Opposition, Timing, and Francesco’s Pipes

Last Saturday, we took a break from staying in and defending and attacking from the lunge.  Instead, we worked on some timing aspects.  Specifically, we focused on counterdisengaging upon our opponent’s change of engagement. (If any of these terms aren’t familiar to you, check them out here.)  The most important highlights that we saw during the course of the lesson:

  • As always, opposition is critical.  Not only does it keep you safe by occupying the line your attack is landing in, but the angulation helps land the touch by directing the point in towards your opponent.
  • Act within the time your opponent gives you.  Given proper timing, your touche will land before the opponent completes the change of engagement (or whatever action he is doing).  Remember:  proper timing requires your action occur within the duration of your opponent’s action.  (The defensive converse of this, in the context of a changement d’engagement, is that your changes must be as tight as possible to keep you safe—that is, assuming that you are not laying a trap for your opponent by, say, trying to bait your opponent into performing a change of engagement.)  However, acting within the given time does not mean sheer speed; it is promptness (thank you, Russell, for the apt description).  We must be ready to move based on what our opponent gives us, not merely ready to move as fast as possible irrespective of what our opponent is doing.
  • Given half a chance, Francesco will break into an opera song.  So don’t say things like aria, soubrette, or La Traviatta around him.  And under no circumstances should you mention Puccini.  You are only asking for it . . . .

On Thursday, we’re going to do a few things differently with our warm-ups.  I’ll be adding some elements to the warm-up, so be prepared to hear such commands as “coup droit,” “circular parry,” and “parry prime.”

Reminders:

  • If you haven’t paid dues, please do so.
  • If you have a pic of yourself lying around, please send it to Kevin.  (I know some of you people have pictures of yourselves on Facebook, so stop stalling and just forward it to the man.)

One last bit:  Early in the Saturday class, we talked about the use of the saber and how modern fencing has lightened the saber, divorcing it from historically accurate usage.  Here is a link to the website of David Achilleus’s school Trovare di Spada in St. Louis.  On that page, you’ll see a YouTube video of David and Maestro Sullins bouting with heavy sabers.  As far as I can tell, these sabers are more historically accurate.  (I’ve held David’s saber, and I assure you it does not lend itself to some of the wider motions today’s sabers are known for.)  Note the care, timing, and set-up these impressive fencers demonstrate . . . all with weapons heavier than our fleurets or smallswords.

See you Thursday!

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Review of Saturday, January 8

Comme d’habitude, today we solidified what we were working on last Thursday:  in this case, parrying and riposting while remaining in the lunge.

Through experimentation and questioning, we learned today that there are a number of ways to respond to the opponent’s riposte.  We can:

  1. parry laterally and bind to the low lines, or
  2. circular parry (and, again, bind to the low lines).  A circular parry is particularly appropriate if the opponent’s parry is close in our inside line.

Others experimented with their own response.

Next Thursday, we will continue to work on this.  Additionally, we’ll review the responses to having our blade seized.  Do you remember the responses to a prise de fer?

  1. the ceding parry,
  2. the intercepting parry,
  3. the cavé.

See you guys Thursday!

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Review of Thursday, January 6, 2011

Last Thursday, the advanced folks worked on something new: parrying and riposting while remaining in the lunge position. Below are some of the things to remember:

* From the lunge, do not rock back and forward.
* Don’t drift to centerline! When you are parried, do not allow your opponent’s parry to carry you arm to centerline. Instead, allow your wrist and fingers to bend with your opponent’s parry, keeping your arm in the line in which it attacked.
* As your opponent ripostes direct (not by disengage or seizing your blade), bend your elbow slightly and flex the fingers and wrist to maintain contact with his blade, repositioning his your blade on his to align your forte to his foible. It is okay if your point comes off the target. Remember: the elbow bend is slight—keep it supple.
* Once your forte recovers the foible to medium portion of your opponent’s blade, you can counter-riposte direct or bind his blade to the low lines.
* When you recover, remain in the line in which you ended.
* The most important thing: keep it soft! The French style is not forceful and resisting, but instead flows with whatever force it receives (my apologies to George Lucas).

We’ll work on this again tomorrow! Also, please remember to bring dues if you haven’t already paid.

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Just in Time for Thanksgiving, Something to Snack On . . . .

Next time you see him, congratulate Josh for doing pretty well in his first foil tournament.  Staying true to his French roots, he even used his French grip!

As a reminder, there is no fencing this Thursday.  Instead, wear your fat pants and enjoy your tryptophan-induced stupor.  David will be teaching this Saturday.

In the meantime, remember that we have now studied three takings of the steel (prises de fer):

  1. le croisé, used when the opponent’s hand is at or a little above his shoulder;
  2. the bind (le liement), also used when the opponent’s hand is at or a little above his shoulder, and
  3. the opposition, used when the hand is below the opponent’s shoulder.

And, finally, here’s a little fencing history:  Denis Diderot was an Enlightenment thinker and is most famously known for his Encyclopédie, a general encyclopedia published in France in the 1700s.  (Some of the Enlightenment’s best thinkers contributed to the Encyclopédie.)  The Encyclopédie contained an entry titled “Thirty Principles of Fencing.”  Here are a few of the entries.

  • The widest movements expose more of your body to the enemy.
  • When one breaks measure, it is useless to parry.
  • If one does not parry the final thrust, one should break measure.
  • When the enemy breaks the measure on your attack, pursue him with haste but with prudence.
  • When the enemy himself breaks measure, do not pursue him because he wants to draw you forward.

Happy Thanksgiving!

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Guest Instructor Tonight!

Tonight we all will be getting a lesson from Russell Hogg.  In anticipation of that, let me say that Russ knows his stuff.  He’s an assistant instructor in classical French foil under Maestro Martinez.  http://www.martinez-destreza.com/

Tonight Russ will be teaching us about takings of the steel (prises de fer):  the bind (le liement), the (le) croisé, and the opposition (l’opposition).  Be ready to pay attention because each of these is done in response to a specific action from our opponent.  We need to learn to recognize when each action is appropriate.  This will help us not only in seizing our enemy’s steel, but also in manipulating our enemy by giving the specific cue and then anticipating  and defeating his/her attempted prise de fer.

For some of you, this will be a review of what we’ve been working on the past few weeks.  For others, it will be your first introduction to les prises de fer.   Either way, it will be useful and I’m looking forward to it.

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