Have any of you experimented or trained in a system that teaches students to swing a stick with two hands? All of the FMA that I have done is all one handed. How do you think the two handed grip compares to the one handed? Pros and cons?
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upnorthkyosa said:Have any of you experimented or trained in a system that teaches students to swing a stick with two hands? All of the FMA that I have done is all one handed. How do you think the two handed grip compares to the one handed? Pros and cons?
Phadrus00 said:UNK,
My experience has been that when dealing with a short stick (30" or shorter") the FMA training is almost exclusively one handed primarily for speed (the light weapon has little concussive value and you must augment it with speed to generate the deisred power) but also, as HKPhooey pointed out, to free up your second hand for Tapi-Tapi (checking, inserting, countering) as well as for use with an additional weapon such as a blade or second stick. Having two hands on a shorter weapon leaves them BOTH vulnerable to being attacked and disabled in a single strike from your opponent. Some exceptions do exist however such as when you are transitioning the stick from one hand to the other whcioh may require you having both hands on it at some point however these maneuvers are never done as an attack but rather in close to the body where they are covered.
However if we are talkng about LONG weapons like the Bo or Jo staff (4' or greater) then using two hands is perfectly acceptable (in reality it is required!) Here the hands are spaced out to control the longer weapon and they are not made simultaneously vulnerable to an opponents single strike.
Remember SPEED is critical to generating the desired force at the end of your stick and having two hands on that short will inhibit your ability to generate that.
Regards,
Rob
upnorthkyosa said:This question is coming from a little exercise we did in our dojang the other day. We had our ukes swing sticks one handed and two handed and it was much much harder to disarm the stick held in two hands.
Also, HK I've never done a FMA that used two handed striking. I was wondering if anyone has.
Raymund Suba said:When one strikes two handed, one has more torque(?) in their strike. Meaning there is more of a push to it after the initial impact.
In Arnis, it's not uncommon to see the weapon gripped with two hands when resistance occurs. And I dont mean just a weapon to weapon resistance. When Tapi-tapi occurs, one can negate the other person's checking arm by gripping your weapon with two hands.
That and the choking and grappling stuff already mentioned above
Raymund Suba said:And I dont mean just a weapon to weapon resistance. When Tapi-tapi occurs, one can negate the other person's checking arm by gripping your weapon with two hands.