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The heart is behind the ribcage. There's every chance your blade will hit a rib when trying to hit the heart.
Since the strike and recovery is executed so quickly, you could push through the bone and make another strike.
I can't find any digital video of the little bugger, but PM with an e-mail and I'll send it off to you if I find any.
In respect to the skull, the eyes, nasal cavity, and mouth offer fairly large openings.
a simple broken bone has only a chance of stopping your opponent before he kills you
Even a solid thrust through the abdomen or chest won't guarantee success. A person's ability to continue fighting after being wounded is directly connected to his psychology, not necessarily the damage.
I'd also like to throw in this: How is modern fencing different from the "real thing"? [fencing.net/fencing101.com]
lighter thrusting swords evolved because they were considerably more deadly than heavy cutting weapons.
I'm sorry -- I have the funniest cartoon going through my head now. Soldier... armor... rapier... *tink* *squash*
but did the historic lunge need to be as powerful to efficiently kill the enemy?
Well, look at it this way...
comes down to John not wanting to admit that there are some things he can learn from modern fencing...
Safety is a goal, but on the World Cup level, it's dog-eat-dog ... a World Class sabereur draw blood, to a standing, cheering crowd
They believed that in order to mimic combat conditions, a fencer should be prepared to stab through bone, and so they started improving the lunge.
I started reading the ARMA articles and was surprised to find no mention of the more powerful lunging techniques.
True, but I think you'll agree that a broken bone has less chance of stopping someone than say a pierced lung, heart, kidney, etc.
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