Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Monday Practice

Practice yesterday was okay I guess? I felt good about my pickups against people, but I felt like I didn't fight super well in the tournament. I fought without my glasses on, since they tend to fog up quickly in my new mask. That isn't a workable long-term solution. Depending on lighting conditions, it is just a little bit harder to see and react to people's weapons. I need contact lenses, I need anti-fog glasses, or I need to rip out the padding from my new mask and do something with leather strapping to make it breathe.

If I'm going to fight in the tournament, I need to not half-ass it. I need to focus and bring intent to the tournament, or else I'll be unsatisfied with my fencing. I had several factors working against me in this regard - I am still figuring out my new mask, I am working with a new blade, I got a bruise on my most important knuckle before the tournament, and I spent some time teaching beforehand. Teaching always makes me kind of derpy for the next set of passes, and this time those passes happened to be the weekly practice tournament.

Just to be very clear - everybody else was fighting super-well. I just felt like I was not fighting well, despite not actually doing terribly in the tournament thing.

Looking at it in that way, I guess I'm not surprised that I was unhappy with how I fought in the practice tournament. I think I needed to not do the tournament this week, and instead find someone to get pickups with. I also did something unfortunate to my ankle during the practice tournament, but fortunately I am seeing the foot-and-ankle doctor tomorrow about a long-term issue.

*****

In order to help me stop feeling unhappy about practice, I am going to force myself to do a Plus-Minus-Plus exercise. This is an exercise in which I state one thing I did well, one area for improvement, and then another thing I did well. The positivity sandwich is super important - having something positive at the beginning means that I'm not going to just rant and rail about what I was unsatisfied about. Having something positive at the end leaves me with an at-least-slightly good feeling. Also, narrowing it down to just three important things reduces scope to the point that I can do actual meaningful work.

So, without further ado...

  • Thing I Did Well
    • I felt pretty good about my usage of the new blade. There were some hand-shots and opposition shots, especially during my pickups, that were really good. I couldn't have pulled them off with my case blade.
  • Area for Improvement
    • I didn't recognize that my headspace was off for the tournament. I offered to teach a thing, and then I didn't do anything to get rid of the bunch of little things that were in the back of my head bothering me.
      • More succinctly: I need to better recognize when I'm going on tilt, so I can take a step back to re-approach the tournament and change the things which are frustrating me.
  • Other Thing I Did Well
    • I feel like my three primary stances really clicked yesterday. Like, I didn't always win with them, but I felt super comfortable moving from one stance to another. 
      • Even so, I need to keep in mind that I shouldn't get complacent - those stances are probably up for another review pretty soon.
    • After-the-fact edit to remind myself of a thing:
      • I also finally got a technique to work semi-consistently which has been theoretical for a while.
        • In my heretical wrist-bent Giganti inside guard, apply opposition. Then, in the tempo of an action, circle your tip around their guard while rolling from fourth to first, raising your hand and moving it slightly right while extending. Lean forward and to the left, such that your body is protected by your hilt. After your hilt is in place, finish the disengage around their wrist/forearm. The target is as close on their chest to their right arm as possible.
          • At one point I did this and then just straight-up didn't recover because I haven't thought about how to recover after it is parried, so I just sat there going *click*.
All right everybody. That's it for me today. Keep fencing, keep drilling, and something else.

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Interim Post

I'm currently working on a semi-exhaustive categorization of techniques and strategies, and the techniques and strategies which are effective against them. I intend it to serve as a personal reference chart - "Oh man, that person is using super long range sniping shots. How do I deal with them? Well, chart says I should use counter-guards and zone-blocking, so let's try that." It is proving more of an ordeal than originally anticipated, so new posts are happening until I either shelve that other post, or I finish it.

*****

Yule was a good event. Lots of hanging out, lots of swording. Court was long, but that was fine. Lots of hanging out and talking with good people, although I wish I had started to get ready for court earlier.

In the early-ish, I helped to marshal the Bergental Baronial Rapier Championship. I was pretty impressed with the depth of competition there!

Then there was a bear pit tournament. It was good. After a rocky start, I got into a good groove. I got third place, which is pretty good. It felt good to just be able to do some Bear Pit and get into a groove.

I tried to integrate a bunch of new things and old things into my tournament game, but none of it seemed to be working super well. As such, I ended up relying on Distance and Timing Games to win fights. I would fight some holding my sword normally, then switch back to holding my pommel and tap my opponent at the absolute edge of my measure. It's amazing what gaining five inches suddenly can do to other people.

My hand decided that it really wanted to hold my sword in a Thibault-ish grip. It actually worked really well for the fights where I chose to do it. The particular variant of the grip that I was using meant that I had a very long grip on my sword, which let me use leverage from my wrist far more effectively than usual. People would find my blade pretty well, but then I would be able to push through them anyway. It was pretty great.

I then fought a bunch of good pickups. Yaaaaay.

*****

Basically all of my gear has started falling apart at once. My mask has been in questionable condition for a while, my gorget has had to be re-riveted, and my blade broke. For questionable reasons, I've chosen to replace my mask and my blade, rather than my gorget first.

New blade arrived from Darkwood! Yay! Due to some combination of "my blade broke sooner than it should have", "I have bought many things from Darkwood", and "they would like to look at my blade to see what happened with it", they were kindly willing to discount a new blade for me. I wanted to be able to fight my preferred melee form, so I took them up on the offer. I would say that this means you should buy things from them, but if you fight rapier in the SCA you probably have already given them  quite a bit of cash.

Compared to my current blade, it is about 1/4" longer both in the tang and in the blade length. I have cut down the threaded portion such that it fits my rigs - it was originally about 1/4" too long to fit. It is also a bit of a noodle, which I am fine with and was indeed the same as the sword I used before it broke.

It is 14.5 ounces, which is one ounce lighter than my current blade at 15.5 oz, and 0.5 ounces lighter than my old 45" blade. For reference, it is much much lighter than my ~21 oz longsword blade. It also doesn't really *feel* lighter in the tip, which means that most of the reduced weight is probably in the forte. That is fine with me.

When flex-testing, the new blade bends about 3", whereas my current blade bends just shy of 2". For reference, my longsword blade bends somewhere between 1" and 1.5".

From a purely subjective assessment, this blade is pure joy. It feels exactly like my old blade did, and I had thought I would never get my old blade back. It has all the same quirks I expect, and I am so happy about that. My case blade can return to being my case blade, and I can go back to using my whippy fishing-blade.

*****

I hadn't realized how much of what I do is made better by having a whippier blade. I do a lot of disengages which reverse direction toward the flat of my blade. This loads up some bend in the blade, which I then discharge by extending my blade and cutting into my opponent's blade. Lots of my cutting and angled opposition is made better by having a blade that can bend with the opposition, when using the flat.

More to the point - my favorite thing, the hilt-first disengage, is made better by having a bendy blade. The sudden movement creates some force on the tip, which bends the blade downwards and allows me to do subtle disengages around people's hilts. Perhaps this is part of why I have been almost entirely unsuccessful in teaching this technique to other people.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Practices Continue to be Good

Tonight, I fought a bunch. Instead of a play-by-play, I thought I would concentrate on how I'm trying to develop my game.

*****

My game for the last while has been concentrated on cutting through my opponent's opposition. Swords in collision are an edge case that I have studied pretty thoroughly. However, in order to gain the sort of cutting thrust I want, I have to throw that cut from my wrist, from a position in which my opponent has somewhat-strong opposition. That is a useful tool, but every new tool I add to my tool-set increases the effectiveness of every other tool.

I have watched through the Academie Duello series on opposition. In this video series, Devon Boorman talks about how to perform opposition correctly. And the videos I've watched thus far are So Good.

Today, I was working to try to fight even more safely than usual. I was trying to perform opposition from the elbow, not the wrist. The problem I ran into is that whenever I applied strong opposition, my opponents would disengage. Or they would put their tip far enough below my sword that I couldn't effectively oppose. Or other things like that, which neutralize Good and Proper fencing. As such, it was possible for me to defend myself in that way, but not for me to actually stab my opponent with my current knowledge.

In order to stab my opponents, I had to revert to my tactics from about a year ago, even before the cutting-opposition that I have been using recently. This meant that I did a lot of tiny twitchy mind-games type feints. It's the sort of thing that relies on my opponent reacting to me, which some people don't do until I present an actual threat. I could probably integrate cutting opposition into the new tactics, but I'm going to need to fight a more "pure" Duello-esque fight for a while so that I can learn how to blend things in without losing the essence of these new techniques.

