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Post by Lancelot Chan on Mar 8, 2024 16:33:19 GMT
This is a short debrief of what happened in 1 single strike, telling how Tun predicted where my hand will move to, and struck at that spot. In the same time, I've predicted Tun has predicted my hand's movement, thus adjusted my movement so my forte replace where my hand would naturally be, hence defending his strike. Meanwhile, my sword tip cut his forearm while all these were happening. This shows how highly skilled this seemingly simple exchange actually is.
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Post by Lancelot Chan on Mar 8, 2024 18:00:57 GMT
Another example
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Post by Lancelot Chan on Mar 9, 2024 8:46:53 GMT
Someone thought the premonition vs PRE-premonition video I posted was just a lucky / random shot. It's not. It was a planned move and was taught to the student at the moment after he got hit by it. He used it on me right away afterward, showing this is a skill that can be mastered indeed.
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Post by BryanW on Mar 11, 2024 1:32:06 GMT
Whether it was luck or skill in these particular instances is irrelevant. This concept is actually a really interesting and, in my opinion, important one that we can see in all sorts of high level fights from boxing and MMA to various fencing disciplines as Lancelot posted. The problem of course is in those fights you have the opportunity to read the opponent over the course of potentially several interactions (or even deliberately "program" a response through various strategies). Much harder to do probably back when a single miss could be the end instead of a point on the scoreboard though.
Lancelot, as this was your student, you probably had an idea already from the beginning, but if you have the opportunity, perhaps a short series of exchanges showing how you learned the pattern and adjusted/reacted to properly predict the appropriate counterstrike may help further educate people. Thanks for posting.
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Post by Lancelot Chan on Mar 11, 2024 6:54:09 GMT
Whether it was luck or skill in these particular instances is irrelevant. This concept is actually a really interesting and, in my opinion, important one that we can see in all sorts of high level fights from boxing and MMA to various fencing disciplines as Lancelot posted. The problem of course is in those fights you have the opportunity to read the opponent over the course of potentially several interactions (or even deliberately "program" a response through various strategies). Much harder to do probably back when a single miss could be the end instead of a point on the scoreboard though. Lancelot, as this was your student, you probably had an idea already from the beginning, but if you have the opportunity, perhaps a short series of exchanges showing how you learned the pattern and adjusted/reacted to properly predict the appropriate counterstrike may help further educate people. Thanks for posting. lancelotsword.com/shop-1/ols/products/lesson-8-how-to-defeat-stances-quickly-gmail-is-required-to-view-the-videoThis is the lesson where I teach people how to defeat every stance quickly through "quick targeting" at areas very difficult to defend. This is the full bout with Tun where you can see how the exchanges happen. In aerial combat, this is like deflective shooting (high aspect deflection). One predicts where the opponent will be at when the bullets got to that distance, thus leading the target with the correct amount. However, of course the target if aware of itself being led, will try to jinx around to avoid going straight ahead to the "predicted point". So, if the shooter predicted the jinx motion even, and shoot at where the opponent will move to, the shots will hit. In fact, if the opponent didn't jinx at all, the shots will miss instead. :P This is like how I lead my cut to the spot Tun's hand will be at when he also reacts, because I don't assume he would stay still. If he indeed stay still, he would be safe. However, most ppl has knee-jerk reaction, thus I calculate that too. When he strikes at me, most likely going to hit where I'm closest to him, thus hands. So I replace the spot where my hands will be at, with the forte to defend that strike, while still hitting the spot I predict his hand will be at. In the full footage I show in this post, you can see many "ace shots" that I did, hitting directly at him without any exchange before. Those were also done with "deflective shooting", leading the target, predicting where his movement will be and hit at the spot. None of those shots were done at "hitting at what I see right now".
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Post by Lancelot Chan on Mar 11, 2024 10:42:51 GMT
This one is a tactical debrief I did against a non-student, who's a practitioner of Mizongluohan style and was a former student of toyama ryu.
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Post by Lancelot Chan on Mar 11, 2024 11:12:18 GMT
this is ibrahim test cut on the day. he isn't a newbie. He cuts with feints, on the move, and multiple cuts on the same targets.
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