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How to Improve Your Defense – You Don’t Want to Miss This Trick!

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This is the single most important lesson that you will ever learn about defense: it’s all about getting the distance right.

In fact, if you get the distance right, you don’t even have to use your blade to parry.

Below you can see how Choi (right) makes Rigin (left) fall short on his first attack by getting the distance right. If you look even closer, you’ll realize that Choi doesn’t even use his blade to parry.

Beyond having an amazing fourth parry (or third parry, first parry, second parry, etc.), focus on getting the distance right first.

Below is one of my favorite touches of all time. It’s the final touch (1:20:07 or 1:22:51 for slow motion) of the 2012 Olympics. Watch how Baldini (left) makes Ota (right) fall short on his attack, and then scores immediately after. Notice how Baldini doesn’t even use his blade to parry. Simply beautiful.

Insanely beautiful touch: London 2012 Olympic Games – Italy vs. Japan

Bottom Line:

Of course, in the above examples, we analyzed some of the best fencers in the world. Needless to say, they put in countless hours of practice before getting to that level. But, one of the massive improvements to their defense started with getting the distance right.

Additionally, the bonus take-away is: if you make your opponents fall short in their attacks, parrying with your blade becomes optional (and it looks pretty sick if you can do that). The way you make your opponents fall short on their attacks is by perfecting your footwork.

Thank You for Your Feedback

I hope you enjoyed this post! Please let me know in the comments what your thoughts are and if you would like me to talk more about something in particular (timing, footwork exercises, parrys, etc.).

Thank you for your feedback, I really appreciate it!

– Fencing Insider

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Filed Under: Ultimate Fencing Hacks

Tired of Always Fencing the Same People? Here’s a Free Tip to Improve Your Results

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If you’re tired of always fencing the same people, you’re not alone. The reality is most clubs have a limited pool of training partners. Maybe you live in a place where fencing is not as popular. Maybe you’re in college. Maybe you don’t want to switch clubs. Either way, there’s a solution for your problem.

When you fence the same couple of people, getting the most out of practice and improving your fencing skills can be challenging. You know exactly what actions work on your clubmates and they know what works on you, too. Same actions, same footwork, same distance, same timing, etc.

Bored-emote.svg

If you want to avoid getting stuck, here’s an idea that will change your life forever: deliberate practice.

Simply put, deliberate practice is practicing at an optimal level of difficulty. Not too easy, not too hard. In other words, practice something that is challenging, yet achievable.

When you practice at an optimal level of difficulty, things that used to be challenging eventually become easier. When something becomes too easy, you step up the level of difficulty again. And then you keep repeating this process.

Below is a depiction of deliberate practice created by pianist Chris Donnelly, who is an expert in the subject.

Deliberate Practice, 3

Practical Application:

What does this mean for fencing? If you know an action always works on your clubmates, stop doing that! Challenge yourself to score in new ways that are difficult for you. Step outside of your comfort zone. If you’ve mastered point touches, practice flicking. If your defense is super solid, focus on attacking. If your sixth parry is perfect, work on your first parry.

Deliberate practice is an intentional form of practice. It involves tackling your weaknesses so that you can turn them into strengths. It requires creativity and effort. By nature, it is not fun. Nobody likes doing something that they’re not good at yet – but that’s exactly why you should do it: so that you can improve.

Eventually, you might reach the moment where you’ve perfected all of the things you could at your club. At one point, you might realize that you’re the strongest person in the group. When you reach that stage, it means that it’s time to move on to something bigger. But, the philosophy is that you never stop. If you’re always challenging yourself, you’ll never stop growing.

Thank You for Sharing

I hope you enjoyed this post! Please let me know what you thought about it or if you would be interested in some other topics. I appreciate your feedback very much and create new content based on the comments I receive.

Thank you for taking the time to read this and if you liked it please share it with your networks!

– Fencing Insider

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Why Momentum Made Olympic History and How You Can Apply This In Your Life

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Fencing Penn State

This lesson is not only for fencers, but for everyone: get MOMENTUM on your side, and you will be able to do the unthinkable.

My senior year at Penn State, I fenced in the final of the Garret Open, and I was getting killed. I got off to such a bad start, and it was because I was reacting to my opponent. I was letting him lead. But, then I switched things up, and I began to establish my own rhythm. This threw my opponent off, and then everything changed.

As I started to score more touches, my opponent started to get nervous and my confidence began growing. The crowd on his side began getting quieter and my teammates started getting louder. At one moment, I had passed the tipping point and momentum was on my side. When that happens, it’s game over.

I don’t often yell, but this is a video of the very last touch.

At the Olympic level, the video below (watch on YouTube) is by far one of the best examples of a match that went back and forth in momentum. It is also one of the most exciting bouts I’ve ever seen. Period.

Skip to minute 39:52 to watch 3 minutes of absolute intensity between Ota and Kelibrink. Classic match-up.

London 2012 Olympic Games: Japan vs. Germany

Stopping your opponent’s momentum is one of the hardest things to do. But, you have to remember that the toughest moment of a come-back happens right before the momentum shift. So, it is critical that you stay composed. GIVING UP IS NOT AN OPTION. When you are able to believe in yourself during the most difficult times, you push through and eventually begin to see the light.

This idea applies to everything: you buy stocks when there’s blood on the streets – because the best rebounds always come after a sharp downturn; you keep submitting job applications and interviewing when it feels like it’s pointless – because the next call might be the one where you get the offer; you go back to practice and work on your mental toughness when you’re losing – because that will set you apart from others at the next competition.

In the video above, in very literal terms, Ota sees his light at minute 47:29. From that point on, he gets a huge breath. It’s when the tides begin to change in his favor.

Kleibrink knows Ota’s first touch after the 9 touches he just scored is a critical point. So, he stops the match to try to keep his momentum. But, lo and behold: Kleibrink’s break became exactly the time OTA needed to put his act together. While Kleibrink got cold, Ota got into the zone. He was fired up, and yet in total control. Simply incredible.

Ota Yuki

Whatever meaningful goal you are working toward, there’ll always be bumps along the way. Some will be straight-up walls – challenges that seem bigger than yourself. But, the question is: are you going to let that stop you or make you stronger?

Any goal worthwhile achieving will have moments when you’re gonna feel like quitting. You’ll feel stuck – like you’re wasting your time and you’re not seeing any results. But, if you just keep going, eventually you will reach the tipping point. If you just keep pumping the lever, sooner or later you will see the water. And when success comes, it gushes.

– Fencing Insider

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Filed Under: Ultimate Fencing Hacks

Flicking like a Pro – Explained with Videos!

Advanced Attack Strategies for Foil – Explained with Videos!

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