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You are here: Home / Archives for use of force

Stick Fighting Week Recap

08.12.11 By Patrick 3 Comments

Stick Fighting. Get it?

I hope everyone enjoyed the exposure to a different style of fighting this week. Even though this was a sip from the fire hose, I hope you were able to learn some things, big and small. Here are some takeaways:

  1. Exploring new things
    Krav Maga is, for most of us, our primary training modality. While I believe it is unique and effective in its comprehensive design and in applying one solution to many scenarios, there exist many more scenarios than we can possibly train for in the universe of fighting. And then there’s the Law of the Instrument. Gaining skills and perspective from outside the system can serve to strengthen your knowledge of and aptitude for Krav Maga. Often times, seeing something new can make the light go on and make sense of something you previously struggled with. Check out this post for more on the subject.
  2. There’s more to swinging a stick than just… swinging it.
    1. As “The One with the Stick”
      Figure 8, rompida, banda y banda, abaniko… We took a brief look at a lot of different ways to move a stick through space. Think of using the stick as both a blunt object and an edged weapon and you begin to see many more possibilities than just bashing with it like a caveman.
    2. As the Defender
      Someone can whip a stick around in many more ways than just vertically and horizontally! While our Krav Maga stick defenses cover many possibilities, they don’t cover all possibilities. I believe you always have a fighting chance, but your best defense against a trained stick fighter might just be a good pair of running shoes!
  3. Cutting Angles
    In Modern Arnis, virtually nothing happens straight on. Almost every attack and defense must be made on either the live side or the dead side of the opponent. This angular nature and the footwork involved translate very well to our style of fighting in Krav Maga. Try it!
  4. Ranges
    In Krav Maga we often talk about the distance continuum and using the correct combative for the range available. In our three classes this week we covered the three ranges of Filipino stick fighting:

    1. Largo mano: Your opponent’s stick cannot reach your head, but your stick can reach his hand.
      What we did: Defanging the Snake.
    2. Medio mano: You are within range of the opponent’s stick. The “check hand” is added to defenses.
      What we did: Block, Check, and Counter; stick disarms.
    3. Corto mano: Close range; puño / trapping range. All the fun locks and throws.
      What we did: Fun locks and throws!
  5. Use of Force.
    This stuff is undeniably fun to train, but the practicality of engaging in a stick fight is somewhat scant. As a teenager practicing these techniques, I obviously fantasized about recreating scenes from The Perfect Weapon. Let me now be the killjoy, though: You’d better have just cause for striking someone—period, but let alone with an object—and you’d better be able to articulate it to the authorities in the aftermath. Read the use of force post.

Thanks again to all those who attended the classes this week. I love teaching, and I especially love seeing people excited about learning new skills. I can’t remember the last time we packed so many onto the training floor!

Filed Under: Krav Maga News, Weapons Tagged With: distance continuum, Modern Arnis, stick, use of force

Pocket Knife FYI

06.28.10 By Patrick Leave a Comment

Assume everyone's packing one of these. But you shouldn't carry one in Boston...
Assume everyone's packing one of these. But you shouldn't carry one in Boston...

Another question/discussion that comes up now and again regards pocket knives. Two parts to this FYI:

  1. Assume everyone carries a knife. This article is almost three years old, but I doubt much has changed since:
    With shootings declining, Hub sees more stabbings

    This is a particularly scary thought:

    “It’s clear that minor altercations, when someone has a knife, will escalate. When you don’t have a knife, you walk away, and five minutes later you realize it was just a punch in the face. Now, they have a knife, and they react very quickly.”

    Two quick comments on that: One, this is another good reason to avoid altercations whenever possible. Two, if you must defend yourself against an attack, finish the fight. Do not allow the attacker even a hair’s breadth to pull a knife.

