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Stick Fighting and Knife Fighting are very valuable in Martial Arts. Learning these weapons teaches you to defend better against them, and most weapons that people might have are the stick and knife. Also, fighting with them helps to improve the body mechanics of your empty hand movements which in turn makes one flow from technique to technique better, and improve speed and power. When learning how to stick and knife fight one's timing (a most important attribute) is improved greatly. If you can defend against a stick moving at 100 plus m.p.h, then when you fight empty hand the speed is almost pathetic.
Sticks and knives are the most practical weapons to learn how to use because they are found everywhere. If you are in a house they are surely going to have kitchen knives, or at a restaurant you have table knives. If you are outside you can grab any old stick or branch and make a deadly weapon out of it. Or if you are at a bar there might be a pool stick that you can break in two and use as double sticks.
There are many reasons why, so you should definitely learn them!
Stick & Blade
The Philippine fighting arts are all about efficiency. When a skilled practitioner swings a stick, he strives to eliminate all unnecessary movement as he executes fluid offensive and defensive combinations. When he wields an edged weapon, he endeavors to apply the same principles he learned for the stick, and if they don’t transfer directly, he’ll alter them bit by bit until they do.
Not surprisingly, many Arnis stylists believe you should practice with a stick the same way you train with a knife or sword. Although that’s not possible 100 percent of the time, the best training tips and action principles pertain to both facets of the art. The following nine morsels of advice fall into that category of crossover application. They’re sure to supercharge the effectiveness of your stick and knife skills.
Keep Your Knuckles Facing Forward
When you hold a knife or sword using a standard grip, the blade faces outward
from the front of your fist. Therefore, when you’re using a stick, you should
hit with the "front" of it as well. The benefits are twofold: It helps you
develop edge awareness, and it encourages you to use a grip that will transfer
the force of a blow into your palm and not against your thumb and fingers, thus
reducing the chance that you’ll drop the weapon. Bad habit: In competition,
practitioners frequently execute fanning strikes with their sticks. Such
techniques can be fast, but if they become habitual and you try them with a
sword, you won’t hit with the edge of the weapon. Although the resulting strike
with the flat portion of the blade can be used as a parry or a distraction
before a follow-up slash, it has limited usefulness.
Don’t Grab the Stick
In most weapons-based systems, the "alive hand"—the one not holding the
weapon—plays an important role. Some practitioners even insist that skill with
the alive hand is as important as skill with the weapon. As you focus on
maximizing the potential of your alive hand in combat, avoid using it to grab
your opponent’s stick. Use that technique against an opponent armed with a blade
and you’ll immediately know why.
That advice also pertains to the "stick wrap" and "snake disarm." While those techniques can be effective for trapping or disarming an opponent who has a blunt weapon, if he’s holding a real blade, all he has to do is move it around a bit and you’ll be cut to ribbons. If you must use a wrap or snake disarm, do it on his arm. Then get a joint lock on the entangled limb or hold it long enough to land a few strikes. The exception: When you must defend against a sword or machete being thrust at you, it’s sometimes advisable to slap the blade. That’s because if you reach for his hand, the point of his weapon might penetrate your body. Furthermore, if you parry the blade, you have a 50/50 chance of slapping one of its flat sides. Even if you lose that gamble and get cut, it probably won’t be that serious unless you have a close encounter with the point.
Don’t Always Train for a Duel
Most of the sumbrada flow drills taught in the Philippine arts are designed to
build your skills and accustom you to combative movement. To ensure that you
don’t restrict your own growth, occasionally forgo the stick-vs.-stick and hand-vs.-hand
duels in favor of mixed combinations. Try using a knife against your partner’s
stick. In no time you’ll become more aware of your body and learn just how
universal movements can be.
Fringe benefit: You can also apply this concept to sparring. Try using a stick to fend off your partner’s continuous knife attacks, then ditch it and go with your empty hands. Of course, you’ll need to approach this exercise in a careful and controlled manner, but once you do, you’ll realize how dangerous weapons truly are and that an armed opponent should be confronted only if you have no alternative.
