Author Topic: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage  (Read 6715 times)

Benny B

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Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« on: March 14, 2009, 11:45:46 AM »
The master and forerunner of all this "mma" stuff. My opinion is that Bruce Lee would totally LOVE the UFC and what it represents, while pointing out some of the flaws of it relative to street self defense. It is much much closer to a real fight then the point fighting of the 1960s and 70s. I believe had he lived, he'd be coaching fighters and experimenting to to see what techniques he could make work inside the octagon or mma ring.

Anyway...let the haters hate (as they always do), and let the lovers of martial artists appreciate.  8)

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Migs

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #1 on: March 14, 2009, 12:25:45 PM »
He is/was incredible.  Taken away too early.

MindSpin

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #2 on: March 16, 2009, 08:02:38 AM »
Would have dominated in his weight class....
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Benny B

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #3 on: March 16, 2009, 11:33:31 AM »
Would have dominated in his weight class....
I believe so too, but Bruce really had no interest in competing in sport fighting. He was friends and coached and gave tips back in the day to sport fighters like Chuck Norris, Mike Stone, Joe Lewis, etc.

In case there is anyone living under a rock who hasn't seen the so-called "Lost Interview" by now, I'll post it here. Bruce's wisdom and way of thinking has always intrigued me just as much as his fighting ability, if not more so. Very well read and philosophical young guy. Pretty fucked up about the level of racism he had to deal with in his time.

Enjoy.  :) I find the interviewer (Berton) a bit of a jackass. LOL

Bruce Lee on the Pierre Berton Show. December 1971. Part 1.


Part 2.


Part 3







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americanbulldog

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #4 on: March 16, 2009, 01:53:50 PM »
Toward the end of his life, he became disenchanted with Wing Chun and had removed most aspects of "trapping."  He also started studying and training in grappling.  I think he would have been an advocate for NHB.  He wouldn't be able to compete with the Norifumis, Urijahs, Mike Brown's of the world, but he'd definitely love the game. 

Migs

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #5 on: March 16, 2009, 06:15:16 PM »
I think he would be extremely formidable.  His speed alone would be so much to handle.

Benny B

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #6 on: March 17, 2009, 02:45:35 PM »
Toward the end of his life, he became disenchanted with Wing Chun and had removed most aspects of "trapping."  He also started studying and training in grappling.  I think he would have been an advocate for NHB.  He wouldn't be able to compete with the Norifumis, Urijahs, Mike Brown's of the world, but he'd definitely love the game. 
No disrespect to Uriah Faber and the rest of those lightweight dudes, but Bruce would KILL them in a real fight. As far as mma, that's their world and of course they'd win. That is their world and the sport needs to be trained in to be competitive. It's all a matter of opinion, but I just can't put those guys at the same level of Bruce.

Your analysis of BL and Wing Chun is a bit simplistic. Suffice it to say he realized that the art by itself was not effective enough for all aspects of fighting. Listen to Inosanto and you come to find Bruce did not throw away trapping completely at all, he just realized most could not pull it off in a real fight.

As far as grappling...Bruce knew its importance very early on.  He studied wrestling at the University of Washington, trained with "Judo Gene" LaBell (one of the toughest grapplers on the planet). The grappling in Jeet Kune Do is primarily from what he learned from LaBell and Wally Jay (Small Circle Jiu Jitsu). He also trained with his friend Olymic Judo champion Hayward Nishioka. Bruce felt grappling was exremely effective because the arts were so tactile and you had to really mix it up every time you sparred. I think it is pretty fair to say Bruce would have learned and incorparated BJJ into his style had he known about. Personally I don't think he'd be a huge fan of the art, however, given its sportive nature and the lack of an ability to deal with multiple opponents when rolling around on the floor for long periods of time.
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Migs

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #7 on: March 17, 2009, 04:39:23 PM »
No disrespect to Uriah Faber and the rest of those lightweight dudes, but Bruce would KILL them in a real fight. As far as mma, that's their world and of course they'd win. That is their world and the sport needs to be trained in to be competitive. It's all a matter of opinion, but I just can't put those guys at the same level of Bruce.

