We explored the "one against many" side of the equation in class the other night. I had the class break up into groups of four. I had two attackers grab the victim and hold him still for the third attacker to beat up. I insisted on slow-motion for safety, but turned the victims loose to use any karate of jujutsu technique that seemed like a good idea. Everybody got more than one turn as the victim, and we saw some very creative fighting.
At the end of class, we discussed what we had learned. Here are some of the points that the karatejutsu students said were important.
- Don't go to the ground to hold someone down. You can't fight the other two from there.
- If you can drop an enemy on his back (wristlock), hit him in the forehead to bounce his head off the floor. He won't get up too fast.
- When you feel like you can punch someone in the face, do a knee sweep instead. (Students were rigidly required to sweep from the outside of the knee, bending the knee safely. No inside sweeps!) The sweep put the opponent on his knees where it was easy to "finish" him with a knee to the face, a palm-strike to the temple, or a slap to the ear. (All strikes simulated in practice.)
- Put somebody down hard right away. Then use him as an "island" to force his friends to split up and come at you from two directions. Pick the side you want to engage, and keep the "island" between you and the other side. It cuts the opposition down by half.
- If you can put a second person down (as by an arm bar or wrist lock), make a small effort to drop him across the body of the first guy. Then holding down one holds down two. Repeat as necessary.
- In the opening move, when two opponents have your arms and the third is threatening to punch from in front, simply turning 180 degrees to face the other way slams the two opponents together behind you, closing the door on the third guy. The key is to roll out behind one of the two. (I know that's opaque. I'll see if I can get a picture.)
- If you get a guy down, face-down in a hammerlock, just pin his hand to his back with your knee (really painful for him) and fight the next guy with both hands.
- The easiest way to take out an opponent is to grab his hair, yank his face down and bring your knee up. Or, take his head back and down, spilling him on his back. Or use his hair to bend him over and then run him into a wall. Or spill him in a rolling fall that hits one of his friends.
- If you go down, they'll circle round and kick. Grab a leg and roll into it hard enough to spill the enemy on his back. Keep rolling right up his body. Elbow in groin, next elbow in solar plexus, palm heel to chin or hammer fist to forehead. You roll right out of the "circle of death" and create an "island" as before. Get up and keep going.
- When you knee a person in the groin, your foot is perfectly positioned for a knee sweep on the return stroke. That would be the devastating inside knee sweep, which my students were forbidden to simulate. Even in slow motion it can be dangerous to the knee.
- In this scenario, do not ever punch with your closed fist. You need to grasp and grapple part of the time, so this is the world's worst moment to break a bone in your hand. Use open-hand strikes instead (or hammer fist strikes). Don't use forefist strikes.