OK, how about Knife attack #2?
Steve
I forget exactly the order these things occurred in but I'll pick one anyway. Late night, heading down a corridor near my old elementary school with a female acquaintance walking her home. Guy jumps out of the corner with knife in hand and proceded to execute the "prison stab". I'm late on the awareness so I eat the blade in the gut. Luckily it was a short household knife. Grabbed his arm for all I was worth, knee'd him in the nuts and proceeded to break his arm over my shoulder. Threw him to the ground (Seio Nage) and practiced a technique called "return to sender" if you know what I'm saying. Sought medical attention after ensuring the girl got home as I'm not sure if the guy wanted me or her. I'm pretty sure he didn't want JUST money as no demands were made just an aggressive attack.
The Below is copied from another post here where I was describing one of my "successful" knife encounters
B) The kenpo rule is "divert, seize, control, disarm." When a weapon technique fails to adhere to this rule people don't what-if the technique or ask why. There is a reason for the diversion from the rule (pun intended).
4) The Kenpo technique on that post you hotlinked seems to be Thrusting Lance, I've had the unfortunate pleasure of actually using that one for real. Here's how it went.
A) Jerk tried to stab me and I hit his wrist and has groin, he dropped the knife. (Weapon diverted and disarmed no seize and control available).
B) with no more knife to worry about there was no need to manipulate his arm and break his wrist to get rid of the knife and risk a grappling match.
C) Obscure elbow, uppercut, sandwich, handsword, hammer fist (Locking Horns into Detour from Doom) go home to my family in one piece.
In my opinion the technique did exactly what it was supposed do. But there are those that would say "you had to change it so it didn't work" my response: "I choose to change things and made it home to my son, it worked fine in my textbook"