One thing I noticed is that this type of fighting is far, far less tiring on my wrist. This means that I was able to pull off better twitch-angle-shots when I had to. Unfortunately, this form of opposition is one that the longer-time fencers in practice seemed to be very familiar with. As such, I ended up just sort of flailing when my first or second intention didn't work, and things did not go well for me.

Really, what I need to do is binge on Academie Duello videos. I'm sure that the Duello.tv website covers what to do in their fight when someone disengages and suchlike. I could guess, but I don't want to make assumptions based on the period manuals I have read. I also need to think harder about what to do when someone has a buckler, because frikkin' bucklers. Maybe I need to actually poke their buckler to get them to think, and then proceed accordingly? It's a start.

*****

I also played around with my longsword. I stitched together a leather wrapper for the handle, and it feels so good in my hands now. There is now an integral shim to improve blade stability, and it actually stayed in place when I took the sword apart. It is so easy for me to swing it around and do horrible, terrible things with it. I don't like the color of the leather of the handle in contrast with the metal of the sword, but that thing is intended to be an atrocity which will do horrible things on the melee field at Pennsic. As such, it shouldn't be pretty. Part of me wants to put a nice splatter of red on the handle, to properly express the horrible things that this longsword is capable of.

As a minor bonus, the integral shim means I can actually fully take apart the longsword and get my extra-heavy blade for drilling back on my standard hilt. Yay!

I want to make a new longsword handle for a second, shorter longsword. This is to see if I can replicate my success with this longsword's handle. I have probably spent upwards of 20 hours on research and work to make this handle, and I would like to see if I can do it faster this time. I started from basically no knowledge or skills, which is why it took so long. This new handle will be rounded and about 10", so it can be used with almost any blade and still be within SCA rules. I will see if I actually prefer the rectangular handle, or if my love of the rectangular handle I made is just some complex form of Stockholm syndrome.

Maybe I should leather-wrap a rapier handle I own which is too thin for my hands to use comfortably. That would be a good trial for leather-wrapping a cylinder.

*****

In order to keep myself accountable, I have the following action items:

  • Before next practice, I want to:
    • Watch through at least another series of Academie Duello videos.
      • This can just be in the background while doing another thing, like sewing or some kind of leatherworking or something.
      • I have a sheath to finish for Carolingia - perhaps that?
    • At home, drill more. I've been slacking lately, because work-stress.
      • Drilling is a good thing to do.
        • It improves my ability to stab a person.
        • It is vaguely aerobic.
  • Next practice, I want to:
    • Fight a buckler-user if possible, because bucklers are A Problem For Me. Poke the buckler and see how they react.
      • In the future, attempt to generalize reactions to poking buckler. Do all buckler users react the same way?
      • Try using my rotella. Do I react the same way when someone pokes my rotella?
    • Continue working on direct opposition in the method outlined by Academie Duello.
      • Don't try integrating cutting-through opposition yet.
      • Try not to use too many feints yet.
      • Probably this will be more detailed when I walk into Thursday practice, because of the above directive regarding watching more videos.
Until next time - have fun fencing!

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Violence Practices

Sunday and Monday's practices were good. This post is mostly spitballing random thoughts, because I've got no overarching sword-theory that I'm working on right now.

Sunday I ended up authorizing in long s-word. It is pretty great, and it's especially a fun form to periodically bring into melee. Speaking of melee, there was melee on Sunday! Yaaaaay.

We ended up doing a bunch of line drills, primarily. Line drills are hard to do, but we need to do them to get better at the melees. The particular focus of this one was in rolling lines. There were two lines, and one person to the side. People were expected to fight some, and then eventually the person to the side would choose a line and start rolling it. Before the side-person starts moving, all hits are called out but not taken. Afterwards, shots are called normally.

I liked the drill because the incentives were very similar to normal melee line incentives. Eventually I started fighting more conservatively, because I realized that if someone has their tip close to me when the line starts rolling, I will die. I started hanging back in my guard and waiting to either catch the roll or assist the roll, which is pretty much how zippered lines normally go in melee. We weren't practicing the creation of internal flanks, but that wasn't the point of the drill.

I feel like I did pretty well both at rolling lines and at stopping the roll when it began. It was pointed out that my chosen stance was kind of gaming things by accident, so maybe next time I start farther back or in a less offensive stance.

*****

Near the end of practice, I had a realization about the way I throw thrusts. In general when I'm fighting for keeps, I set myself with my hand forward and my blade to the far outside line. If my opponent commits to taking my blade, I perform a hilt-first disengage and stab them in the gut. If my opponent stays in guard, I try to do a thrust with false-edge leading. This is much more effective because of the particular way I hold my sword. This thrust should cut through the weak of my opponent's sword, thereby foiling any counterattack and their parry at the same time.

I have previously had trouble with people who hold their sword particularly far out. I have since realized that I can actually angle the cut so that my tip creates a curve, instead of a line. Instead of going from the outside line through my opponent's sword to stab them, I can cut a different path with my sword. This path goes from the outside line, to my blade being almost vertical, on to thrusting into my opponent's body.

This preserves the defensive and offensive properties, but lets me apply opposition at a much more advantageous spot. It's pretty cool, and I still need to explore all of the possibilities therein. I have managed to surprise more than one person with it at this point, though when doing this I need to be prepared to move forward more than I normally would with a false-edge-opposition-cutting-thrust. This is because this new method takes a bit longer, and also weirdly it can be initiated from farther away. This is because the normal counter for false-edge-opposition-cutting-thrust is having one's arm extended very far, such that pushing through the weak of the blade would put my sword to the other side of my opponent's body, but not in a place I can thrust.

Maybe I should add a passing step or something. Also, my hilt sort of goes in front of my eyes and it's hard for me to eyeball if I have touched my opponent yet. Maybe I need to drill responding to the tactile sensation of thrusts?

*****

Monday practice was kind of full of derp. It was probably useful in some holistic way, but there were just so many moments of weird things. I spent most of the practice working the new cutting thrust described above, or fighting single, or fighting shorter-than-usual sword.

I started drilling with a dude, but bailed on the drill when I realized that we were drilling things that I deeply and explicitly don't want to do in my particular game. Namely, I don't want first-intention dagger defenses to be a thing for me, with a few exceptions. Defense always starts with the sword in some way. Either the sword parries, or it beats, or it serves to zone-block and limit my opponent's options. I am very aware of how easy it can be to trick someone's dagger into doing the wrong things, and my game is very sword-primary.

My lack of ability to care about drills if they are neither historical nor My Thing leaves me somewhat hesitant about the non-historical classes of KWAR next week, but I'm sure it will be fun regardless.

The other violence was pretty good, I guess? I fought most of the people I have been learning a lot from fighting recently. There were many derp moments, regardless.

I think that the number of pre-loaded intentions in my violence macro needs to depend very heavily on the weight, agility, and tip-heaviness of the weapon of my opponent.

I also pulled of some pretty sweet Spanish-ish stuff. I need to remember to ask experienced diestros about the situation I keep getting into, where I hilt-parry my opponent and lever them around from the inside line to the extremely low outside line with my bottom quillon. It usually turns out somewhere between okay and good for me, but something feels weird about doing it in a Spanish game.

I have continued to try to pull off my reverse-giarata against both right and left-handed opponents. That entire sub-game seems more effective against left-handed opponents, but it's okay against right-handed opponents. It usually doesn't get me dead, but I'm not sure how to make it land on my opponent. I think people tend to see a situation that they are not used to, then they prepare to back off. Or they don't commit their thrusts hard enough. Perhaps developing my false-edge cutting thrust from the inside line with the wrist angled would make my life better. Perhaps I should try that with a giarata-step, or a rightwards-diagonal lunge? Who knows.

I need to explicitly work on fighting opponents who have more reach than me. That means using a 37-inch sword and fighting someone with a 45-inch or 42-inch sword.

*****
In conclusion, I've got nothing.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Sliding Steps and the Nine Hand and Blade Positions

So I was sick yesterday, which meant I couldn't go to practice. It was terribly sad. As such, I wish to organize some thoughts for next practice. These are several concepts I have come to understand from Sebastien Romagnan's Destreza text. I probably don't understand them as well as I could, but learning is the process of refining understanding. An important step in refinement, for me, is writing things down. As such, I have written them here.

As well, some of these concepts seem like they would be interesting and useful to people.

