Very nice explosiveness and accuracy, pell work is important! Maybe try starting with a straight back sometimes and then leaning forward so the power generation is exponential? Being forward weighted is good to present a target from which you could lean back and counter. It also signals to your opponent that you are taking the vor and may not retreat easily - which can be used to your advantage if you want them to parry an oberhau a certain way so you can push their blade up aggressively into Krieg. If you want to sneak up on them, exponential power may be useful though. Just a suggestion ;)
"Maybe try starting with a straight back sometimes and then leaning forward so the power generation is exponential?" Honestly this is exactly what I was doing. The straight back is super important to translate the power of your legs into the sword. The leaning forward is kinda necessary because your foot will always be slower than your sword. This idea that your sword impacts at the same time as your leading foot comes back on the ground is delusional to say the least. It gets you killed. The leaning forward solves the problem of reach (since a full step is out of the question) and gives exponential power (you mean the kinetic chain right?). Actually if you do this form of a Vorschlag you will have it easy to get into the close game. You catapult yourself forward to your enemy. If the Vorschlag doesn't hit, you still have all the momentum pushing you to the enemy. If you want that then this Vorschlag is great. I actually try to keep all the explosiveness, but want to solve the problem of coming into the high bind (is that what you mean by Krieg?) all the time. Since I don't like ringen to much. I plan to do more videos on this, but most is still experimental stuff.
Very nice explosiveness and accuracy, pell work is important! Maybe try starting with a straight back sometimes and then leaning forward so the power generation is exponential? Being forward weighted is good to present a target from which you could lean back and counter. It also signals to your opponent that you are taking the vor and may not retreat easily - which can be used to your advantage if you want them to parry an oberhau a certain way so you can push their blade up aggressively into Krieg. If you want to sneak up on them, exponential power may be useful though. Just a suggestion ;)
"Maybe try starting with a straight back sometimes and then leaning forward so the power generation is exponential?"
Honestly this is exactly what I was doing. The straight back is super important to translate the power of your legs into the sword. The leaning forward is kinda necessary because your foot will always be slower than your sword. This idea that your sword impacts at the same time as your leading foot comes back on the ground is delusional to say the least. It gets you killed. The leaning forward solves the problem of reach (since a full step is out of the question) and gives exponential power (you mean the kinetic chain right?).
Actually if you do this form of a Vorschlag you will have it easy to get into the close game. You catapult yourself forward to your enemy. If the Vorschlag doesn't hit, you still have all the momentum pushing you to the enemy. If you want that then this Vorschlag is great.
I actually try to keep all the explosiveness, but want to solve the problem of coming into the high bind (is that what you mean by Krieg?) all the time. Since I don't like ringen to much.
I plan to do more videos on this, but most is still experimental stuff.