Sunday, August 27, 2017

Pounding skulls - more drill development

There are two kinds of Abrazare - one done for sport, and one done in anger or defending one's life.
This is kind I will talk about. ~ Fiore

One of the things I truly love about The Flower of Battle is that is repeats itself. Fiore was a simple guy, it would seem. every section starts off with an inside bind, usually with the left leg front, and the descends from there into various plays and remedies.

Now, Many will agree that many of the old man's plays arise from various specific crossings of the sword. Do we agree that he sets up his book in this way? But why then does he only give us one such crossing in the Abrazare section?

I posit - he actually gives us a great many. To paraphrase a bit, use the binds that arise from that arise from abrazare, and strike you foe in the places most dangerous or painful.

Those two lines from the prologue give us permission to come to grips from a place of striking. "Coming to grips" is how I interpret the variety of binds that may exist. We grabbed each other. There are a whole lot of sensible ways to grab some one who is trying to hurt you. You could clinch the head, tackle the body, upend the legs, or put the belt on 'em. Which only names a few "Crossings".

To strike with the hands makes a good deal of sense in a wide variety of situations. Whether we are faced with a common tough, looking to liberate coin from our person, or a fellow warrior on the field of battle, sluggin' the assailant in the kisser or taking their nethers on a boot ride to heaven seem like great ways to distract them or soften them up for further action.

So, it's there for us.

There are a great many ways for us to come to grips, and so many crossings of the arms that may occur that it made my head spin just considering them, till I noticed that most of them don't matter. A lot of them are so fleeting that there is no way to meaningfully use the moment. hand to had strikes rarely elicit "binds" of useful duration.

Silver talks about this when he notes the dagger is too short to make a crossing. Punches don't make for the best crossings either, no lasting binds will occur here.

So which crossings DO matter? Well, I can't say for sure, but I have settled on three of them to work with in training. They cover a pretty good spread of situations in stand up hand to hand combat. The clinch, the Classic underhook, and the peasant throw. Now, Fiore does not draw us a clinch in his pictures. But it comes up in life too much to ignore it. So I will use "Fioreish stuff" to address the problem.

So, some basics.

How do we hit them? - Hard.
We need to be able to hit hard. Bang, I like to call it. One must deliver enough juice for the target to care. So, in video chunk one, we'll look at using the hips to generate that "bang". Get your minds out of the gutter. I am talking about face punching. We need to deliver crisp, sharp blows that elicit a strong response. And by response I mean their body should displace under the impact.

Where do we hit them? - Where it hurts.
We need to know where to put biscuit in order to fill up that basket. The jaw, neck, mouth, floating ribs, kidneys and groin are what Fiore suggests.  But in a pinch, any target will do. What I mean to say is, when in doubt, Gob them one good.

Follow up. - It ain't over till they taste dust.
If one is good, two is better. The main point of these strikes is to set up what comes next. to you had best be ready to break or throw your opponent after you hit'em.This is really the most important part of Abrazare. The ability to take advantage of the hits you deliver to finish the fight. As always, I define that as being the human that ends in control of the conflict. Fiore made a point that in his duels he came away with out injury, not that he murdered 5 people. My mission is the same - survive with out harm to me.

That means controlling the target, and being ready to deal with the targets buddies.

So, here is the video -
It will go over a few types of strike,
power generation on the high line,
a simple training drill to come to a bind,
and using Firere to break a grab.

I'd love to see YOUR version of the drill, which bind you might break.
post them in he comments. I'll take text versions as well.

Any way - Were gonna deal with the clinch.





So, the above pictures will appear in my video, the one on the left is what I use to justify Fiore dealing with a clinch type grab. Clearly the dude has been grabbed by the head. In the first frame, the defender is using a strike to the eyes to break the offenders grip. the second is not an immediate follow on in the book, but Fiore recommends you break his chestnuts in two when held in that manner.

Lets link this together, along with a plausible crossing.

1. Offender decides its time to hit the Defender - and he goes for it.

2. Defender clears and hits back - "winning"

3. Offender gets in and grabs the defender to stop the face punches

4. Defender breaks the clinch and regains control.


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