*****

Destreza has a particular type of sliding step. The front foot takes a step forwards similar to a lunge. The back foot comes up to meet it, and then the back foot goes back out. The two feet meeting allows one to gain a couple more inches of reach, without over-extending and falling forwards. The back foot does not touch the ground, but instead continues elsewhere. As well, the instant of feet meeting allows you to decide whether your back foot continues into a passing step or returns out of measure.

The red circle is you, the black circles are where your feet go.
This is in the order specified by the green numbers.

The slide really does create additional reach. It's pretty sweet. I want to start integrating it into my standard Italian-ish game. For some time I actually did by accident, because I was preparing a second lunge in order to catch people who reacted by moving backwards quickly. I am unsure why I stopped - perhaps because passing steps took the theoretical place that preparing a redouble took? Either way, it's time to introduce this into my game.

*****

Secondly, I think I have come to understand better the idea of Spanish-style bladework. As described by Romagnan (whose book I suggest you acquire if you find these concepts interesting), there are a set of nine positions and a set of three distances-from-the-center. They end up forming three cylinders  (or cones, depending on how you think of it) - a two-foot-diameter one, a four-foot-diameter one, and a six-foot-diameter one. I don't personally believe that the number of feet is exact here. It seems like it would suffice it to say that there is the small, medium, and large cylinder/cone/pyramid/whatever shape you want to call it.

Your hand can be in any of these positions, and the tip of your sword can be in any of these positions. This image is to be imagined as looking at your opponent. The 1 position is to be imagined as as having your arm extended straight at them, with no bend in your elbow and your sword pointing outwards. The 2 position is your tip or hand being level with or in line with their head.

Wheeeeee swords.

If nothing else, this is a useful framework for defining blade positions. It lets you understand where you are in relation to your opponent's weapon - an understanding sorely lacking in the traditional Italian one-two-three-four shorthand we generally use. Additionally, the position of your top quillon is defined in the same way.

As an example, Capoferro's guard in third places your hand at 6, your tip at either 1 or 2, and your top quillon at 2. Probably in the 4-foot cylinder/circle/pyramid.

Giganti's bastard guard for the outside line in terza-quarta places your hand at either 5 or 6, and your tip at 9. Also your top quillon in 9.

It would be a super-interesting exercise to annotate an Italian manual with this notation.

*****

This becomes weird when there is a significant height difference. As I understand things, this is what a side-view of two people of radically different height doing late-period Destreza would look like.

That short figure's leg-to-torso ratio is way different from what I intended there.
I could also be completely wrong about this.

Note that the cylinders are tilted, such that each fighter's 1 line (not drawn - it goes along their arms) is pointing at the other's shoulder. This is all well and good when it's another Diestro that you're fighting. But extending your arm like that just gives your opponent your tip, especially if you have a long sword. Even if you attempt an atajo. This is something I have experienced in drilling at home.

Several throwaway mentions of lowering your arm occur in various texts. For example, if I remember correctly, Thibault advises that you lower your arm if you are fighting in constricted circumstances, such as in a tunnel or some such. So I wonder if it would be useful to consider the 1-line to connect your respective elbows, rather than your shoulders. This would mean we could do things in two ways. We can either tilt down from our shoulders or we can lower our elbow to the same level as our opponent's elbow.

An example of lowering from the shoulder, to create a line between elbows.
I totally forgot to label the 2 and 6 lines.
Also I drew the Italian's sword.
Note that the cylinders are angled downwards from the Diestro, and the Italian's hand is on the inner 6 line.
...the Diestro's hand is supposed to be on the 1 line, not the inner 6 line.

An example of lowering from the elbow.
I drew the Italian's sword. It seems much less complex than the above.
Note that the cylinders are straight and parallel to the ground, here.

Perhaps neither of these is correct, but I have had trouble making the Destreza things work on Italians in the past, so I am interested to try these things. It is fully possible that the answer exists in Romagnan's book and I missed it. Or even that it is in another book that I have read fully or partially, and I just missed it. Or perhaps it's one of those ill-explored territories in fencing.

This doesn't at all take into account the fact that the ideal Atajo is accomplished with a 60º/120º angle between the blades.

This is a very abstract image of an arm, a hand, and a sword from each person.
The person on the right is taking the sword of the person on the left in an atajo.

But yeah. It's hard to take your opponent's sword in an atajo if they are already at an angle like Italian guards tend to be.

*****

So, in summation, there are a few things that I want to try on Thursday at practice.

  • Sliding steps to gain extra range and to be able to move more freely.
  • Different guards against Italians, to understand how Destreza concepts can be used in an Italian fight.
  • Trying to understand Destreza concepts better in general.
Yay violence! I hope that this entry was educational, or at least interesting. This post does not cover nearly all of the things in Sebastien Romagnan's book. It only covers the things I am finding most interesting at this current moment in time. Have good fencing, everybody~~~!

Friday, October 30, 2015

Practice Report and Digression on Freeplay

First practice using my case blade as my primary one. It could have gone worse. I still mourn the loss of my blade. It had always been wobbly, so I am not surprised that it broke. I purchased the sword that became my case weapon specifically so that if my sword broke at an event, I could just switch over and continue. Even so, it doesn't feel quite right. I think that the greater stiffness and weight will eventually be better, but right now I'm having some trouble pulling off weirdness that I could with my old blade. Also it's half an inch shorter, which means that a decent amount of the time I either miss, or I take a passing step and overshoot.

I did hit people too hard some, which I feel super bad about. :(


*****

I talked a bunch at the start of practice, eventually leading into some drilling and some freeplay. I had a hard time getting Destreza concepts to work for me, and ended up falling back on a lot of Destreza-inspired-but-not-in-canon hilt parries. I need to work on the second-intention attacks, since I had worked on first-intention attacks primarily and my opponent was presenting strong opposition even when I was able to successfully apply an atajo to his sword. By the end, my opponent was doing Destreza, and I was doing Destreza-ish.

It was so obvious that he knows how to do this better than I do, lol.

As an aside, this is why I tend to want to do free play more than drilling. Free play gives me data about what I need to work on in drilling at home. I worked super hard on those atajos and first-intention attacks, but if my opponent performs a counter to those attacks then working further on first-intention attacks is not useful. I tend to think of things in a rock-paper-scissors context.
  1. I learn how to throw rock. Yay rock! 
    1. No idea how to throw paper or scissors, though I know vaguely that they exist.
  2. My opponent knows how to throw paper. I lose.
  3. In response, I learn how to throw scissors.
  4. My opponent knows how to throw rock. I still lose.
  5. In response, I learn to throw paper. Maybe I win now?
    1. It is at this point that we are actually fencing. Before that, I was just losing.
In this context, my weakly-applied first-intention atajos are rock. His stronger, firmer first-intention atajos were paper. I am imagining that second-intention attacks will end up being scissors. The metaphor breaks down at this point, because the relationship among these attacks and counters is more complex than this. Regardless, my outlook on learning how to actually do Destreza in fights is optimistic, with my new textbook.

Just to be super clear - I am not at all saying that people who primarily drill are wrong. It's just not how I learn for myself. Different learning styles are totally a thing, and I am very much an active learner. I learn best when doing the thing, whether successfully or unsuccessfully.

*****

I then drilled some more with a newer dude in our practice. Things went okay - I walked in thinking I had a plan for what to do, but everything I was planning fell out of my head. We ended up doing some free-fighting, me using my short blade. It went okay. I was sort of doing my "throw out a bunch of attacks and parries and see what sticks" strategy. Then I threw a bunch of words at him about concepts that exist and how to do a very tight disengage. I am pretty sure that I didn't express myself effectively, but life will go on regardless. Next practice I need to write down what we are going to work on ahead of time.


*****

I then fought some against other people in our practice. I'm pretty sure that they were both trying new things. I was working on my Outside Line All Day Every Day style. It felt right. The new blade means that my first-intention thrusts need to have a little bit more cut to them than they used to, in order to move my opponent's blade out of the way. The yield around is a bit more awkward to do now - I can't rely on a flick of my wrist to get my blade to flex such that my tip goes around their hilt. Even so, I was able to get those two things to work. It made me happy.

I'm learning the value of not pulling my hand back after thrusting. If I leave my tip out there, I might get a kill if my opponent expects me to pull back. Additionally, it forces them to take that extra tempo to clear my blade. It's a way to keep them honest if I don't have a clear second thrust to attempt. It's a dumb long-blade trick, but so many things I do are dumb long-blade tricks.

