I worked up a new pollaxe drill yesterday, and it got me to
thinking about what, exactly, a drill should be. Judging by what I see on YouTube, most
schools think a drill is either a solo exercise like a karate kata, or else a
sort of repetitive exercise where they bang on each other’s swords, usually while
aiming at one another’s blades rather than at their partner as they should.
Solo exercises are found in many martial arts, and have a
minor value even in ours. In my school,
I use solo drills to help rank beginners work on guards and on simple cuts (to
learn to cut solely with the hands, not the arms, and at the correct angle,
etc.). We later use the simple cutting
drill on the pell to reinforce angles of attack so as to ensure we are cutting
straight rather than flat (edge alignment). After just a
few months, the guards drill is absolutely useless because the student will be
using the various guard in actual technique practice and in real drills (see
below), and thus the guards drill is completely superfluous. The simple cuts solo drill likewise becomes
useless because of pell work and a simple partner cutting exercise we do.
Binding and working “am Schwert” (“on the sword”) is central
to the Kunst des Fechtens. Moving from
one technique to another by oneself thus focuses on something practiced only
minimally by us. Of course, we do free
cuts, but they are usually to or from a bind (although there are certain
specialized exceptions); if you are moving from cut to cut without actions at the
bind, it is extremely likely you have done way too much playing of sword tag
and not nearly enough real KdF practice.
Thus, once you have learned how to make the basic movements, solo
practice is nearly useless (not counting pell work as solo practice).
Likewise, repetitive banging on each others’ swords is
pointless; it, too, derives from way too much completely undisciplined playing
of sword tag in which am Schwert techniques are not even considered. Central to that kind of “exercise” is the
idea of leaving the bind without limiting your opponent’s response for safety, an
idea entirely contrary to Master Johannes’ teachings, as is aiming at the blade
rather than the man.
Both of these approaches are wrong for the practice of the
KdF (except as noted).
Having already discussed the limited value of solo drills,
let us turn to partner, or “structured” drills.
First, we must distinguish between what I call “drills” and “forms.” A form (my term for them) is a choreographed
exercise intended to teach the student how to execute techniques correctly in a
sequence with good form. Like drills,
these are performed with a partner, but unlike drills, they are entirely
predetermined; there are no choices or decisions in their execution. Meyer uses these extensively, calling them
“devices.” They are somewhat like
Japanese kenjutsu kata, and fulfill exactly the same purpose.
In contrast, a drill is an exercise wherein one partner
preforms an action from a limited menu of allowed choices, and the other
partner must respond correctly, then the partners reset, and the actor chooses
a different action to which his partner must respond correctly. I call the person who is acting from the menu
of choices the “Teacher” and the one who must respond the “Student.” These titles don’t have any reference out of
the context of the drill, as the teacher may be of lower or higher rank, and
they will switch places once one iteration of the drill is completed; they only
refer to each partner’s role in any given drill. The Teacher’s job is to act in such a way as
to allow the Student to learn to do his techniques correctly under pressure and
to be forced to do so when he doesn’t know what’s coming, just as in combat.
Here’s an example of a simplified longsword drill: The Student
attacks with a Zornhau. The Teacher
either:
(1.) Pretends to start to displace, but stops, thus ensuring
that the student is really aiming for the cut, and is not going to turn to the
Teacher’s sword, or,
(2.) displaces the
Student’s cut and remains hard in the bind, to which the Student should respond
with the First Winden, or,
(3.) displaces and
then leaves the bind to cut at the other side of the Student’s head, to which
the student should respond with bricht Abnehmen, or, … etc., etc. (This is a
simplified version of one of our drills).
Some drills can be quite complex, requiring that when the
Student responds correctly to a given technique, the Teacher then responds to
that technique with another, forcing the Student to respond correctly to the
second technique. For example, in (2.)
above, when the Student winds, the Teacher may push the Winden aside, requiring
the Student to shift to the Second Winden in response.
Drills such as these come as close to real combat as is
possible in the practice of the KdF.
Since it is not possible to do accurate free play with any of the
unarmored forms, drills are essential to learning as much about how to fight as
we can in these safety-conscious days.
The point is to force the Student to react correctly with a historically
accurate and canonically correct response to an attack with correct form and
function while under pressure. This
teaches students to learn to keep a flexible mind (i.e., not to anticipate,
which is why (1.) above is so important), and to act with proper form even
under pressure. This is only possible
when the student has truly learned to execute his techniques perfectly at a
“muscle memory” level.
Contrast this kind of drill with the mere “banging swords”
which seem almost universal elsewhere.
Sword banging (to coin a phrase) teaches nothing about the Kunst des
Fechtens; in those, you don’t have to think, don’t have to plan, are taught to
leave the bind without rendering your opponent harmless, and to attack the
sword, not the man.
By practicing both correct drills and correct forms,
students of the KdF come as close as possible to understanding the true art of
combat without falling prey to the inaccuracies and bad habits inherent in the
game of sword tag.
In my book on the longsword I included a handful of
structured drills of the sort explained here, but I also included a structured
way to create drills for any situation.
I have since come to realize that was a mistake, because people using my
book to learn the art have a very tough time creating realistic drills which
correctly express the central tenets of the art. Thus, I have written a book which includes
twelve structured drills of the sort described above, sixteen forms, instructions for pell work, solo drills for beginners, and much more to help
with the actual training process. I have
taken it down from Lulu.com for revision, but look for the expanded second
edition soon.
Here is a video of two of my students performing a structured drill:
Drill #8: Sprechfenster
Here is a video of two of my students performing a structured drill:
Drill #8: Sprechfenster
Setup: Teacher starts
in vom Tag and Student in left Langenort.
1.) First
Choice: Teacher steps straight in and
attempts to beat Student’s sword down to allow himself to get close.
Response: Student responds with a Durchwechseln.
2.) Second
Choice: Teacher steps around Student’s
point with a slope step as he attacks with a Zornhau.
Response: Student counters Teacher’s Zornhau with an
Absetzen.
3.) Third
Choice: Teacher simply waits in vom Tag.
Response: If Teacher does not act within five seconds
after assuming vom Tag, Student attacks with a long thrust into right
Langenort.
3a.) Advanced
Choice: Teacher counters Student’s long thrust (in (3.) above) with a lower Schielhau.
Response: Student counters Teacher’s Schielhau with a
Schnappen (not shown in the video as they were doing a simplified version.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8Qa4JadPYk
(I apologize for the bad quality of the video, but I hope it gives an idea of what a drill looks like.)
(I apologize for the bad quality of the video, but I hope it gives an idea of what a drill looks like.)
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