Hi Vincent!!!!
Sorry for late reply! It has been a good discussion!!! And it is a long reply (sorry, but try to bare with me) I hope that my comments do not come by as preaching or anything else than my opinions and points of view and my sincere doubts about tournaments, and I'm not interest in people agreeing with me but I do look for understanding between our different views.
So I'll get to it:
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:The overall opinion of those who enter tournaments and also take part in freeplay is that they provide a higher pressure to test your skills in (which is why tournament fighting is not always so beautiful to watch). This, aside from any ego boost, is the real reason to participate if personal performance is something you seek. Note that not seeking that is perfectly fine by me...
Well, in my experience the universe of people who are drawn into looking at MARE do not have all the same motives, it is not a cohesive universe seeking mutual benefits, but rather some atomized multi-motive gathering of people.
Some want to rediscover and reconstruct the Art, some want to use certain parts for theatrical purposes, other want to compete and take what is useful from the art to make even an Olympic sport, for others is just a good way to do exercise, others because they can use it to have fun or socializing or for role playing, others because they feel proud what their ancestors did, others just want to incorporate or contrast martial arts to their studies, and yet others have a personal need for recognition and ego boosting in there lives and selected this young enterprise to get it…
And as I see it this is the core conflict, the efforts of one group may be in crash course to the efforts of another group… people who like tournaments because they want an ego boost and like to compete, will justify tournaments, rules and the development of tournament equipment no matter what and this is a crash collision course with the people interested in reconstructing the art, who are trying to do it with hard data from the source literature, without contamination from sports or other martial arts and are passionate about it (in both cases passions arises).
This is the problem…
Again I have no problem with people doing tournaments, I’m sure they are fun, I’m sure there are great people in them,… but just know where the tournaments fits in relation to reconstructing a martial art.
One of my complains is that we don’t know yet fully and thoroughly how the Art looked like, and probably will never be 100% sure (there are no masters today), but probably one day we will know with a very high degree of certainty how it looked, but at present we don’t know, we don’t even agree in simple concepts or explanations from the masters such as holding guards, stepping, cutting… so then how can we use tools that are not explained in the source material to draw conclusions?
Yes the tournaments are fun, but useless at this moment as to reconstruct the art, how do we know that by following this path of doing tournaments adding rules to enforces more rules we will not finish exactly where we started 3 decades ago, with the sportification of the art, with a distorted understanding of what is the ars marcialis of Renassaince Europe?
History has shown us that by setting up rules and pushing the art to tournaments, the art got extint and the only surviving heritage are some old books…
How can going down the ally of tournaments we will prevent this from happening?
Doing a quick review on other forums, all the conclusions on the art are based on tournaments, yet there is so little info on the tournaments themselves and they are absent from the source literarture but never the less that is how we measure our advancements of the art. Aren't we fooling ourselves?
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:Manciolino (trans. Tom Leoni) wrote:
A blow to the head counts for three, because of the nobility of such part of the body. A blow to the foot counts for two, in deference to the awkwardness of delivering such a low attack.
Or he is just emphasizing importance of going to the head or body, upper opening vs lower openings during set/freeplay…. I know I’m going in circles, but it is just to show that the argument of tournament rules is not a solid one, it is an inference of the sources… why if a tournament is such a good tool has no direct mention by the Masters is intriguing?
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:The after-blow I'm talking about is not German fencing nachschlag. It really is a seemingly arbitrary rule such as this:
Manciolino (trans. Tom Leoni) wrote:
After receiving a hit, you may not perform more than one riposte delivered with a single pass forward;
Just by reading this statement I would assume Manciolino is talking about the need to practice single time moves (counters) (I know this is another discussion) =) I would need to read the whole passage to get a better context…
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:The footnote of the translation mentions that this appears in the Anonymous Bolognese, a work that I have not read from the early 1500:
Tom Leoni wrote:
Manciolino is citing a rule in the art of the spada da gioco, which is also reported by the Anonymous Bolognese. The reasons given by the Anonymous are that such restriction makes the play more realistic (with sharp swords you may not physically be able to riposte with more than one pass after receiving a hit), and allow the spectator to have a clearer grasp of the outcome.