Lastly, I think my lunge has gotten longer? Because my at-home practice area feels smaller now. That means either my lunge has gotten longer or the practice area has shrunk. While the second is possible, I think it's significantly less likely.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Practice Report and Intentional Rambling

Monday practice was good. I feel like I blinked or something, and literally every single person has improved relative to my skill level. Every single person, without exception. I haven't been drilling at home, so I guess I'd better start that back up so that I don't fall behind. However, in order to be motivated to drill at home, I need to have a Thing to be working on. Some bit of theory or something. So today, I plan to ramble until I figure out some things to specifically work on.

I started off practice with my short sword. That sword is super light in the blade, despite being kind of heavy in the hilt. I was attempting to play my basic Capoferro game. It worked okay, but not great. I kept needing to revert to my largely speed-and-trickiness game. In theory, throwing thrusts in third toward the arm should be safe, which was my primary go-to action. It was not safe - in particular, there was a type of hilt-high disengage which dropped the tip toward my gut which forced me to back off every single time.

I eventually moved to fighting with my long and super-tip-heavy sword. It went pretty well - I like the fact that my opponent has to commit super hard to push it offline, even with rigid parry devices. My game with it tends to involve just sort of dangling it out there and disengaging until I can take a long step or two. I am tempted to take a hacksaw to my spare Darkwood Pappenheimer hilt in order to remove the plates and reduce the weight, so I can have a real ricasso and reduce the danger of getting thwacked in the finger. This is instead of using my dagger hilt for that particular blade setup.

*****

We eventually fought the tournament. I was trying pretty hard, but wasn't correctly in tournament headspace. Usually when I fight in a tournament I have a "game" that I play with people. In particular, the "game" usually has the following aspects. I have also included an example of each of these aspects.

  • Uncommon situation
    • Keep my blade on the far outside line no matter what
  • Opponent has a relatively obvious response
    • They strongly take my blade to the outside and thrust
  • Strong counter to that response which is hard to counter
    • Yielding disengage with hilt used for defense
  • Knowledge of other responses, and counters that at least won't get you killed
    • Opponent maintains distance
      • Edge forwards slowly as possible
    • Opponent weakly takes my blade to the outside
      • Countered by pushing through and thrusting with opposition with a diagonal passing step
    • Opponent takes my blade to the inside
      • Maintain distance, counter-disengage

Shallow games are useful because it's easy to retrieve your go-to responses quickly, and you are far less likely to get caught with your brain-gears turning. There is an aggregate paper which contains information on various topics which affect reaction time, such as the number of options you need to choose among. The more things you have available as choices, the slower you will react. As such, a shallow game will let you react more quickly than you would otherwise.

I think that if your objective is to win tournaments, creating a somewhat shallow game like this is an effective tactic. You will only lose if someone else plays a game that happens to have a hard counter to your actions, or if your opponent has knowledge of these obscure portions of the game. Unfortunately, people gain this knowledge bit by bit as they fight you, if they are fighting mindfully. As such, it is necessary to mine for new secret knowledge, and to be able to plumb the depths of your secret knowledge quickly when your first-line techniques fail.

I think that writing up several prospective shallow games like that would be an interesting exercise. The shallow version of Capoferro which I wrote would be a good example of such a writeup.

*****

As I said above, this practice was fun. It felt aimless though, which means that it wasn't really satisfying in that way that practices are frequently satisfying. I think I need to start dividing my practice time up ahead of time, so that I don't end up just messing around all practice. Something like the following:
  • 30 minutes: Practice a secondary style.
    • This should probably be first because warming up is important.
    • Case, bargain-basement Capoferro, ridiculously tip-heavy sword.
    • My interpretation of Fabris 60, Dagger-forward stance.
    • If I am trying to decide between two tournament-styles, might practice one here.
    • If I need to do R&D, do it here.
  • 30 minutes: Practice my current tournament style.
    • Far outside line is currently my best.
    • Compound thrusts are a close second.
  • 30 minutes: Teaching/drilling with anyone willing to listen to me talk at length.
  • 15 minutes: Socializing, drinking water, changing, etc.
  • 15 minutes: Pick a fight with one or more people to work on some specific particular things.
    • "Oh hey, you are doing something interesting I don't understand. Let's violence at each other."
This might get mixed together. I might switch among these while fighting someone. But keeping things divided in this way might be good for me to retain focus. Because focus is hard, and it is easy to just mess around with a wide variety of things during practice.

Next practice I intend to work on:
  • Shallow version of Capoferro, with long and short weapons.
  • "I <3 the Outside Line" style, with particular focus on situations which kill the disengage.
YAY PRACTICE.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Practices Report

So I didn't really do a Monday practice report? Ah well.

Monday was pretty good. I entered the tournament late and fought longsword, a form that naturally works well with how I fight. I also got utterly and ruthlessly curb-stomped by Anastasia in pickups both Monday and today, but that's how things go.

I didn't really enter the practice intending to do anything except for have fun. I did. Yay!

*****

Today I entered practice intending specifically to fight a couple of specific forms. I wanted to focus on a very pared-down interpretation of Giganti, Capoferro, and Fabris. As well, I had three swords I used - the first is "The Standard", a 45" front-weighted hilt-heavy sword. The second was "The Heavy", 45" front-weighted tip-heavy sword which actually used a dagger guard rather than a standard rapier guard. The third was "The Original", a 37" hilt-heavy slightly front-weighted sword which is overall very light.

The three pared-down flowcharts were as follows:

  • Giganti
    • Attempt to assume his bastard guards.
    • Draw my opponent offline by adopting strongly outside or inside guards.
    • Single-tempo disengage-thrust
      • Compound thrust
        • I performed the disengage by moving and rotating my hand, and then performed the thrust by flicking in with my wrist.
    • Hand starts farther back, then extends.
    • Tighter grip on the sword than Capoferro.
    • Use actions depicted by plates on reaction if they seem applicable.
  • Capoferro
    • Loose grip, with the cross resting on the pad of the index finger and the pommel resting on the bottom of the wrist. This is taken from plate 4, in which he describes his guard in third.
    • Only thrust in the ways outlined in the chapter titled "Explanation of some Practical Fencing Terms" paragraph 17 - "The Thrust"
      • imbrocatta
        • Thrust in first targeting the line between your opponent's left shoulder and knee
        • Outside line mostly?
      • stocatta
        • Thrust in third toward your opponent's right shoulder
        • Both inside and outside line?
      • punta riversa
        • Thrust in fourth toward "the outside of their right shoulder"
          • ????
        • Didn't really use this one
    • Primarily counter-punch in the way outlined in the above chapter, paragraph 15, "Strikes"
      • Falso Manco
        • False-edge cut to your right as a parry with your weak, then extend into an appropriate thrust as described above.
        • Mostly performed by clenching the hand and rotating the wrist slightly.
      • Falso Dritto
        • Didn't actually parry with this.
        • Instead, rotate to fourth and extend, parrying with the strong of my sword. Then hit with a thrust in fourth???
    • Hand starts more extended, then when disengaging moves back, as per (can't find the reference. Maybe I imagined this?)
  • Fabris
    • More extended guards
    • Fabris plate 60???
    • Mostly trying to steal from Donovan's blog
    • Wait for opponent to try to take my sword near the tip, then disengage by moving my hand, and then thrust by moving my wrist.

I'm beginning to study Capoferro, so obviously that flowchart is more detailed. And again, this is drawing almost completely from that one particular chapter, because I find it useful to focus on particular parts of a text to try to discern what it means.

*****

I want to preface this next section by saying that I walked in expecting The Heavy to work for Giganti and Fabris, and The Standard to work for Capoferro. Because I have particular heresies that I have come to believe, and they are

For Giganti, I liked using The Heavy quite a bit. I wasn't able to get my opposition to click well enough tonight using any of the others. This is probably because I was focusing on the new and shiny configuration of things, but regardless, it was much much easier to gain opposition with it. Giganti worked pretty well with any configuration, though. Or at least, Giganti prevented me from dying, which is almost like working.

For Capoferro, I liked The Original most when counterpunching, and The Standard most when being more offensive. The imbrocatta is even better as a starting action than I thought it would be, especially when aimed correctly. As well, with The Original, I was able to respond so very, very quickly to attacks. I want to pay attention to how length of blade effects things when I eventually go through the Capoferro plates, but I feel like it mostly changed how I wanted to fence, not my overall mechanics.

For my knockoff Fabris, I liked The Standard the best. Extending your blade way out there can allow people to do horrible things to your sword. With The Standard, I could get out of the way, dance, and taunt in-measure much more easily. With The Heavy, when I got past their guard, I was totally in and wasn't going to be dislodged before landing my thrust. It was a much more subtle game, but I felt like when my opponent knew where to oppose my blade with The Heavy, it was harder to perform effective actions than with The Standard. I forgot to try this one with The Original. Oh well.

