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Anyone do this?
I've saw some knife adds that say their knife can be used this way. I'm guessing that it's holding the knife in a reverse grip (blade down) with the edge facing you.
Seems like it'd be limited to trapping to me, but be devastating at that.
Jeff
Just playing with my trainers, I'm finding it pretty easy to swith from the standard reverse grip to the reversed edge. It's become one of those "why the hell didn't I think of that" things to me. Especially as it fits in great with the jujitsu I do.
As far as sentry neutralization, I'm still a big fan of the good old kidney, so I'll stick with a regular grip for that, not that I'll be doing that anytime soon!
Jeff
Does pakal necessarily mean edge-in? I thought it just meant the reverse grip, with either blade orientation.
I can understand this from the viewpoint of personal comfort and opinion, which I respect. However, I have seen some "nasty" fighting techniques from the pakal position.The only drawback I can see is that the method doesn't lend itself very well to "duelling" or sparring.
it's "sister" technique forward-grip, edge-in
I don't doubt that there are techniques out there and people that can use them effectively in knife-on-knife situations. I guess I should have said "In my [limited] experience..."I can understand this from the viewpoint of personal comfort and opinion, which I respect. However, I have seen some "nasty" fighting techniques from the pakal position.
For Arnis/Kali practitioners, imagine the "rolling elbows" or downward trapping hands with the pakal grip as the lead....
I know there are techniques of this nature for longer bowie-style knives (back-cut). Is this what you're talking about?arnisador said:You don't see this very often with a knife--more so with a longer blade.