@ I have never seen this technique before, but it appears to greatly increase leverage within the over bind. This opens many opportunities, especially with Ringen. It seems to be a safer and more efficient half-sword for blossfechten
Рік тому
Also my thoughts on that. For me its a form of half-swording and liechtenauer mutieren hybrid technique :)
Michael Pitt Stronger leverage and control is achieved (it essentially moves the division between the strong and weak a bit in the direction the tip) at the obvious cost of the risk to one's hand.
Some opponents simply need to be grappled. I have a student who would come back week after week, ignore all the progress he made and begin to flail about like a drunk because he was determined it was the best way to win...as silver writes, the drunk is a formidable foe, as they do not protect themselves, which makes them unpredictable and incredibly hard to counter safely, after weeks of frustration and attempting to get the other students to punish him for his foolish behavior, I finally joined in the sparring, only I did not fence him in sword's measure, I would simply receive him, switch to a half sword grip, and grapple. Doing this I never once failed to thwart his shameless display, and he eventually learned to fence artfully to avoid such a fate.
Very little risk to the hand, remember that this was created for a sport environment, and so the danger comes from a moving sword, and you precede this technique with total stoppage.
@@bearling477 The myth that Meyer was sport only is just that. There is not a single mention of tournament in his treatises and in his time the Longsword was still used in war and self defense.
Very nice, this seems to open a whole new world of possibilities! Thanks for sharing :)
Thank you for the detailed, up close, slow downed motion. I was able to pick up the technique much quicker.
First I was "Why?". Then I saw the rest of the video and was "I need to try that out!".
Extremely cool stuff. Thanks!
Ahhh, didn’t make sense I til the second part. Useful for defeating the bind.
is it just me or do the swords sound different in this video?...
tehehe lovely as always.
Greetings from Munich :)
Besides a very great channel and really decent videos, that is a very nice lady over there. Very beautiful! Keep it up
nice video greetings from Mexico
Nice movés pretty Hard to get it in real combat i think, but the best i think if you máster them
Nice .... ! :3
My mind is blown 🤯
Why... xD
@ I have never seen this technique before, but it appears to greatly increase leverage within the over bind. This opens many opportunities, especially with Ringen. It seems to be a safer and more efficient half-sword for blossfechten
Also my thoughts on that. For me its a form of half-swording and liechtenauer mutieren hybrid technique :)
But why?
It's a half sword variant, so why not?
Michael Pitt
Stronger leverage and control is achieved (it essentially moves the division between the strong and weak a bit in the direction the tip) at the obvious cost of the risk to one's hand.
Some opponents simply need to be grappled. I have a student who would come back week after week, ignore all the progress he made and begin to flail about like a drunk because he was determined it was the best way to win...as silver writes, the drunk is a formidable foe, as they do not protect themselves, which makes them unpredictable and incredibly hard to counter safely, after weeks of frustration and attempting to get the other students to punish him for his foolish behavior, I finally joined in the sparring, only I did not fence him in sword's measure, I would simply receive him, switch to a half sword grip, and grapple. Doing this I never once failed to thwart his shameless display, and he eventually learned to fence artfully to avoid such a fate.
Very little risk to the hand, remember that this was created for a sport environment, and so the danger comes from a moving sword, and you precede this technique with total stoppage.
@@bearling477 The myth that Meyer was sport only is just that. There is not a single mention of tournament in his treatises and in his time the Longsword was still used in war and self defense.
👍
Historical European Swordsmen have good taste in sexy girls. 😎😤