I guess I was wrong about that one. Educational!

Perhaps if I knew more of How To Fabris, I would have been more effective. As it stands, trying to Fabris with The Heavy was a far more subtle game, but not one that plays to my strengths. Very educational though. I will do this thing more often, because I feel like I have learned from it.

Lastly, there is one particular last-ditch maneuver I have become accustomed to. When my sword is pushed far to my right, either up or down, I tend to flip my sword back in a circle over my head and step back with my right foot, ending in position for a thrust in first from very high. With The Heavy, the mechanics were different enough that this movement just turned into a cut toward my opponent's head. That would be great if we were doing Cut and Thrust, but I had to stop myself from completing that motion twice. My lizard-brain really wanted to get in position for that thrust in first both of those times, but it was not happening.

*****

Presently, I remain in an experimentation phase. Perhaps I will add a shallow version of Meyer's rapier to my repertoire, since The Heavy resembles a Meyer style rapier more than anything else. I have learned that tip-heavy blades do help for straight-on opposition, but as far as I can tell they don't improve things for motions such as Destreza-style enveloping thrusts, as described by Puck on his blog. (Line in Cross, etc) I will continue using The Heavy, and perhaps I will gain more insight. It will be fun times regardless.

Monday, October 19, 2015

Melee Practice

Yesterday we had a melee practice. I also had a flash of insight right before sleeping that I can't remember for the life of me, so maybe I can recall it if I just start typing.

It was good times. I reassembled the longsword, and one of our local OGRs kindly provided a suggestion for a better shim. It's not easily-removable which makes me sad, but I don't really use that blade for anything other than the longsword very often anyway. I also added a leather washer next to the pommel, which makes it fit much more snugly and solidly.

My warm-ups were an illustration of why I would want to use the longsword for cut and thrust. I ended up in a hanging parry pretty often, which in non-C&T play doesn't give me many options. In C&T, however, I would totally be able to go from that position to a squinting cut while remaining defended.

Melee happened too! First, we did some fox and hounds. It was a great warmup for more complex melee, and super fun to try going back and forth between my standard case of rapiers and longsword. I think I did better with longsword, honestly.

I spent the rest of the practice thinking about where it is appropriate to use different types of implements, given that we played several 4-on-4 and line drill games.

  • Longsword feels like it would be so good in a very static line situation, like a capture the flag sort of thing. If I can maintain range, it is so good. I can also frequently catch people who are moving backwards because having five feet of sword plus my standard lunge is so long.
  • Sword and dagger is something I need to try more in melee. It would be nice to be able to commit to taking one person out in fox and hound drills. Dagger would allow me to commit deep to taking out one person and not care if I get too close, where case wants to maintain range, which is bad for me if I want to kill someone in a 1v2 situation. Getting close to one person and essentially using their body to foul the other person's attacks seems fun.
  • Case of 45" swords is pretty much made for zippering, skirmishing, and striking from the side. One sword gets committed to fouling their blade, then the other one stabs. It's great, and it is a strong tool for forcing individual people to retreat.
  • Buckler / Rotella is something that I need to try more in melee. It seems like it would allow for safer presses. I don't like pressing unless I can snipe from range, so it might be good to work on that. Like, maybe I push my opponent's weaponry to the other side of my buckler with my sword, then advance and stab?

I had trouble with the fast-paced line drill we were working on. Usually in line situations, I use distance to defend myself and try to draw the person across from me forward, in order to create internal flanks. I couldn't do that in the drill we did, partly because people were pushing very hard and not behaving tentatively, and partly because the people across from me had super-solid defense.

I was also asked about how to fight people with case. My answer is, and remains, that you should try to get both of their swords on one side of your body and then move in. In theory you can also push both of their swords outwards, but that is hard to make work.

At dinner afterwards, people talked about a bunch of things. Of particular note was a conversation in which we talked about what direction we parry things when trying to zipper lines.

  • I parry forward, attempting to push my opponents' blades across their bodies. This unfortunately creates opportunities for them to parry, which skilled people can use to prolong their life.
  • I also push swords sideways, which makes life easier for stabbing people, but also forces me to put myself in some danger from the opposite side that I'm pushing.
    • As well, this and parrying forward both put people's blades in the way of the direction I'm going. This means I either have to step daintily over their blades, or I have to wait for them to finish moving.
    • Many times, I've stabbed someone in a line who take a long time to leave and also leaves their sword sort of in my way, which ruins the momentum of my zipper.
  • One fencer at dinner parries downwards, which makes it hard to maneuver through your opponents' tips.
  • One other very successful melee fencer parries upwards. This puts blades above you, and it makes sense to me that this is a more "sustainable" parry, since it doesn't put blades in your own way.

So, I need to practice throwing shots between prima and seconda more in melees, to see if I can get free parries out of it. This will require me to duck down a bit and try to catch swords upwards, but I believe it might be a more effective way to do things than my current strategy of pushing forwards and sideways with case in melee.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Practice Repoooooort

Practice was a good thing yesterday. I was tired because I didn't sleep very much that day. Not solely because I was out late on Wednesday, but because I had woken up early to work on things for work. I had the most stressful work-day that I had had for quite some time, to the point that I was having some breathing and heart-rate issues before on the way to practice.

Practice itself was fine. I started off by doing some random desreza things. We sort of ended up doing the back-and-forth chess exercise organically, which was cool. I find that the most successful actions I perform involve catching and pushing with my quillons and hilt. If I can get my hilt on someone's blade and make sure that their hilt isn't on my blade for a moment, I can frequently capitalize on that because defending against it requires my opponent to pull their blade offline.

I ended up fencing a bunch of people. I did some single rapier, in which I got stabbed in the right lower ribs several times. I did a bunch of short rapier and stick, in which I remembered why I like that combination of implements so much. I did a bunch of case, in which I proved that I have no idea how to use a short weapon against someone using a pair of 45-inch swords if they're fencing in the way I tend to fence. I need to ask Sorcha how that works, and maybe fight her with case a bunch.

I ended up doing some fencing with afterblows. That was fine. Neither of us really had afterblows trained as a reflex in this context, so it didn't really change things. Very good fights all the same, despite the fact that I didn't really learn anything in particular from them. Very interesting to see additional Fabris guards in use.

I need to go back to actively thinking about how I lose bouts, in my ideal 45-inch sword and dagger setup. In the past, I have had the following flowchart for improvement:

  1. Fight a bunch.
  2. Find a particular way in which I am losing consistently.
    1. "I'm getting stabbed in my ribs"
  3. Figure out why I'm losing in that particular way consistently.
    1. "I'm committing to weird angle shots when I don't have substantially more range on my opponent."
  4. Figure out a way to fix that.
    1. "I'm going to try only striking through my opponent's blade with opposition."
  5. If the change to my fight makes me die less, try keeping it around
  6. Regardless of whether or not I keep the change, return to the top of this flowchart.

Obviously this flowchart only works for finding local maxima and minima. I'm not going to go from fencing Italian to fencing Spanish with this flowchart. But large changes to my game come from thinking really hard about big concepts, rather than thinking small and optimizing like this.

I worked on footwork some. That was nice. I am a firm believer in the principle that the hips lead and the feet go where they dictate. But my footwork was terrible-but-effective for a long time.

Lastly, I did some more destreza-ish stuff. My fighting was destreza-ish, his was more true to actual destreza form. I spent those fights feeling out what did and didn't work in terms of many things. I need to work on the four thrusting actions as per Puck. I also want to try doing Destreza with a more tip-heavy blade. This means either using my 42-inch noodle or my 45-inch stick of rebar. Possibly I would like to try doing destreza with a more minimal hilt, in order to make my blade more tip-heavy and my handle more back-weighted. I might try putting my dagger hilt on one of those blades and fencing with it.

Actually-lastly, practice really tired me out. Like, all of my muscles felt like lead before dinner, and there was a part of practice where I just sat down and panted for a while. This morning, I feel fine except that the point of my shoulder is super sore. That's probably because I was improperly loading the weight of my sword on my arm, for destreza things. Oh well.


Sunday, October 11, 2015

K&Q Post-Action Report

Starting With the Happy Things

So there was an event, and a bunch of people I like got recognized for stuff! The most awesome scroll was handed out! My fencing unit got recognized too! I need to start wearing a sword hanger to events, because our unit has been explicitly granted the right to wear weapons before the king and queen for this reign, so I want to flaunt the hell out of that.

