I managed to do this to my opponent in college. So either it has happened twice as often as you thought, or else I fenced against you. (Wrere you at MIT in the 197os?)
Oh, don’t bother. He does good work, but I’ll most likely kill him in the morning.
Not so much a technique or tactic as a holistic philosophy of fighting - fencing treatises were as much about selling each guy’s school and lucrative lessons as about actually teaching moves. So they all developed different theories - circles, measures, timing and emphasised different aspects of the art. I haven’t rapier-fenced for a while now, but I still can tell sorta the difference between the Italian and Spanish schools, and the mixed stuff that a lot of the later guys came up with.
Nope. Pacific Northwest, early 1990s.
The main weapon where people used to get really hurt was saber, partially because the head is a target in saber and saber fencing involves more large motions than epee and foil. The injuries (and there were even a couple of fatalities in competitions) stopped when the USFA introduced mask regulations that were pretty strict. I think the mask now has to pass a 12 kg punch test.
On another topic mentioned in the thread, in fencing in order to simulate the psychology of fighting with live steel for keeps, foil and saber have rules about “right of way”. Basically, (in foil) if someone has established a credible threat with their point, you can’t just dive on it and try to hit them at the same time. If you do that, and you both hit, you lose. You both died, but you’re the one who did the stupid thing. Before you can counterattack, you have to deflect the threat (there are various fine points about timing, riposts, stop thrusts, etc.). This is why a fencing match has a “director” - the electronics keep track of who hit whom, and the director watches the right of way flow back and forth. It’s pretty hard to do, and requires a very trained eye.
I never fenced sabre, but my theory was you were more likely to get hurt in a sabre fight because it mostly involved two guys running at each other full tilt waving long bits of metal. Gross impact injuries were the order of the day, including mask to mask contact. However, I guess high attacks at speed could result in Mask punctures.
And the above rules are why I fenced epee - which replicates fencing to first blood. You can hit your opponent anywhere (sabre and foil have restricted upper body targets) and it is the first clear hit that gets the point - simultaneous hits don’t count. Oh, and an epee has enough stiffness to hurt, so care is required - getting an epee hit to the knee or toe will teach you to not expose the front leg too much during a lunge. It seems a bit more tactical rather than rulebound.
Si