by HanshiClayton » Sun Jan 22, 2012 9:04 pm
I have to admit that some of the katas would make more sense if there were a second fighter on "our" side, following us around and bashing the miscreants with a 2x4 whenever we turn our backs on them.
But if I were to wish for that kind of help, I'd wish for a .44 magnum and a pony, too.
I don't see much sign of "team fighting" in the Shotokan katas. However, over on the Chinese side forms were used to train soldiers, and soldiers assume there are allies beside and behind you. The forms might also. The Romans definitely trained in two-man teams, to deadly effect.
Here are two actual responses to your concern, however. One, I sometimes train families to coordinate a response to a street attack of a home-invasion. There's a picture of that in the first edition of Shotokan's Secret. The key is the groin kick from the rear. While the bad guy is punching out Dad, wife/daughter steps up behind him and kicks his testicles up into his tonsils. QED.
Two, with reference to your concern about various attack geometries, linear karate is Very Good for breaking up any kind of formation. You change straight at, into, over and through the first guy, driving him twenty feet back out of position. Then you turn around and charge full speed at the next guy, knocking him out of the lineup like a bowling pin and chasing him 20 feet away. Turn and pick a third guy. I have seen this done (admittedly on YouTube) and it was very effective. The assailants had no idea how to respond to it.
Don't play their game. Make them play yours.