The site was gorgeous, and despite high tensions and suchlike, people seemed to be in good spirits


Now, About the Fencing

The finals of King's and Queen's rapier championships contained the guy we sort of expected to win and one of the guys from my pool, who is also my don.

The semi-finals contained one of the other guys from my pool and the guy who I beat a year ago to become Carolingian champion.

Saying it like that, I shouldn't be unhappy with how I did even though I didn't advance out of my pool. But I really, really wanted to progress out of my pool this year. As such, I'm going to be frustrated for a while in my own personal little blog here, where very few people will see it.

When I was knocked out of my pool, I was so, so frustrated. I managed not to say anything too rash, aside from brushing a few people off with a terse "I'm going for a walk". I sat on a bench for a good few minutes and thought about life for a while. Eventually I returned and got some food and water, at the continued prodding of one kind person.

This is the second year running that the finals had one guy from my pool, and the semi-finals had the other guy. At this point I am just going to emotionally prepare myself for having the single hardest pool every single year, because according to tournament performance in the Sweet Sixteen, that is what I have had the last two years.

Additionally, the people I lost to in my pool are people who I would have particular strategies against, who I did okay against in the pickups I got it, and who those strategies uniformly did not work against when I got to the tournament. I think that warming up against people who are not my usual warm-ups was a bad plan. From here on out, I will only warm up against handsome boys.


My Losses

My first loss was to a tall guy who used a crinkle-buckler. I got half of a pick-up against him before the tournament started. I attempted to leg him in our pass, and that didn't work. Eventually he pressed hard and got through my defenses somehow? I usually can remember these things, but not this time. I remember most of our pass, and I think I presented good defense and offense. I think that next time, I need to go deeper for the leg against him, perhaps with a rightwards diagonal step of some kind.

My second loss was to my don, who uses longsword. I attempted a couple of my standard ridiculously long lunges based on distance against him, and they didn't work. Eventually I took his hand, but with his right hand he was able to sort of circle his sword around my parry and lay his tip on my chest. Next time, I should attempt a passing step if I think halfway through that my lunge that it will provide me adequate defense.

My third loss was to a tall guy who I fought extensive pickups against, in which I did pretty well. In the pickups he brought dagger. In the tournament he brought buckler. I attempted a few tactics, and saw him learning what I was doing and short-circuiting his responses as time went on. Eventually he landed a cut on my neck that I had attempted to pull onto my arm before he had a chance to cut. We went back and forth about it for a little while, and I was about to cede it to him when the king walked by saying that, "he totally had it." I probably should have ceded it earlier, which I will try to remember to do next time.

In the future, I either need to commit deeper earlier, or I need to take advantage of his anticipated responses. I am somewhat loathe to do these things, because it is hard to do either of those things in a safe way. More importantly though, I need to investigate the utility of learning people's responses in the middle of a match. It does leave the danger that I might allow myself to be trained into a dumb response. But it is a thing to think about. Maybe. Maybe not.


Notes and Other Things

In terms of specific techniques. I need to think through the following tactic more thoroughly:

  • Perform a disengage from the inside line to the outside line, ending in an exaggerated quarta.
    • If your opponent responds by taking your blade to the outside, take a forward passing step and place your dagger in the Parrying Area. Re-disengage under their hilt and stab them in the gut.
    • If your opponent does not respond, uncoil your arm directly horizontally to deliver a cutting thrust through the Sad Zone of their sword. Proceed to take a diagonal leftwards passing step, making sure to put your dagger into the correct place to cover any counter-offense.

It works great against so many people. But against people with middle-weighted swords, it might be possible for them to rotate their sword too fast for my dagger to present a real obstacle to them. I need to think harder about how back-weighted, middle-weighted, and front-weighted swords handle differently, and how this changes the possible tactics against them.

All in all it was a good-but-stressful event. Life will go on. I really really wanted to be a kingdom champion, but the two people who got it this year were super deserving of it, and I am legitimately happy for them.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Why Do You Fight?

On the eve of K&Q, it seems like a good idea to remind myself why I fence.

I fence because fencing is a puzzle.

I fight specific people so that I can present problems and solutions, and either I can be proven wrong by my death, or right by my living. Additionally, I prove my opponent wrong by stabbing them or I prove them right by being unable to.

I fight in tournaments because I can guarantee that in a tournament, my opponent will be doing their best to prove my principles wrong. I will be doing the same for them. In practice we try things and do research to try to mine for new principles. In a tournament, we are presenting our very best theories and principles and butting them against each other. Am I right, or is my opponent? Only time will tell.

Tomorrow, I will get yet another chance to learn the clearest lessons possible. There is value even in losing. There is value especially in losing, because losses provide an opportunity to improve and refine myself.

As Jon Radburn once told me - "It isn't about winning. It's about fighting well."

Pre-King's and Queen's Championship Feels

I completely failed at "taking it easy" yesterday. My ankle is super messed up this morning, but from past experience it will be okay tomorrow. Ah well. Post-K&Q Podiatrist Appointment will totally be a thing, because my general internal medicine doctor is useless for my ankle and has encouraged me to "just wait and see if it gets better" for more than a year at this point.

I'm pretty anxious about King's and Queen's Rapier Champions tomorrow. My fencing has been pretty on-point, but I still feel like there are things I need to work on before my game will be "good enough". I've always felt that since starting fencing though, so I guess that's not a bad sign.

It's scary coming into this event. I don't have a particular "thing" that I plan to use and overuse. Sure, I've got my old-style Outside Line Tricks, and my new-style Sword Magic, and I've got my distance/measure/posting tricks. But I don't really feel as though any particular one of them is going to carry me through the tournament. I don't have A Plan, because people have adjusted to all of the individual games that I play to the point that I can't win with them alone.

It's really scary coming into this event. The lead-up to this event has been super intense. This is the first K&Q that a lot of my semi-contemporaries plan to go for it for real. Along with so many skilled OGRs and MoDs going for it. I'm actually more stressed about this than I was about Champs last year or the year before.

The one thing I need to remember is to have resolve. All the skill in the world doesn't matter if I don't have the emotional fortitude to make correct choices in the tournament. I need to remember to do the things I need to do in order to make all of the noise and static at the back of my head go quiet.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Practice Report

Practice last night was good. I had a couple more realizations about New Sword Magic. I've finished writing two blog posts on the subject, except that I need to create photos and animations to describe the concepts involved.

I fought pickups against several people. The purpose of my pickups was to see how this different way of thinking about opposition is applicable. A note: I use the term "Sad Zone" in this post. This is the ideal place to push against someone's sword for opposition. I will not go into how I determine the location of the Sad Zone here.

As a note, I was literally bouncing this practice, that's how happy and excited I was for the pickups portion. As the tournament happened, I slipped into tournament headspace. That was good! It means I am able to switch between headspaces as needed.

My first set of pickups was against a buckler fighter. I ended up getting touched when he was able to isolate my sword and grab on to its location with his sword and/or buckler. I ended up touching him with a cutting thrust over his arm, directly through the Sad Zone of his sword. Additionally, I was able to perform several single-tempo passing-step dagger-pushes into the Sad Zone of his sword, when I moved my sword to the far outside line. I wasn't able to capitalize on it like I thought I should have been. Perhaps I should have gone for arm cuts or leg thrusts during the tempi in which I completely owned his sword.

My next set was against the Doctor. He was not feeling super well, and even so I think that the fights went more than 50% in his favor. He uses two long swords, and using my knowledge of principles in New Sword Magic, I was able to determine that the Sad Zone of his swords was much farther back than I had previously expected. As such, I was able to perform many cuts and pushes which actually gained good opposition against his swords. I feel like there is quite a bit of room for me to improve my execution of the principles of New Sword Magic, so that's pretty exciting to me.

After that, I fought another buckler fighter. She used her buckler more offensively and kept her sword much lower. I had trouble applying my principles of opposition to her, because she kept doing all these really good things that I didn't expect. Eventually I settled on a tactic of getting into Fabris Plate 60 stance and letting my dagger drift around defensively, while alternating high/low and high/high fakes. I could probably have done that same thing I mention above for the other buckler fighter, to her. Oh well, live and learn.

My last set of fights was against someone fighting with a dagger and a shorter sword. She was fighting primarily in a Fabris stance that I do not think is Good and True. I have seen this stance several times, and I have never liked it. Her stance exposed the Sad Zone of her sword, and as such I was able to push through that area using Compound Thrusts. That is to say, a particular type of line-change, combined with a particular type of cutting thrust. 

