Now, I'm one of those people that felt the flat-parry was "obvious" once it had been explained to me. I never liked the idea of edge-bashing (which was counter-intuitive for me, but which I did as a little kid 'cause that's what they to in the movies). I think the evidence is pretty solid and I'm happy being part of the "flat-only" gang.
I've had a lot of conversations with folks that belong to the "edge-only" gang that has more recently been converting into the "it doesn't matter gang." The "it doesn't matter" gang has a few arguments they use in their favor (though I can remember none of them), and is generally as stubborn as the other gangs are.
So anyway at the Provo NTP 1.2 last weekend John shows us the relation between Iron Door, Schrankut, Hengen, Schrankut (left) and Boars Tooth. He then showed us how all of these positions (and all non-abwenden "parries") are derivatives of either Pflug or Hengen. He then describes from manuals (Meyer for Hengen, I forget the reference for Pflug) that the Masters instruct us to parry from Hengen and Pflug using the flat.
Then we add it all up. Hengen, Schrankhut, and Iron Door are all similar to Hengen...where the deflection is made with the strong of the flat. Boar's Tooth is a "lowered" Pflug. And then there's just Pflug itself...
You can receive (parry passively, we'll say) any attack from these positions, and they *all* use the flat. Clear as day. Functional. Obvious.
Like I said, it's always been a "duh" sort of thing to me, but this presentation left me shaking my head and saying "wow...beat that!"
Good stuff, thought I'd share.
Happy Versetzen,
