I can be on then. was up all night and just woke up. I have been working with BigRat but he says he has taught me all he knows Somehow I am not so sure because he still out turns me most of the time And TC sent me his head position files then went and hurt himself.
Well, I can see it from BigRat's position. He very well may have reached a point where he just doesn't know how to take you further. That exact same thing happens to me all the time.
I can feel like I teach someone "all I know", and still beat them in a fight. One of the things I've noticed is that it's actually extremely difficult for me to teach someone to kill me. I'll show them the "chinks in my armor", but at the same time, in an actual fight, I'm extremely aware of those chinks myself, and protect against attacks on them... It's even worse when, for example, I teach someone how to kill me in a particular plane. As in, when in a 109G14, do this... Now, in an MA fight, when I see the 109G14 icon, what do you think I'm looking for? And when a second or two later, I see the beginning of that move, how dangerous is it for that pilot to continue on with what is now a "predictable" fight? It's almost like I've seen the others teams play-book...
I'm quick to realize when someone is using my own "stuff" against me, and shift into a slightly different fight.
Teaching someone is also the best way (IMO) to really learn something yourself. You'll think you know it all, and then a student will ask a simple question for which you have no answer. That forces you to go and learn some more. And, while teaching something, you may find that what you thought were "the" answers, don't really pan out under scrutiny. You're forced to look at something from a lot of different perspectives. You get a depth of knowledge on a subject by teaching it that I've seldom reached by just "learning" it.
A lot of my training is more a matter of discovering what
you're doing to
allow me to kill you, and then helping you avoid those things, while teaching you to take advantage of better options. Something as simple as rolling left when you
should have rolled right, can make a
big difference. Helping you understand
why doing that makes a big difference is
huge. I'm not so hot with a lot of the technical terms/aspects of ACM. I'm much more of a "red-neck" trainer. I explain things as I see them myself, even if I don't know all of the big words, hehe!
Killing me in a fight will still probably (er, hopefully) still be pretty difficult, but killing many of the others in the MA will be much easier... When I run into my students in the MA, I recognize right away that they're "dangerous" (but not that they're one of "mine"). As such, they immediately draw a huge amount of my effort. I
always go after whomever I deem as the biggest threat, and try to kill them as quickly as I can. That often leads to me feeling like I've been a little "overly harsh" when I fight a student... I build their confidence in the TA, and then take it away in the MA. I'm not sure how to avoid that. My attack on someone I see as dangerous is much more intense than on someone I see as average, or "new".
And that leads me back to my fight with Dazycutr. I'm guessing he "knew" he was fighting either me or Saber, and was more cautious as a result. That caution is what initially let me build my E, and set up the fight. There's a fine line between too cautious, and too reckless. Both will get you killed.