  2. If you are going to carry a knife:
    1. Realize that a knife is a tool. If you carry a knife as a weapon, you may be all too eager to use it as such. The situations in which you would be legally justified in using a knife as a self-defense weapon fit into a very, very small box, and you’re going to have some answering to do regardless of the circumstances. Further, the more “exotic” your knife looks (i.e. the more it looks like it was specifically designed to inflict horrific damage on a human), the less likely the authorities are going to believe you had no prior intention of using it. See also the Use of Force post.
    2. Know the laws. Many states and municipalities have online resources to peruse. The general laws of Massachusetts are fairly obvious: no switchblades, projectile blades, double-edged fixed blades, etc. There is no specified limit on blade length. Here’s the text: Chapter 269 §10-b

      In Boston proper, however, there has been a restriction on blades longer than 2.5″ since 2001. See 16-45.1 Carrying of Weapons Prohibited.

The purpose here is neither to encourage nor discourage carrying a pocket knife. Be informed.

Filed Under: General Info, Krav Maga News Tagged With: Finish the Fight, knife, legal, use of force

Bas on Fighting. And Jail.

06.11.10 By Danelle Leave a Comment


This Week’s Bas Rutten Weekly Video of the Week

Filed Under: For Your Amusement, Krav Maga News Tagged With: Bas Rutten, use of force, video

The Shirt Grab & Finishing the Fight

03.19.10 By Patrick Leave a Comment

Here’s an interesting video from Rodney King of Crazy Monkey Defense that ties into the shirt grab question that came up at the end of Tuesday night’s class:

Overall, I think the Crazy Monkey Defense stuff compliments the “fighting” portion of Krav pretty nicely. I like a lot of the concepts that I’ve seen online and even experimented with incorporating pieces into the last sparring rotation. While taking the opponent’s back as Rodney does in the video is not necessarily something encouraged in Krav Maga, the opening certainly is. Some compliance-type techniques (i.e. joint locks and pressure points) from styles like Kenpo and Modern Arnis Jujitsu, while effective in certain circumstances, require much more time to train; rely on fine motor movements that can degrade under stress; and often require both your hands, leaving you more vulnerable to subsequent attacks. Striking, however, has a less steep learning curve because it is more instinctive; relies on gross motor movements that are less affected by stress; and, if you’re hands always return to your fighting stance, offers a better degree of protection against a flailing opponent. (Keep in mind, though, that use of force issues are more likely to arise with strikes.)

This video demonstrates three key Krav Maga concepts that apply to nearly every self-defense scenario:

  1. The “when” concept. If you can talk your way out of a scenario like this, by all means do so. If, however, you sense the shirt grab is just a precursor to greater violence, when is now.
  2. See within the fight. Once you’ve made the decision to spring to action, don’t expect your opponent to stand there like a punching bag, and don’t get so tunnel-visioned with what you’re doing that you don’t register subsequent attacks (or attackers). Remember, it’s usually the one you don’t see that’ll knock you out.
  3. Finish the fight. Once you’ve engaged, do not stop until A) you’ve created enough space to safely escape, or B) the threat has been neutralized.

Filed Under: Krav Maga News, Krav Related, Self-Defense Tagged With: "when", Chokes & Grabs, Finish the Fight, legal, Modern Arnis, See within the Fight, use of force, video

Developing Your “When”

03.02.10 By Patrick 6 Comments

krav_countdown
One concept that sets Krav Maga apart from most other self-defense systems is that we consistently train from a position of disadvantage. The belief is that all techniques must work whether we are prepared or not, as most situations requiring us to defend ourselves occur suddenly and with little warning. If we only trained from a prepared position (our fighting stance), we would either be delayed to action or—much worse—freeze when caught off guard.

Part of our training involves practicing both offensive and defensive techniques from what we call passive or neutral position. Beyond developing lighting-fast reaction, not much forethought must go into defensive techniques; the decision to act has been made for us by the attacker. Launching a preemptive assault, however, is a very different situation. We must consider the how?, the when?, and the what then? (the immediate and longer-term consequences) of such an action.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Combatives, Krav Maga News, Krav Maga Technique Library, Self-Defense, Training Tagged With: "when", 360 Defense, fundamentals, legal, passive/neutral position, situational awareness, use of force

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