There was also a tournament! I fought in it and won it.

Several people did good things. I got booped in the nose because I did not close the line far enough, which is apparently a danger when performing a cutting thrust from the inside line using New Sword Magic. I need to work really hard on it before K&Q Rapier, in order to not shoot myself in the foot with New Sword Magic by doing something like that.

The other pass I lost was one in which I had cane, and he had buckler. There was a bunch of messiness, and I got legged. Then there was more messiness, and we both thought that we might have hit with thrusts, so we re-fought from the point at which I was legged. Eventually he took the pass and I don't even remember how. I think it was a thrust from his left side, using his right hand? Not sure.

But yeah. It was a good practice. I learned a lot.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Rose Tournament, and a preview of New Blade Magic

Rose Tournament went well. My team won, which is nice. Everybody in my team had more wins than losses, which is also nice.

I was sort of work-hung-over, so my attitude toward my fighting during the tournament wasn't that great. I had a lot of good fights, and so many courteous people. Such courtesy. So fighting. Wow.

My first loss was either my first or second fight in the tournament. I fought a guy who I had seen around, but never fought before. As such, I made the terrible error of assuming that he would not be a skilled fighter. I posted my sword, assuming I'd just be able to ace him quickly. That was not the case. He did the correct thing, gaining my sword deeply. I grabbed some pickups with him later, and he's really good. Victory wasn't a sure thing for me against him, but I certainly handed the win to him on a silver platter.

My second loss was to a guy who I have fought and won against in tournaments before. He's quite good. There was an iffy maybe-push-cut and around the same time, I had a draw cut. I suggested we re-fight it, because he seemed confident that he had the cut and I was pretty confident that I had locked his sword pretty far outside of my head. It was also clearly evident that he did not at all feel my false-edge draw-cut.

We re-fought, and he caught me square in the gorget with a cross-shot over his right arm, after I had taken his blade and I was preparing to stab him. It was fine, it was good, and I'm not 100% sure what I could have done differently. I need to figure out if New Blade Magic has any relevance to cross-shots with case swords. It might be able to teach me a better way to take case swords so that the cross-shot isn't open, so that would be cool.

Aside from that it was a pretty good day. I got pickups with the first guy I lost to, and those were good. New Blade Magic seems to have clicked to the point that I can do neat things. This is good, because I spent the first half of the tournament wrestling with New Blade Magic, instead of being able to just call upon the reactions which I know work. A blog post is brewing, but it's going to take some time to fully explain it. I will probably try to explain it to people at practice, just to see if it makes any sense outside of my brain.

As a preview, New Blade Magic provides:
  • An explanation of how and where people can disengage from.
  • A way to determine the exact correct area to push on your opponent's sword, and why that is the case.
  • A digression on what "back-weighted" actually means in the context of a sword, and what that gains you relative to "front-weighted" swords.
Have a good day everyone!

Friday, September 11, 2015

New Geometry on the Inside Line

The new geometry described in the previous entry, worked pretty well.


Stance Description

The stance ended up as a very profiled stance. The hilt went slightly to the left of my body, and the forte crossed over the rest of my body, frequently ending up with my tip pointing quite a bit off-line. This was because I needed to use my forte to defend myself against their debole, and the way most people fight on the inside line involves putting your sword very far over theirs on the inside line.

My hand ended up naturally rising when entering this guard, but I think that's because I was profiling my body. I could not find a comfortable place for my dagger, so it ended up drifting to various places. My hand ended up changing between being in seconda and in terza, which is about as expected.

None of the single-tempo actions I expected to work were the ones which ended up working. I had expected to be able to get a single-tempo on-line thrust to work well. This almost never worked, because my opponents never felt comfortable having me on their inside line. Usually this resulted in my opponent pushing me even deeper toward the inside line.


Successful Actions

The most successful actions ended up being two-tempo actions. One example was a two-tempo false-edge push upwards into a single-tempo thrust, from my sword being in seconda-terza below theirs. This ended up being a relatively safe action because of how this stance covers itself, and because of how far offline my opponent's blade had to go in order to push me offline. Also, the fact that my tip tended to be lower than my opponent's tip, despite my hilt being above their hilt. A less steep angle seems to be a thing with this stance.

Another successful action ended up being a straight-in thrust, leading to a passing step with a dagger-cover, void, and yield around. I would try to thrust straight-in, which forced my opponent to parry hard to the inside. This meant I knew where my opponent's sword would be, so I could take a passing step, covering with my dagger. If my opponent parried particularly high, then the dagger was not necessary, the body void being sufficient to protect me.

The last successful action was a response to my opponent pushing hard inside and downwards, with their tip lower than their hilt. It was a simple disengage to the left around their hilt. This is extremely fast, because the action initiates in the direction of my true edge. It ends up touching in my opponent's flank, past that beautiful and hard-to-parry part of the crook of the arm.


Less Successful Actions

When my opponent didn't give me blade engagement, I felt like I could not do very much. In theory I should have been able to strike in the tempo of their disengage, but in practice my sword ran into their dagger most of the time when this happened.

Additionally, if this stance really is what Giganti wanted, it should have been easy to strike through a disengage-thrust. This was decidedly not the case. I would usually catch the parry, but then my tip would go wide. I think that is a problem of execution on my part though, not a problem with the geometry itself. I shall need to think on this.


Going Forward

For the future, I need to work on my single-intent actions from this new inside guard. My intuition says that as my two-tempo actions improve, this will open up options for single-tempo actions. The two-tempo actions listed above all take advantage of my opponent's guard being very "big" - as in, "oh, you're on the inside line, I am going to very firmly cover your blade". I think that if I fight someone using a "smaller" guard, I will have more success with single-tempo actions.

Additionally, it's interesting to note how many of my go-to actions on the outside line are two-tempo. The most successful ones are still the single-tempo actions, but the two-tempo actions are very necessary to make opportunities for the single-tempo actions.

This stance is still not ready for tournament primetime, but it's well on its way to being useful.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Heretical Thoughts About Giganti

I have something to confess - I have been having heretical thoughts about the text of Giganti, as translated by Tom Leoni. The following is the result of a couple of hours of research. I could be wrong, and if you have evidence that I am wrong, please show it to me and I would be happy to edit this entry. I do not want to mislead others.

Additionally, if the geometry and techniques resulting from this end up being ineffective, I will edit this entry to reflect such, so that others do not begin down an ineffective path.

Why Should I Even Care?

One thing which has always bothered me about Leoni's Giganti is how Leoni specifies that in the inside guard, your tip should be pointing toward your opponent's right shoulder. There are several reasons that this just does not feel like it works. 

First off, it is impossible for you and your opponent to both be in this position. Sure, if you can force your opponent out of that position and take it for yourself, it's nice. But unless you are in an unsafe and impractical position which exposes both of you, then it is impossible for both you and your opponent to be on the inside line.

Second, the thrust is an unsafe action from the inside line. Giganti is concerned with safety above all things. He repeatedly chastises people who fight in a way that would cause what he calls a "double-hit". However, if you take your opponent's sword and then thrust from Leoni's Giganti guard, you create a line for your opponent to thrust at you. If your opponent is an inexperienced fencer, he might do exactly that. Or if he has a dagger that he intends to parry with, or any number of other, unpredictable factors.

Note that it is possible to perform a safe thrust from Leoni's Giganti guard, by pushing your hand toward your opponent's blade and then directing your sword to them. However it is slower, and from experience it ends up feeling more like a tempo-and-a-half action, rather than a single-tempo action.

Additionally, I have been recently thinking about alternate ways to adopt an inside guard. This does give me an agenda in this - I am working from necessity and looking to historical precedent for guidance. I will not go into my entire argument for this, but I feel it is good way to do things, due to the ambiguity of historical sources in many places.


What Does the Text Specify About the Plates?

Due to the above reasons, I decided to take a closer look at the actual text and words of the translation. In the actual text of Leoni's translation of Giganti's words on guards, it isn't specified which guard is inside and which one is outside. Is this actually true in the historical source?

http://mac9.ucc.nau.edu/manuscripts/giganti.pdf
(Look at page 11, GUARDIE OVERO POSTURE)

Survey says nope, as far as I can tell. This makes sense, because Leoni's translations are beautiful, generally carrying the intent of the words faithfully. In the translation by Leoni, the order is not specified. It is true that the inside guard is mentioned first in the text, but that doesn't necessarily mean that figure 2 is the inside guard, and figure 3 is the outside guard.


How Does the Text Specify You Should Place Your Blade?

