Verfliegen
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				|  (→Flying Off) |  (→Application Examples) | ||
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| − | !  | + | ! Meister | 
| − | !  | + | ! Lehrling | 
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| | [[Eisenport]], left leg forward | | [[Eisenport]], left leg forward | ||
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| | Long edge parry. | | Long edge parry. | ||
| − | | Before  | + | | Before contact, pull the sword back and side step to the left, cutting a [[Zornhauw]] to their upper right opening. | 
| |} | |} | ||
| + | |||
| + | Note: In some ways this particular example is similar to [[Zucken]], the difference being that this flying off example is performed before blade contact, whereas zucken occurs after the bind is established. | ||
Revision as of 02:28, 16 August 2016
Flying Off
The act of halting a cut just before the opponent parries it, then flying off with a cut to one of the other openings. This is actually a key part of the Meyer square - we fly off to other openings in succession.
Application Examples
In which the 'student' demonstrates their knowledge to the 'teacher' of a flying off to the opposite opening.
| Meister | Lehrling | 
|---|---|
| Eisenport, left leg forward | Zornhut, left leg forward | 
| Passing Step, Zornhauw | |
| Long edge parry. | Before contact, pull the sword back and side step to the left, cutting a Zornhauw to their upper right opening. | 
Note: In some ways this particular example is similar to Zucken, the difference being that this flying off example is performed before blade contact, whereas zucken occurs after the bind is established.
