Sigurd pulled the blow and retracted his leg, realising too late that the lunatic had actually intended to block it head on, and that if he'd just thought to activate the second phase he'd have ended his opponent in a single blow. Whatever. Too much thinking. He let himself drop to the ground, turning over and bringing his other leg around into a sweep.
[OOC: Okay, this is going to be pretty long for an OOC comment, but there are a lot of problems that need addressing.
Firstly, while I understand what you're trying to achieve with the whole 'pretending to be in a different year' thing, you're doing it completely wrong. When your character speaks he can say whatever he wants, which is why when he introduced himself as a 'third year Beacon student' it wasn't a problem. However, you can not. When your character lies, it's part of the roleplay; but when you lie, it's misleading and confusing. Outside the perspective of the character, you're supposed to write about what's truthfully happening.
Secondly, you're completely misunderstanding both your own character and mine, and thus the power balance of this fight. Galileo is a short, weedy guy who is often mistaken for a girl. He is many things, such as astrologer, astronomer, magician and fortune teller- warrior is only one of them. He has been training as one for between a decade and half a decade, closer to half if anything, and has not been training with outstanding dedication because he has a number of other things which he does in parallel.
Sigurd is a big, tough guy. He has about 30 kilos and 7 inches over Galileo, which in a fight is huge. He is a highly skilled martial artist, who has been training for about fifteen years. With no other hobbies or interests to spend his time on, literally all he ever does is train. I'd be willing to bet that he does more of it in a single year than your character has done in all his time at Beacon. Even accounting for his physical disability he has more experience, more training, and a better physique than Galileo. Likewise, you seem to be under the impression that Sigurd is a dumb brute; which is not the case. He is not slow, but of average speed, and although he may be headstrong there's nothing in his profile to suggest he is in any way unintelligent.
Realistically, Galileo is hopelessly outmatched. Being extremely generous, he might be able to fight as an equal. But there's no way in hell he can toy with Sigurd the way you have him doing. Which brings me to another point.
I've read Galileo's profile, and I understand that you're just trying to work with his fighting style. However, that style of playing with his opponent will only work when he's against a fighter less skilled than himself. If he tries it against someone more skilled, he's going to get himself torn to pieces within a few seconds. This is not just a problem with Sigurd. Your character is pretty weak by the standards of a Beacon student, especially for a fourth year, and you'll probably have a hard time finding someone it will work against.
Now, another thing you don't seem to understand is just how strong Sigurd is. I'd have thought it would be obvious by now with all the clues we've been dropping- the ground shaking when he strikes Yngvarr, Yngvarr referring to him as inhuman, and Sigurd himself thinking that if Galileo doesn't take things seriously he's genuinely going to die- but perhaps all of that was not enough. Galileo can not block his kick like that. If he did, Sigurd would break his arm and send that cane flying off into the distance. I've had to write around that, because I didn't want it to happen, but I could just as easily have let it go.
To simplify, you're completely misunderstanding the way this fight plays out. You're overestimating Galileo, and underestimating Sigurd.]