Postby LafayetteCCurtis » Fri Feb 15, 2013 4:04 am
By now I'm pretty much convinced that you're overthinking the issue.
Now STOP. Forget everything you've read in this thread. Go practice some more sword and polearm work according to your preferred master(s). And then, when you feel like you're starting to seriously get the hang of things in both weapon groups, try dissimilar matches against somebody you can trust to approach the subject with (at least) a similar level of integrity and dedication. Then reread this thread, armed with that experience, to help you figure out what you've been doing right and what you've been doing wrong and how to do things more effectively within the context of the historical system.
No matter how much you discuss sword vs. polearm techniques in this thread, NONE of it will matter the first time you try it out. Almost everything you know on the theoretical level will go out of the window. You'll stumble and fumble and make a mess of everything. But that's the way things should be; no amount of theoretical discussion can substitute for actual trial and error in the sparring yard (or the salle or whatever). No number of bytes sent back and forth over the Web can substitute for the sweat and tears (and often blood) that you'll have to shed on the long road towards proficiency.
Why am I suddenly breaking into this rant? Well, your endless search for absolutes and what-ifs makes me think that a dissimilar sword vs. polearm match is still far beyond the reach of your skills at the moment, and going at it so soon may do more harm than good. No offence meant, but most of what's being discussed here seem to sail way over your head (and frankly mine, too). Forget it. Put it out of your mind for the time being. Just go and practice the basics some more. When you come back in a year or six months or even a couple of months, you'll be surprised at how much more useful information you can extract with the aid of the cognitive and martial background you've been building up in the meantime.
(As an aside, many people say that a poleaxe is a "short spear with benefits," and they probably have a point. Most poleaxe fighting at range involves the poll (spearhead) and the butt, just like a short spear, while most strikes with the poleaxe's mail (head) can also be executed with the shaft of a spear just below the head. At one point my sparring partner and I made the mistake of assuming that the spear's shaft (or a short staff) won't strike as hard as a poleaxe's mail so we could relax our control a bit when we did a bit of free-play with it. Well, yes, it didn't strike quite as hard as a poleaxe, but still more than hard enough to knock our masks askew and give us nasty bruises along the cheek and the jaw in the process. Have respect for these weapons. And no matter how much you think you know about a weapon, there's always more to know--much of which cannot be gained without sweating buckets over the practice floor.)