Zucken

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(Application Examples)
(Application Examples)
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{| class="wikitable" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border: none;"
 
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border: none;"
 
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! Teacher
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! Meister
! Student
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! Lehrling
 
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| [[Zornhut]], left leg forward
 
| [[Zornhut]], left leg forward
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|-
 
|  
 
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| Cut back down behind their blade over their blade to slice the wrists.
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| Cut back down behind their blade over their blade to slice the wrists or head on the same side to which you originally struck (ie. their left side)
 
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In which the 'student' demonstrates their knowledge to the 'teacher' of a pulling from the text, which shows how we can pull away to mislead them, then cut back in.
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Note: Meyer describes this cutting back in as using the short edge of the blade in a rapid zwerch/krumphauw movement, though the long edge is described in earlier sources also.
 
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{| class="wikitable" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border: none;"
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|-
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! Teacher
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! Student
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|-
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| [[Zornhut]], left leg forward
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| [[Zornhut]], left leg forward
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|-
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| [[Passing Step]], [[Zornhauw]]
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| [[Passing Step]] back, [[Zornhauw]] to a bind.
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|-
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| Maintain the bind
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| Slide up the bind as if you intend to take away and cut around to the upper right openings.
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|-
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| Move to parry right
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| Cut back with the false edge in a [[Sturtzhauw]]/[[Zwerch]] like motion back to the upper left openings.
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|}
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Revision as of 02:16, 16 August 2016

Pulling

The act of pulling away from a bind and cutting to a different opening with a swift twitch around their blade.

Application Examples

A demonstration of a simple pulling from a strong bind.

Meister Lehrling
Zornhut, left leg forward Zornhut, left leg forward
Passing Step, Zornhauw Passing Step back, Zornhauw to a bind.
Press hard in the bind Pull away from the bind sliding up and over to the other side of their sword, using the continued contact to draw their bind out
Cut back down behind their blade over their blade to slice the wrists or head on the same side to which you originally struck (ie. their left side)

Note: Meyer describes this cutting back in as using the short edge of the blade in a rapid zwerch/krumphauw movement, though the long edge is described in earlier sources also.

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