blackn'blue wrote:I keep trying to emphasize that strength is not the whole story. Speed is not the whole story either. There is agility to consider. There is flexibility. There is balance. There is the simple matter of practice and familiarity, which lets a person know what the right thing to do is automatically without needing to think about it. There is endurance, which is not the same thing as stamina. Pain tolerance matters. I understand that Vulcans are conditioned to lear4n mental disciplines that help them endure pain... when they have time to meditate and get into the right frame of mind. But how well do those disciplines work when you take a sudden hit and blood starts pouring gout of your face or arm or belly?
It takes a certain frame of mind to endure a sudden hit and keep moving. Trip would have been getting an extended term of training in exactly that kind of conditioning from his time in the Expanse. Week after week, he had to keep going and fight through the pain to keep the ENT from falling apart. He kept going in spite of sleep deprivation, grief, hunger, thirst, rage, sickness, wounds, and countless distractions. That kind of discipline is not something that Koss would be likely to have available to him, even if he does sit around in front of a candle and a stick of incense for an hour every day.
What I am saying is, Koss might be able to knock Trip down, but how easy would Koss find it to KEEP him down? And how well would Koss be able to keep taking hit after hit after hit and still continue soaking up the pain and damage? As well as Trip? There is the simple matter of courage to consider you know.
I agree about strength not being the only thing to consider. But from what we know, Vulcans are also faster. I mean, the ability to throw a hard punch IS actually the ability to move fast anyway

. But really what I'm saying is, those other things you're saying are all correct, it's just that I see Trip and Koss on a roughly even playing field in terms of the fact that neither are conditioned fighters. But that doesn't put them on an EVEN even playing field, it puts them on an even playing field in terms of experience. Trip may be used to having his life in danger, but it's a lot different to be enduring psychological and mental stress for months on end than it is to get hit by what feels like a Greyhound bus and then get up.
Tell you what I would have liked. Some reference to Trip having been a Golden Glove boxer, THEN i would I have loved it and I'd be singing a different tune!

Also, I think Vulcans' mental discipline is designed for situations exactly like a battle-to-the-death. I think Koss would keep his wits about him very well. And like you said, there IS something to be said about courage, but only for a human. Courage is the ability to keep going on in the face of what appears to be your death, and for a human that's the mechanism by which we oversome the emotion of fear. But a Vulcan gets around it a different way, so the question isn't does Trip have more courage than Koss, but can Trip's courage match Koss' trained discipline. I can't say I know the answer.
aeverett wrote:blackn'blue wrote:It takes a certain frame of mind to endure a sudden hit and keep moving. Trip would have been getting an extended term of training in exactly that kind of conditioning from his time in the Expanse. Week after week, he had to keep going and fight through the pain to keep the ENT from falling apart. He kept going in spite of sleep deprivation, grief, hunger, thirst, rage, sickness, wounds, and countless distractions. That kind of discipline is not something that Koss would be likely to have available to him, even if he does sit around in front of a candle and a stick of incense for an hour every day.
Also, there is the MACO training Trip received. MACO training seemed to be about finding the advantage in a fight, getting in decisive blows while deflecting them from hitting you. All the throwing and such was about getting your opponent offguard and winded for the split second you'd need to win the fight.
While I'm sure Trip's SF fighting training was good, MACOs are a strike team. They train to keep things simple, to permanently end a fight as quickly as possible. To me this would an important advantage.
I'd have to say that the only benefit I'd see Trip getting from this depends on how much time he has to prepare. In my story, "Stake Thy Claim", he doesn't have any time. Well, depending how you read the story, because he DOES say he figured ahead of time this is how it would go down. He might have prepared. But he couldn't have prepared a whole lot without T'Pol finding out.
The reason I don't think this training would be a big advantage is that anybody who's ever physically trained knows that you either
use it or lose it. If he's been training consistently or like practicing to be a reserve security officer, sure. But just doing his daily routine for the last year since that happened, he wouldn't hold over any of the physical conditioning derived from that, and only minute amounts of knowledge about fighting technique. He could use that to go back and study up again, sure. But if he was thrown into a fight suddenly, he wouldn't have much advantage having learned that stuff a long time ago. Unless he just made a point to practice it, which we never saw.
Starting in Feb. I was running 6 days a week and got up to running 6 mile marathons 3 days and a 1 mile sprint the other 3. I got up to a 21:00 minute 3-mile run, preparing for the Marine Corps physical fitness test. I did that for about 7 weeks until I got sick and school got hectic, and I've been off the running bit for about 3-4 weeks. I've restarted again, and I can *barely* run a 7:30 single mile, but no way in hell can I reproduce that for 3 straight miles. So, you lose a lot of that if you don't continue to use it.