Your analysis of BL and Wing Chun is a bit simplistic. Suffice it to say he realized that the art by itself was not effective enough for all aspects of fighting. Listen to Inosanto and you come to find Bruce did not throw away trapping completely at all, he just realized most could not pull it off in a real fight.

As far as grappling...Bruce knew its importance very early on.  He studied wrestling at the University of Washington, trained with "Judo Gene" LaBell (one of the toughest grapplers on the planet). The grappling in Jeet Kune Do is primarily from what he learned from LaBell and Wally Jay (Small Circle Jiu Jitsu). He also trained with his friend Olymic Judo champion Hayward Nishioka. Bruce felt grappling was exremely effective because the arts were so tactile and you had to really mix it up every time you sparred. I think it is pretty fair to say Bruce would have learned and incorparated BJJ into his style had he known about. Personally I don't think he'd be a huge fan of the art, however, given its sportive nature and the lack of an ability to deal with multiple opponents when rolling around on the floor for long periods of time.

Good post.  If Bruce were to study mma, he would destroy those guys.  His level of understanding and adaptation is second to none.  As for JKD so much of it is based on wing chun and I agree that he did away with some of the more complex traps moslty becuase it is difficult for most to get off.  I have sparred against JKD and other martial arts and even though I study wing chun it can be difficult to get compound traps off, but it is possible.

doison

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #8 on: March 18, 2009, 11:02:30 AM »
Bruce Lee would hold the title in every division and ever federation of MMA. 
I once saw him in a movie taking on at least a dozen men at one time.  They came at him one after another, never two or more at the same time, and his kicks would make guys do a back flip like they were stuntmen jumping off of a trampoline.  He caught bullets with his teeth.
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americanbulldog

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #9 on: March 18, 2009, 11:31:48 AM »
No disrespect to Uriah Faber and the rest of those lightweight dudes, but Bruce would KILL them in a real fight. As far as mma, that's their world and of course they'd win. That is their world and the sport needs to be trained in to be competitive. It's all a matter of opinion, but I just can't put those guys at the same level of Bruce.

Your analysis of BL and Wing Chun is a bit simplistic. Suffice it to say he realized that the art by itself was not effective enough for all aspects of fighting. Listen to Inosanto and you come to find Bruce did not throw away trapping completely at all, he just realized most could not pull it off in a real fight.

As far as grappling...Bruce knew its importance very early on.  He studied wrestling at the University of Washington, trained with "Judo Gene" LaBell (one of the toughest grapplers on the planet). The grappling in Jeet Kune Do is primarily from what he learned from LaBell and Wally Jay (Small Circle Jiu Jitsu). He also trained with his friend Olymic Judo champion Hayward Nishioka. Bruce felt grappling was exremely effective because the arts were so tactile and you had to really mix it up every time you sparred. I think it is pretty fair to say Bruce would have learned and incorparated BJJ into his style had he known about. Personally I don't think he'd be a huge fan of the art, however, given its sportive nature and the lack of an ability to deal with multiple opponents when rolling around on the floor for long periods of time.

Blind hero worship clouds your judgement.  First off, I studied WC because of BL.  I am a former instructor under Robert Leung, who is a Wong Long student, who was a Yip Man student.  In the WC circles, JFL was the prodigal son, who never finished the system, but popularised it because of his movies.  JFL was in fact moving away from "trapping," and Guro Dan would be the first to tell you this.  He started getting more involved in western boxing, wrestling and judo.  Larry Hartsell was a second degree black belt in judo.  He had periphial knowledge of both judo, through his brief studies in Washington state, Wally Jay and Hayward Nishioka.  He didn't slap on a white belt and "empty his cup" like he espoused.  Because of this unwillingness (or lack of time), he never quite understood arts like Guro Dan.  (Although Guro Dan will opine that he was never the athlete JFL was). 

