In fencing thinking, it is foolish and dangerous if you approach your opponent without fully extending your arm, or if your sword tip is not pointing at your opponent. In other words, it is possible for players to make different choices.
In the greco-Roman foil competition, it is not uncommon to make an offensive gesture against an opponent without blocking the net. Reasonable reasons are as follows:
(1) Judge that the attacker's offensive action is not threatening.
(2) attack before the opponent attacks, and at the same time separate or dodge the opponent's sword.
Competition system
Individual competition adopts group round robin system and direct elimination system, and team competition directly adopts single defeat elimination system.
The method of direct elimination of each game is to play 15 swords in each set for 9 minutes. Each group was divided into 3 groups, each group was 3 minutes, and the interval was 1 minute. An athlete hits 15 sword or all the time specified in 9 minutes is used up. The player who hits more swords wins.
If there is a draw at the end of the specified time, an extra match of 1 minute is required. In the play-offs, the player who hits the first sword wins. Before overtime, athletes must draw lots. If the draw lasts until the end of overtime, the player who draws the winning right will win.
In the team competition, there are 4 people in each team, 3 people take part in the team confrontation, and 1 person serves as a substitute. Play 5 swords every 3 minutes, ***9 times. The team that scores 45 points first wins.
If some athletes don't stab the opponent's five swords within the specified 3 minutes, the next player on the team will continue to play, and he can play the score he should have played in that game, that is, the first game will reach 5 points, the second game will reach 10 points, and the third game will reach 15 points ... until he gets 45 points, the game is over.