greg Coffman wrote: What is not clear is whether the blade is touching the shoulder or not. But why does that matter anyways? If you are constantly moving, according to John's interpretation of "constant movement," then you are not resting in any position irregardless of whether or not the blade is touching your shoulder.
But that is not really what I hear you arguing against. I hear the argument against LVT as that it is not a viable position at any time, that you can't make good displacing cuts from there, and that you can't cut to the left side. I strongly disagree with all of that.
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