You also aren't giving fighters like Urijah, Nori, and Mike Brown credit.  Urijah got into a gang fight in Thailand, and came out on the winning side.  That wasn't sport fighting.  Nori has gotten into MANY a fight outside the confines of the ring, and come out on top.  Professional fighters will always have an advantage over non professionals.  JFL, or Bruce, was a stud, no doubt.  But no takedown defense=getting mounted and eating punches and elbows until you are unconcious.  I have wrestled most of my life practice TD defense (as have sub grappling, BJJ, MMA fighters for that matter) and STILL get taken down by better wrestlers at will.  He didn't, and he assumed the Jeet Tek, Biu Gee would "intercept" his opponents attacks and prevent crossing into trapping and grappling range.  Had Helio or Carlson been around, he would have been a big proponent of BJJ.  Judo Gene easily picked him up on the set of the Green Hornet and walked around with JFL, while Bruce threatened to "Kill him." 

Benny B

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #10 on: March 18, 2009, 01:25:46 PM »
Bruce Lee would hold the title in every division and ever federation of MMA. 
I once saw him in a movie taking on at least a dozen men at one time.  They came at him one after another, never two or more at the same time, and his kicks would make guys do a back flip like they were stuntmen jumping off of a trampoline.  He caught bullets with his teeth.

*yawn*

These "jokes" stopped being funny about 25 years ago. Actually, they have never been funny. No one in this tread suggested Bruce Lee was superhuman.  Posts by non martial artists always devolve to this. ::)
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doison

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #11 on: March 18, 2009, 04:02:21 PM »
*yawn*

These "jokes" stopped being funny about 25 years ago. Actually, they have never been funny. No one in this tread suggested Bruce Lee was superhuman.  Posts by non martial artists always devolve to this. ::)

I must formundicate to the statement of non martial artist.  While I may not be currently practicing, I could easily punch anyone that has studied karate.
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Benny B

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #12 on: March 18, 2009, 07:36:52 PM »
I respect you and your thoughts AB, as I have been reading your opinions on this board for some time. I know that you have a true background in martial arts and know much of what you talk about. However, you make some false assumptions and draw a conclusions that I believe are false. For that reason I am going to address your post.  :)


Blind hero worship clouds your judgement.  First off, I studied WC because of BL.
You do not know me to come to the asinine conclusion that I suffer from "hero worship." I don't believe in heroes with the exception of perhaps my parents and certainly my Lord and savior Christ Jesus. So many of us over a certain age got into MA primarily due to Bruce.
I trained primarily under two Jeet Kune Do instructors: one third generation (under Inosanto), and one fourth generation (under Vunak). I learned early on from both men not to engage in hero worship as it will hurt your ability to learn certain fighting skills and what would work for you as an individual.

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I am a former instructor under Robert Leung, who is a Wong Long student, who was a Yip Man student.  In the WC circles, JFL was the prodigal son, who never finished the system, but popularised it because of his movies.  JFL was in fact moving away from "trapping," and Guro Dan would be the first to tell you this. 
Your knowledge base on WC should be strong based on your background. I got most of my knowledge of WC through JKD, although I did train a couple of times with Lo Man Kam (nephew of Yip Man, whose real name was Ki Man.) I know the thinking of many traditional Wing Chun practioners. "Bruce never truly learned all of Wing Chun, and that is why it did not work for him." Bruce, or "JFL" as you call him, said "once you learn trapping, discard it, use it when it is necessary, don't hang on to it." To say that he did away with trapping and Wing Chun is ludicrous because one cannot simply throw away something that is a part of you.  It would be more appropriate to say that he de-emphasized, simplified, or simply modified it to a degree that it no longer appeared to be what he was originally doing. I know Inosanto's thoughts on this because I have heard him speak on it personally.