With just this footnote, I don’t agree with this interpretation, it fits best with single time move training/concept… however let’s theorize and experiment: ask 2 fighters to freeplay without padded gloves, without padding their bodies, no padding on legs or arms, just a fencing mask on his head, ask them to freeplay vigorously with intent and energy and don’t have restrain/control, when one of the fighter gets hit (a broken bone), ask him (the injured fighter) to do the above statement “to do this afterblow”, to the fighter who was able to hit tell him to do the nachschlag as stated by Master L (if you hit him, well continue hitting until he has completely disabled his opponent), see what happens … and this is not even considering sharps that cut or penetrate…IMHO this is where the reality of a violent encounter is not well understood and is not very well interpreted and do not reflect vicious encounters… This would make in real life /death situations irrelevant Leoni’s interpretation of the afterblow. So MasterL teachings for the real thing makes irrelevant the afterblow rule, that has probably zero martial value, making useless these rule for training martial arts.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:You could argue that these are in fact rules for freeplay, not tournaments. But then we also have tournament rules as I linked to earlier. These are not from fencing masters' technical treatises, I'll grant you that, but they are from fencing guilds, which had to be supervised by fencing masters.
As a parallel, in the modern combative schools or during military service of the armed forces of almost any country you have tournaments as sports, not as the training for soldiers that must be ready to be deployed to conflict zones… their training resembles more free-play than a tournament… During history I have not seen any document where there is a claim that tournaments were used as training for killing, there is a reason IMHO for this… The tournaments from medieval history started as I understand them as ritualized, to keep battle readiness for the elite, etc as society evolved so did tournaments and with this evolution the tournaments evolved to a sport not to a martial art tool…
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:The masters don't detail tournament structure in their work and they don't make claim of performance either. But they don't do that much for "real" fights either (actually the only master I can recall talking about his own performance or that of his student is Fiore). They don't generally detail how to challenge your opponent to a duel, what legislations are at play for judicial duels, what restrictions are imposed in such and such state for weapon wearing. In my opinion that's because tournaments were just seen as one practical application of the same art, not worthy of detailing in technical works.
I cannot concure with this idea, Masters of Defense detailed in written and in some cases images what x,y,z technic, or core principle of fighting is, how it is done, what it does, how to use it… we have very graphical images on Talhoffer, Mair, Capo Ferro, Guelf, etc. For example we have Talhoffer we know he work in overseeing some duels, we see the representations in images in his book, where heads, hands, are severed… but we do not see any image to suggest a tournament… Capo Ferro, shows what the technics and the bases to make the technics, is meant to do against an opponent with no rules (and no clothes

). We do know more about the real fights. We know the Masters had important roles as masters of arms to nobility to train to fight for war or duels or self defense, and yet again remain silent on tournaments.
If the tournaments were so good tool to understand, teach and practice the ART why should they be not worthy to be mentioned and showen in the books?
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:Heck they don't mention test-cutting either and yet last I've heard ARMA was practicing that. I've even had it said to me on this very forum that they did not write about because it was an obvious thing to do. If that works for test-cutting then it works for tournaments, which have a lot more source support.
Yes we practice test cutting, we encourage it… the motives are different, test cutting is about knowing what your weapon does to a target, it is about knowing your weapon, and practicing technics, very much align with martiality. Tournaments have to do more with the ego boost, there is nothing about “skills pressure test” that cannot be done in freeplay that is done in a tournament, except for the ego-boost or ego-lost… and probably this risk of losing ego is what makes a tournament more “pressure test”? however ego has nothing to do with reconstructing and practicing a martial art… Do modern soldiers training for war care about egos when training or do they care about learning to stay alive even if the have to bite, scratch, poke an eye, hit the hands, legs…? They couldn’t care less about ego when training for their life… In the martial arts world it has more meaning understanding your weapons than an ego-boost... pressure testing your skills can be achieved through a free-play...
Regards