Hi Tim, <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
"I know the deal on shorter levers

.... but have you wrestled when kicking and striking is also allowed?"
Yup. It changes the dynamics in many ways not related to height when you allow striking. In that kind of sparring (open fingered gloves with striking and wrestling) I have found (just my personal experience, others may differ) that the tall guy only has an advantage if he can keep you out at the edge of his reach. In live situations, it is very difficult to maintain the "perfect" range. That is where the footwork comes in adjusting range. Going against that reach advantage the tall guy has, once you get past the long arms and legs (which isn't so hard) the guy who is built like Gimli the dwarf has the advantage IMO. First, he can get under the tall guy and throw him far more easily. Second, he can then use his full (shorter) reach more effectively.
Tim wrote: "Once you add the fact that the guy with reflexes, speed and USEFUL bulk can kick and beat on you while you try to shoot in, I would submit that the leverage advantage matters less."
That is the thing. You don't just shoot in. If you just blindly try a tackle it is a recipe for a bad day. What you do is wait until he throws something at long range and then attach to it with a parry, fighting in the nacht, and close the gap with footwork. Then you are in against the tall guy.
Tim wrote: " I am less interested in discussing wrestling and more interested in fighting."
Anything you may have to say on reach in swordfighting I am quite happy to listen and take notes <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" /> . I am just talking about the unarmed side. One thing I saw Jake do at the 1.0 that stands out in my mind is how he seemed well out of range but used his full reach and hit with only the very end of the blade when I thought he wasn't close enough to hit. And I would say in fairness that you can recovery from a tall guys punch much better than you can recover from his zwerchhau. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
Tim wrote: "IN the fight, speed and timing are the two most important factors. all else is subordinate to one degree or another."
No disagreement here. One little understood aspect is that speed IS power when you think of velocity. Not just mass.
Be well,
J.