Here's an excerpt from Vunak on trapping:
Dan [Inosanto] approached me and advised me to go back into the JKD class. I did so, and to my amazement, I was straight blasting, head butting, kneeing, and elbowing every person in the class. This gave me an incredible epiphany: I learned that full-contact sparring alone, even though it is the most “alive” drill one can do, is not enough to take a person even close to their fullest potential! I was elated at my new tools (my self-perfection drills) that could make people functional with their trapping. This is why I find it ironic that many of the people who say they cannot functionalize their traps coincidentally also hate self-perfection drills.

At this point I was convinced that there was no need for Wing Chun traps! About two years later, I got into a fight with a very famous Wing Chun man (I’m not going to mention his name). When the fight began, I entered with my straight blast, but instead of him turning and covering like everyone else, HE occupied centerline as a response, and we were stuck at a reference point. This precipitated a pak sao/lop sao from me, and I followed up with several elbows to the face, and was pleased with the result. The very poignant lesson that I learned was this: The only time you ever need to do a Wing Chun trap is if you’re fighting a Wing Chun man who happens to occupy center line. Otherwise, the vast majority of the time, one never needs to trap the arms at all. This is why over the many years to follow, when people hear me refer to trapping, I’m talking about an entry, straight blast, and head butting, kneeing and elbowing…not some pak sao! (Later, when I was teaching SEAL Team Six, I coined the name “Rapid Assault Tactics”, or RAT for short) for this method of trapping.


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He started getting more involved in western boxing, wrestling and judo.  Larry Hartsell was a second degree black belt in judo.
Correct, as well as studying several other arts. Sijo Bruce was never Hartsell's student, but his instructor. Hartsell first martial art was Kempo, and then he earned a black belt in Judo. He continued to study grappling after Bruce died and made his life's work the foundation of the core of the Jun Fan Jeet Kune Do Grappling.

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He had periphial knowledge of both judo, through his brief studies in Washington state, Wally Jay and Hayward Nishioka.  He didn't slap on a white belt and "empty his cup" like he espoused. 

What?  ??? Bruce never in his life mentioned putting on a "white belt" to learn an art. This is complete bullshit made up by you AB. The "empty your cup" phrase  comes from a story Bruce Lee told where a master was trying to make a point to an arrogant visiting martial artist. This martial artist ostensibly came to learn from the master, but merely wanted to prate his own ideas. In the story, the master begins to fill the visitor's cup with tea, but when it is full, the master continues to pour and the tea runs out. When the visitor points this out, the master replies, "until you empty your cup, you cannot get any more tea." The basic concept is that if you are full of your own ideas, there is no room for new ones.

Bruce Lee was not only a master martial artist, he was also a master of learning from others. He was constantly emptying his cup and taking in new ideas. In his brief lifetime, he continued to learn from others causing him to change philosophies many times, and create martial arts systems based on these constantly renewing ideas.

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Because of this unwillingness (or lack of time), he never quite understood arts like Guro Dan.  (Although Guro Dan will opine that he was never the athlete JFL was). 
Again, a statement made with no basis in reality. Dan is still alive, so if that is what you mean, then of course he has gathered more insight into various arts over the last 30+ years. Dan loved to research arts and often would share his findings with his friend and teacher. If you stated to Sigung Inosanto that he understood the arts he introduced to Bruce better than Bruce did, he would laugh. Once he made Bruce aware of some new finding he had made, within a short period of time Bruce was kicking his ass in that same art! The Filipino arts are the one area where I would be in agreement that Inosanto's knowledge was superior to Bruce's .

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You also aren't giving fighters like Urijah, Nori, and Mike Brown credit.  Urijah got into a gang fight in Thailand, and came out on the winning side.  That wasn't sport fighting.  Nori has gotten into MANY a fight outside the confines of the ring, and come out on top.  Professional fighters will always have an advantage over non professionals.
 
If I wasn't careful, I would think you are engaging in hero worship of your "mma" heroes. Why, you've turned them into mythological Gods. ;D

And someone forgot to tell Tim Sylvia about "professional fighters will always having an advantage over non professionals."  :-\ That's true within the confines of your sport, but not necessarily anywhere else. I personally have known a couple of Golden Gloves champions who have gotten beat down on the street.

