lklawson
Grandmaster
When you teach knife, what do you like to teach first, Defense or Offense, and why?
Peace favor your sword,
Kirk
Peace favor your sword,
Kirk
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When you teach knife, what do you like to teach first, Defense or Offense
and why?
When you teach knife, what do you like to teach first, Defense or Offense, and why?
Peace favor your sword,
Kirk
offense. defense is predicated on offense; any defensive technique will start with 'if you are attacked like this...' it important to know how a weapon is 'best' used, so that you know how to thwart it.
tim
How a weapon is best used and how you'll see it used by an attacker are not the same thing, IME. Everything I've read and seen points to the common street knife attacks being the psycho stab and the sewing machine (strong arm pumping the knife into the person's stomach area) style attacks. IE, untrained responses to rage when they've got a knife handy.
Defense because the majority of students don't carry knives and the majority of attackers who use knives don't use any fancy knife martial art, it's all slash and stab.
For Knife offense I like the FMAs but there is a good number of FMA knife defenses I don't care for. Too much blade grabbing and arm against blade disarms.
Even with an amateur you can be in deep trouble. The fencing masters of old called them the "Vulgar Fencer." Their meaning was that untrained folks will frequently do random, unexpected, and even suicidal (to themselves) things because (being untrained) they don't know any better.Experts: If your knowledgeable you can tell if the person with the knife is an amature or a pro. If they are an expert you are in deep trouble
How a weapon is best used and how you'll see it used by an attacker are not the same thing, IME. Everything I've read and seen points to the common street knife attacks being the psycho stab and the sewing machine (strong arm pumping the knife into the person's stomach area) style attacks. IE, untrained responses to rage when they've got a knife handy.
It's kind of like learning to defend a jab, cross and hook, then seeing people throw barroom haymakers at each other in street fights. An actual cross in a street fight is a rarity.
When you teach knife, what do you like to teach first, Defense or Offense, and why?
Peace favor your sword,
Kirk