Woof:
"I'm sure the bravery or confidence issue plays a significant part."
Good point by LG Dog Russ.
"My question regarding empty hands in relation to single vs. double stick, was, can the same concepts be applied in single and double stick fighting? How much more difficult, if at all, is it to apply these concepts to double stick? And, does an empty hand fight resemble a double stick match more than a single stick match? If empty hands is closer to double than single stick (
) what implications does that have?"
It depends
" , , , Take a drill like hubud...when the number one angle comes in, you stop, pass, press, and return. I'm aware that this is just a training method, and that you could easily strike as you stop, pass, or press, enter, or do any other number of things.
"If the "attacker" is trying to hit you with the butt of his stick, and if he is concentrated on his stick, maybe you could actually stop, then pass to put him in a worse position, then attack. But, in an empty hand situation, or possibly in a double stick situation, if you stoped the angle one as you could possibly in single stick, you would most likely get cracked with the other hand, or punyo."
Said in a friendly respectful way: You are thinking in terms of static range and absent footwork and angling. That is, you are thinking like most people train these methods
"So, how does this effect the way you fight double in relation to single stick, or single stick in relation to empty hands (where there are more than two weapons...since the opponent will most likely not be concentrating on one primary weapon)?"
In DBMA this question is solved with the theory of 7 ranges, the triangle from the third dimension and our footwork matrix.
"The fact that most people reveal a particular "style" or structure in double stick, and that that structure can be exploited is a good point. And, the fact that most people will concentrate on a dominant hand even in double stick, is also a good point. But, my question is, how do the principles learned in drills such as hubud, sombrada, attacking blocks, etc. apply when more than one weapon is allowed? Do you guys feel they apply to a lesser extent?"
T'aint the drills, its the skills and understandings acquired-- or not. If hubud is trained bilaterally with triangular footwork, ditto sombrada, attacking blocks etc then they apply more, not less. If these drills are trained without the fighter's understanding they can impart certain skills but the absence of the fighter's understanding (which can shared to surprising extend by a good teacher or are acquired through experience/observation) then they may well apply less.
That's probably as far as we can go in a public forum David, if you want to come on by and go into it further, we'd be glad to help as best we can.
Excellent questions.
Woof,
Guro Crafty