Since there was no direct reference to an image which I could find, I decided to dive into an attempted translation of the text. My Italian is nonexistent, but with the help of multiple dictionaries, I was able to figure out that the reference text I was using didn't explicitly rule out the idea that by saying that you should place your sword "over" theirs, it could mean that you should put it "between" you and their sword.

It's a bit of a stretch, but stay with me.


What Do the Images Themselves State?

For these images, the text specifies that one is on the inside line, and the other is on the outside line. Given that the earlier PDF I linked doesn't have very good images, we turn to a later translation of this book:


And the high-resolution images for these plates:
(indicated by Leoni as the fencer to the left taking the blade on the inside)

(indicated by Leoni as the fencer to the left taking the blade on the outside)

It is worth noting at this point that these are not the only reproductions and material that I looked at. These are just the highest-quality, and none of the other material contradicted this material. Indeed, in the versions of the plates used in Leoni's book, Figure 3 looks like they are on the inside, as I argue below.

I looked desperately at many different reproductions of these plates. In particular, I looked for indications of which sword was closer to us at the cross. This is the easiest piece to see aside from hand position, and even this is infuriatingly difficult to decode. Giganti does not help us, expecting us to figure out which fencer is in a better position by ourselves.


Figure 2, even in this higher-quality version, is infuriating. It is hard to tell which blade is closer to the viewer at the cross. It might be the fencer on the left? Additionally, the shading seems to indicate that the fencer on the left has his hand tilted to his left, with respect to his arm. If the image is to be believed, we can see the start of his fingers, which would not be possible were he in quarta or between terza and quarta. This means he is between seconda or terza. As for the fencer on the right, there is nothing noteworthy about his stance.

This seems to indicate that these fencers are on the inside line, and that the fencer on the left is pressing on his opponent's sword with his false edge. This seems less than ideal for the fencer on the left, even though his sword is closer to being pointed at the other guy's face.


Figure 3, at this higher quality, becomes far clearer. The fencer on the left's sword is clearly closer to us at the cross. This means that the fencers are on the inside line. The fencer on the left is once again in seconda. It seems pretty clear that this is on the inside line. As well, the fencer on the right has his sword pointed more toward the fencer on the left's face. Lastly, from the quillon positioning of the fencer on the right, it seems like his tip is pointed more toward his opponent's left shoulder.


If both of these are on the inside, then Giganti has explicitly lied in his manual. I would prefer to imagine that Giganti is not lying, so I imagine that the one which looks more like the outside line is Figure 2, since the single line of the fencer on the right's sword drawn over the fencer on the left's sword makes it look as though the fencer on the right's sword might be closer to the viewer after all. This results in something interesting.


Context

Giganti cares very much about the idea of counter-guards. He mentions them in this section of the book, and in an earlier section states that "guards" aren't the appropriate thing to create, but that you should always work to create a counter-guard instead of a guard. If we take this into account (and ignore the fact that the models change between plates), and we assume that Figure 2 depicts the outside line, we get the following sequence:

In Figure 2, the fencer on the right (Dexter) assumes a completely generic guard in terza. The fencer on the left (Sinestro), being a knowledgeable and savvy fencer, assumes a counter-guard on the outside. Note that his tip is pointing at his opponent's head more than the reverse. This fact is hard to see at first, but because Dexter is taller than Sinestro, it is true.

In this plate, we should model ourselves after Sinestro.

In Figure 3, Dexter sees Sinestro's counter-guard. Dexter, also being a savvy fencer, adopts a counter-guard on the inside line. Presumably there was a disengage somewhere in here. Note that Sinestro has not changed his guard in any major fashion. Dexter now firmly points toward his opponent's head, and, assuming that Dexter's wrist is bent and pointing his tip at Sinestro's left shoulder, this forms a ramp which would push Sinestro's tip off-line if Sinestro tries to thrust directly in. We can tell from Dexter's body posture that he expects to be on the inside line, whereas Sinestro still expects to be on the outside line.

In this plate, we should model ourselves after Dexter.


Further Context

One last interesting note - the postures specified by me here, in which the inside guard points over your opponent's left shoulder and the outside guard points over your opponent's right shoulder, force your opponent to make the largest disengage possible if they want to disengage.

I have also gone through several plates separately and this alternate inside-line posture seems to make quite a bit of sense. 

It seems safer against double-kills, which is a deep concern of Giganti's. It also seems generally easier to execute the actions specified by Giganti in this guard. And lastly, it allows for a neutral position between two fencers in an inside guard, so that they can wrestle over the center line and force each other to disengage. As well, my intuition tells me that Giganti fought with far heavier swords than later period masters. This position would allow you to pivot around your blade's center of balance, which would allow for much more agile movements than otherwise.


Closing Remarks

Obviously, this means nothing without testing. I have done separate geometry about this alternate guard, and will be bringing this new paradigm to practice on Thursday. There, it will face a number of opponents. I will need to bring it multiple practices in order to confirm or deny its efficacy. After all, this is why we imitate the period masters - they are theoretically the most effective fencers of a bygone age.

I hope this has been educational, or at least entertaining, to all who read this.


All references for this entry with the exception of Tom Leoni's excellent book were found on the Wiktenauer page on Nicoletto Giganti's book, Scola, overo teatro.

Tom Leoni's excellent book is a fantastic resource which I still suggest you get. It is available at this link.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Quick Report on Things

The first Thing did not work so well. This is because a false-edge cut on their blade with an effective amounts of force is super hard to perform if they are thrusting or stationary. Maybe this would work better with a full-circle cut, rather than a half-circle cut. Maybe this is a lost cause for the situation I'm trying to apply it to. It requires such a hard body-void to make things work.

The second Thing I did not end up trying very much. It made many situations feel much more dangerous, which was not great. I would need to perform so much more geometry to use this that I am electing to not mess with it for now. It would essentially be a new style, centering around rotating from the wrist around the point of balance of one's blade. And while it seems like an interesting style that I have already learned elementary bits of, I'm not ready to commit to it yet.

The third Thing has promise. I feel as though it might be better with the more German-ish thumb-on-the-ricasso grip, rather than my standard Rada-esque index-finger-on-the-side-of-the-ricasso grip. That would involve learning to use the fullness of the thumb-on-ricasso grip, which can be a long-term goal, but not a short-term one. Despite the fact that technically Rada uses the thumb-on-ricasso grip as well. Hm.

Perhaps placing my flat or false edge toward my opponent's blade would be easier on my wrist? One of the problems is that it feels weak against my opponent's blade. In retrospect, though, I'm not sure that actually caused any real problems for my opposition. I think that this is a thing which deserves more study, so I should spend serious time fighitng in this guard in practice, and then flow-charting out possible responses and possible good choices for my opponent in response to this.

As well, I did some good work in working through a couple of situations that were gnawing at the back of my brain.

The response I came up with against sword-first dagger-back guard seemed to work well, with the caveat that it is absolutely vital that I not initiate the action if my sword is farther toward their guard than about 5/8 of the way down their blade. This is different from my normal ideal zone of opposition - here, I want to take opposition about 5/8 of the way down their blade to about 1/8 of the way down their blade.

The action is a passing diagonal step to the left, at the same time taking their blade in the specified area and using the natural rotation of my body from the passing step to interpose my dagger such that a disengage or thrust to my flank is impossible. If I gain opposition any farther back, then it seems possible for them to lever my blade out of the way and thrust. If I do oppose correctly, their only option is a two-tempo parry-riposte, which I should be able to move my dagger to catch in time, leaving my sword at liberty.

Much thanks to the unnamed fencer who helped me sort this out.

The confusing situation which happened a few weeks ago, in which my hilt-first disengage completely did not do the defensive things that it should have done, and also completely jacked an unnamed fencer in the ribs, has been solved. The issue was that my opponent threw a thrust in prima. which meant that my push toward his hilt completely missed. Additionally, I did not perform the appropriate oblique left-foot step that this action should require. I think that a diagonal rightward lunge would also have worked, but we were in too close quarters to do that.

I need to make sure that I perform my footwork in fighting exactly how I perform it in my at-home drilling. Because at home, I do that step all the time. In combat, it's hard to do that step unless your opponent is coming in on you.

Additionally, I'm not sure that pushing my hilt toward their sword is always the best option. I believe that the straight-upward raise blocks off actions in prima far more effectively. It also restricts their sword to the half of my body which is far away, meaning that it is much more likely that my dagger can pick them up. I need to think Very Hard about this, because that hilt-first disengage is one of my bread-and-butter techniques in tournaments.