Naperville wrote: ↑Thu Dec 11, 2025 12:12 pm
As far as these last 2 videos go.
Never having even slashed or thrust a knife at anyone, I cannot imagine where/when I would ever stab someone in the eye. This is a pure military move. The courts in some of these states will not even allow you to have a knife, or present a knife when attacked by 4 to 5 people. But I do find the guy covers topics thoroughly. If it was a time of war and I was drafted, I could do it, but other than that it seems kind of "out there" doesn't it? As he said, in a prison, anything goes, so do not end up there.
The Professor is correct. 3 inches may be enough. Based on what I have learned in training, wide blades and extra long blades and handles may present a target for a potential disarm that short blades do not. Short blades to not have the access to disarm. I was taught a disarm for short blades and all that I can say is GOOD LUCK.
I've thought quite a bit about this and I think the sweet spot is a 4 to 5 inch double edged dagger if you can legally carry one. The double edges make it more dangerous to disarm. The longer the blade, the more leverage to disarm but you have to risk quite a bit getting inside the blade of an opponent to do a disarm.
I've had many hundreds of hours of training yet I am not sure what to do if attacked with a knife. Everything that I have learned has been debunked. Every situation is unique. Use your head is #1. Remain calm, but become a total savage to get out of the situation because they are about to take your life. Not sure why I like to study edged weapons, because he's correct, a few YouTube videos and anyone can take you out. I watch a lot of videos so that I am aware, but that may not save me.
Thanks for sharing.
A couple other things about shorter blades, like around the 3" mark that weren't mentioned in the video are:
* If the person knows what they're doing and have real intent to actually use it, the knife will most likely never even be seen.
* A blade, including a short blade of 3" can actually penetrate much deeper into soft tissue than its actual length, due to soft tissue compression.
I wouldn't really know how to defend empty-handed against a knife, either. I NEVER liked practicing the knife defenses in the couple of martial arts I trained in that had some. I never liked them, because even when I was younger, I knew enough to know they weren't realistic.
I've related the story about the time that a 3rd-degree black belt Tae Kwon Do teacher, who was an acquaintance of mine, asked me to 'realistically' attack him with a rubber training knife in a freestyle manner, so he could test how effective his knife defenses were. The only rule was not to attack his neck or face, for safety reasons. Although I've never formally trained in knife fighting, I instinctively knew how to use the rubber knife to attack his vital areas, and we ended the session with him having welts and bruises all over his body from that hard rubber training knife. He was never able to strike me, kick me, effectively block the knife, nor ever grab me or disarm the rubber knife from me.
IMO, the best defense against a knife, if avoidance or fleeing are not possible, and if you don't have a firearm or bear spray, is a good walking stick. IF you know how to use it. I've never had to defend against a knife attack either, but I know how to use a walking stick as a weapon, and I have used my 51" hickory walking stick to defend against aggressive stray dogs before. And aggressive dogs move very fast, faster than most people can.
And by using a walking stick, I don't mean twirling or swinging it around in big, fancy, circular motions, or holding it one-handed, like you see in a lot of YouTube videos showing self-defense with a walking stick or a cane.
Jim