Go Empty Hand Against Street Weapons
Defending against weapons is one of the most important facets of the martial
arts. The reason is simple: Modern laws often prohibit good guys like you from
carrying a weapon—the bad guys, of course, don’t obey the law—and even if you do
have one in your pocket, there’s no guarantee you’ll be able to access it in
time.
Therefore, you should concentrate on developing your street smarts with respect to weapons defense, and the best time to do that is during training. With only your empty hands, face off against an opponent who may or may not be armed. Make a conscious effort to keep your eyes on his hands. If he keeps them out of view, he may be hiding a weapon and preparing to surprise you with it. Your awareness and your empty-hand counter-weapon skills are what will keep you alive. Back up your plan with techniques for controlling and disarming an opponent.
Best philosophy: Surprise your enemy by making your defense less of a reaction and more of an ambush
Don’t Make Grappling Your Main Strategy
Because knife assaults often start at close range, you should know how to
grapple with an armed adversary, but remember that grappling with edged weapons
is not like grappling in competition. If someone has a knife, once you close the
distance, it’ll be over in seconds—usually with one or both of you severely
injured. Long-range goal: As you train against knife and stick attacks, strive
to maintain the distance between yourself and your opponent as you strike at
him. Aim to inflict cumulative damage. If he’s overly aggressive, however, be
ready to fall back on your close-range-combat and grappling skills. If you’re
unarmed, you most likely will have to grapple. Stay out of range long enough to
distract him, then quickly close the gap. Your first goal is to control and
neutralize the weapon, then the opponent.
Use the Witik and Abanico Strategically
The witik is a quick snapping motion also known as the snap cut. It’s used at
long range to cause cumulative damage and psychologically unbalance an
opponent—often as a counter-cut. A snap cut to the hand done with a heavy, sharp
blade can cause serious damage. One delivered to the inside of the wrist can
take the appendage out of commission. That effectiveness comes with a price,
however, for it will often leave you open to a counter.
The abanico is similar to the snap cut but uses a quick fanning motion that doesn’t always strike with the edge of the weapon. Although it’s weaker, it offers the advantage of speed. It may not always inflict a great amount of damage, but it can protect you while it opens your adversary for a more telling blow.
Tournament caveat: The abanico is frequently seen in competition as two martial artists stand toe-to-toe and fan each other’s heads, but if that were attempted in combat, both fighters would be in big trouble. Remember that protective equipment and the drive to score more often than your opponent can lead to risky tactics that would get you killed in a real knife fight.
Train the Thrusting Lines
A popular adage in the knife world is, slashes injure while thrusts kill. It’s
widely believed that 80 percent of the knife attacks that occur on the street
are slashes but most kills are effected with multiple stabs. Obviously, it
behooves you to learn how to defend against slashing motions but not at the
expense of the time you devote to countering deadly thrusts.
Corroborating quote: English sword master George Silver once said the art of the sword relies on both the cut and the thrust, but in single combat the thrusting rapier is considered king.
Use Slicing Motions
When practicing your slashes, don’t let tunnel vision make you do only
full-power strokes. Although they’re fine techniques that have their place in
combat, you must also hone your drawing and slicing skills. When your weapon
hits its target, pull it back toward your body while it’s still in contact with
your opponent. That will maximize the pain inflicted by a blunt object and the
depth of the cut inflicted by a blade. Plain English: Sometimes sawing through a
tree trunk is better than chopping at it.
Never Think You Can Predict Combat
Fighting is fluid and chaotic. Your opponent won’t just stand still and let you
poke and slash at him. Therefore, no matter whether you’re wielding a stick or a
blade, you shouldn’t be totally confident every technique will work.
The best way to prepare yourself for all the uncertainties of fighting is to work on drills that teach principles. That way, you’ll learn movement instead of moves. Among the most beneficial methods are flow drills, free-flow sessions, sparring, full-contact tire and target striking, and controlled freestyle training against multiple opponents. Metaphysical leap: You’ll learn to embrace chaos in training so you can face chaos in battle.
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