Postby Guest » Sat Feb 28, 2004 2:31 am
Seeing that this post is refering specifically to me, I think I'd better put my two bits in. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
So we were practicing on February 14th and seeing that I have no significant other (for the moment anyway) and I had no pressing homework due to president's day, I wanted to practice longer than the normal 2 hours.
Devin and I decided to hang around after practice and play with our new stirling arms one handed "perfect wasters" (which are freaking awesome, btw!) which we had purchased to better interpret renaissance cut and thrust manuals.
We also wanted to play around with sword and buckler...seeing that John recently did an advanced seminar for us on that subject...but I don't own a buckler yet. However, Utah is still cold in February and we practice outside on Saturdays, so I had my nice heavy trenchcoat with me...
I first tried grabbing it and wrapping it once or twice around my hand, and had a lot of fun playing around with the nuances of sword and cloak. Here is what I found:
--It is very sneaky. Depending on how you use your cloak, they either can hardly see where your sword is (like if you are in tail with the right foot leading) or you can fake them out by flicking the bottom of the cloak at their face while simultaneously cutting, etc, or if your are really daring, throw the cloak at them. A few times it actually draped over their head completely, which effectively means they are dead, because by the time they take it off their head, they would have died 3 or 4 times over (you can't defend against a cut if you cannot see anything at all!). play around with it and have some fun! (I correct myself: Devin did discover an effective defense when this happens to you: drop your weapons and run away to fight another day!)
--Cloaks have more tangling capacity than you would give them credit for. You can flick the cloak at their sword to beat it aside (be careful, because if you miss, your cloak will keep going in the direction you flicked it...if you are not careful you will give them a big opening) or tangle it up for a half second or so, (while you kill them with your own sword) or you can trap their sword if they stay in a low guard and let you get too close (and while they try to either quickly retreat or untangle their sword, you can kill them in any number of creative ways).
--Also, as Devin mentioned, you can outright stop a full blown zornhau/miettelhau/unterhau at full speed with a cloak (straight vertical sheitelhaus and high horizontal zwerchaus are harder to defend against like this...it is better to pick another counter for those), IF you use it correctly. We figured this out quite by accident and I wouldn't believe myself if I had not seen it work with my own eyes when I executed the move. What happens is you bring the cloak into the arc of their attack, with your fist a few inches above where their sword will hit. When it does hit the cloak, something really intresting happens: the cloak is not a solid target, so it gives way to the sword, making the sword unable to cut through the cloak like it could if the cloak was pulled tight, but at the same time, the inertia of the cloak makes the bottom part of the cloak move in the opposite direction of the incoming sword, effectively wrapping up the sword, and absorbing all their energy. It actually works better the stronger and faster they cut! Meanwhile, you can be killing them with your sword in your other hand, and/or you can set up for a devestating grapple (just apply the same principles used with...say, rondel dagger or longsword grappling...), or...the possibilities are endless!
--Another thing that I have found helpful when using more than one weapon at a time: if you look at your opponent in any one spot, you will probably miss something and die, but if you look at, say the tree behind your opponent you actually can see everything he is doing and can react a lot better and faster. As you can guess this principle is not sword and cloak specific.
--If you don't fall for a feint, your legs are nigh invincible! Yep, the only time I got hit in the leg was when Devin did a sweet feint which ended up in my shin (he totally faked me out). So, if you are not faked out, your cloak can stop their attack cold (using that technique I explained above) while you kill them in brutally effective ways!
--I decided that I don't like wrapping it around my hand very much. If i just grab a fistfull of it about a half of a foot below the collar of my trenchcoat (I grabbed it underneath the trenchcoat, so my hand and wrist were covered with 'cloak', if that makes any sense at all), then it worked better for me (and was a lot easier to throw).
--If they decide to do some quick wrist cuts to your cloak arm, move it back (while doing appropriate footword for your particular situation) so they miss while you cut their hand off.
wow. that was a long post. If you made it all the way here, congratulations, you have a long attention span!