New York Post

KNIGHT CLUB

They’re kickin’ it really old school with medieval-style battles amid the rides, surf & sand at Coney Island

- By TIM DONNELLY

Acrowd gathers as two figures in full armor draw their swords. The one they call the Magic Knight reels back his weapon and smashes his foe’s helmet, metal pinging loudly off metal. He lands a kick to the shin before ramming his rival into a wall. Then he goes in for the kill, wrapping an arm between chain mail and helmet in a headlock that sends his adversary clanking to the ground, defeated.

The Magic Knight lives to fight another day. The latest addition to the long and colorful history of Coney Island attraction­s is live knight fighting — a weekly free exhibition where trained warriors clobber each other as if they’re vying for the Iron Throne.

These knights hail from the Armored Combat League, but instead of defending a castle, they’re waging war at Draft Barn Beach, a beer garden sitting next to a pirate-ship ride and a go-kart track. In lieu of the flags of

kings and queens, banners for beer brands flap in the breeze. The edges of their axes, swords and maces are dulled, but they’re real steel, and the hits are wallops. Knights say taking a whack is like being lightly tackled. One knight’s errant swing of the ax takes a chunk out of a wooden table.

“At first, people are like, ‘Oh, this is live-action role playing, or Medieval Times,’ ” says Damion DiGrazia, 38, a former Merrill Lynch analyst who heads the league’s 15-member New York chapter. “Then they see us make first contact, and they’re like, ‘This is real!’ Sparks fly. People come out [of the ring] with blood coming out of their helmets. There’s no choreograp­hy.”

One-on-one matches typically last three 45-second rounds — although suiting up can take up to 45 minutes, since the armor weighs between 60 and 100 pounds. Scoring is similar to Olympic wrestling: Points are awarded for solid hits with a weapon, disarming your opponent or knocking them to the ground. But in three- or four-person melee matches, it’s every knight for him or herself, and the combat continues until one sweaty champion is left standing.

Between rounds, audience members are invited to grab one of the wooden practice weapons and learn how to wield it like a true warrior. The chapter also offers free all-ages weekly classes at its Harlem practice space.

Long Islander Jon Ravilla, 28, was visiting Coney Island one recent week when the sign advertisin­g ancient combat drew him away from the roller coasters and freak show. Before long, he and five friends were sitting on a table, beers in hand, cheering loudly for the night’s only female competitor, Chelsea Agnew. “Off with his head!” Ravilla yelled, surprising himself.

“I actually wasn’t expecting it to be so aggressive, but it’s pretty entertaini­ng,” he tells The Post.

His friend Catalina Pacheco, 28, winced and cheered as a melee match sent bodies flying.

“When he just threw him on the floor, I did not expect that,” says Pacheco, a flight attendant who’s now considerin­g taking up a sword herself. “It’s surprising­ly more aggressive than I thought.”

The seven-year-old league combines mixed martial arts with ancient history and a dash of profession­al wrestling. The sport scratches an itch the competitor­s couldn’t get elsewhere: DiGrazia served in the Air Force, studied the Israeli martial art Krav Maga and ran ultra marathons before discoverin­g the rush of full-contact fighting with weapons.

Orlando Mendez, 31 — a k a the Magic Knight, because he also works as a profession­al magician — wrestled in high school but has always been drawn to the romantic world of medieval knights and fantasy. But you wouldn’t want to make fun of this to his face.

“I like to call us the alpha geeks,”

he says. “We love playing board games and Dungeons & Dragons and role playing. But we also like to fight people.”

A handful of women participat­e, including Agnew, 24. She’s 5-foot-2, so she uses her stature to wear out her competitor­s and knock them off balance.

“It’s fun to see what this little body can pack a punch with,” says Agnew, who swaps armor for a princess dress for her day job as a kids’ entertaine­r.

The knights expect the league to keep growing, because, unlike 13thcentur­y combat, they’re still just friends who enjoy putting on a show in a bar at the beach.

“In what other sport can I go hit somebody in the head with an ax?,” says Mendez, “And afterwards, just go, ‘Yo bro, you wanna get a beer over that ax hit?’ ”

Knight Fights are Saturdays at 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. throughout the summer at Draft Barn Beach, 3029 Stillwell Ave., Coney Island; ACL.nyc

 ??  ?? Damion DiGrazia, an Air Force veteran who heads the Armored Combat League’s New York chapter, says that donning the armor is a real rush.
Damion DiGrazia, an Air Force veteran who heads the Armored Combat League’s New York chapter, says that donning the armor is a real rush.
 ??  ?? A pair of armored fighters go at it as Draft Barn Beach customers look on while they enjoy their brews.
A pair of armored fighters go at it as Draft Barn Beach customers look on while they enjoy their brews.
 ??  ?? Chelsea Agnew is a kids’entertaine­r by day and battling knight by night.
Chelsea Agnew is a kids’entertaine­r by day and battling knight by night.
 ??  ?? This fighter awaits his turn in the ring. A suit of armor like his weighs between 60 and 100 pounds.
This fighter awaits his turn in the ring. A suit of armor like his weighs between 60 and 100 pounds.
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