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JFL, or Bruce, was a stud, no doubt.  But no takedown defense=getting mounted and eating punches and elbows until you are unconcious.  I have wrestled most of my life practice TD defense (as have sub grappling, BJJ, MMA fighters for that matter) and STILL get taken down by better wrestlers at will.
 
No offense, but you're no Bruce Lee son. You're not even a Chuck Liddell, who does not get taken down "at will."  ;)  I think I mentioned that if Sijo were alive today he would be as knowledgeable as anyone on BJJ, Russian Sombo, etc. 

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He didn't, and he assumed the Jeet Tek, Biu Gee would "intercept" his opponents attacks and prevent crossing into trapping and grappling range.  Had Helio or Carlson been around, he would have been a big proponent of BJJ. 
Stop kicks are a part of the arsenal, but Bruce knew enough to know they weren't a guarantee in every fight. I already stated Bruce would be a fan of BJJ, which is why Inosanto has made it part of the Jeet Kune Do Concepts curriculum. Just because YOU love it and are a complete believer does not mean Bruce would embrace every aspect of it wholeheartedly, however.

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Judo Gene easily picked him up on the set of the Green Hornet and walked around with JFL, while Bruce threatened to "Kill him." 
I am well aware of this incident, and I hope you realize that although Bruce got angry that they were playing around. It was on the set of the "Green Hornet" television show, and it is not like Bruce was going to gouge out Gene's eyes at that time.  ::) I think I stated pretty clearly that LeBell was a BAD man, as tough as nails. Also a much bigger guy than Bruce.

Directly from "Judo Gene":
"Bruce called me for a few shows because he liked the way I took falls for him - being a judo man made me pretty good at breakfalls. We ended up becoming friends and would work out together and teach each other techniques. I liked working out with Bruce, but I kept getting sick from that stinky incense he burned in his gym. I told him I wouldn't go there because his dojo smelled worse than a Chinese laundry house. Of course, I was only kidding with him, and once Bruce learned that my teasing was all in good fun he started to joke around too. Bruce came to my dojo after that. He was a great guy, and I loved him.

"Bruce loved to learn grappling, he ate it up! He said that people would never go for it in movies or TV because the fights are over too fast and most of the good stuff was hidden from view. He said they wanted to see fancy kicking, acrobatics, and weapons -- he was a savvy showman who knew how to give 'em exactly what they wanted. I wish he could be around now to see how well grappling is doing these days. I remember one time he kicked me really hard. I remember thinking it was a good thing he only wore a size 6 shoe instead of a 14 like me, otherwise that kick would have sent me to China! He was strong for his size, lemme tell ya.
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americanbulldog

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #13 on: March 19, 2009, 04:57:28 PM »
I studied with Richard Bustillo in 1986-1988 at the IMB academy.  I have hosted Richard in Hawaii at least 6 times, even helped Burton Richardson host Guro Dan, on Dan's first trip BACK to Hawaii.  Been around the JKDC scene almost as long as WC. 

Did a couple of seminars with "Vu" (Matt Thornton was at one of them, that will tell you the time frame).    I have done privates with Damon Caro, Jeff Imada, Cass Magda, Burton Richardson.  So I have been around.  So I think my JKDC information is up to date.  As most in the JKDC world know, Vu has his own agenda, and has been off the radar for quite some time.  His organization, PFS, was quite strong at one point, and had a TON of talent that have left because of his "personal" problems.  What he wrote was from his book that was printed in 1988, which was later used in a TRS ad.  If you ask people who were close to Vu, you will get a mixed bag of opinions on the credibility of his information.  That is all I will say.  I have a friend, a Machado Black Belt who teaches BJJ at the Inosanto academy who might be a better source of information about JFL than Vu, because he hears it from Guro's mouth, not someone who speaks with Guro Dan infrequently, like Vu if at all. 

Never intoned that Sifu Larry taught Bruce anything.  Sifu Larry did in fact do Judo in NC before getting drafted and going to Vietnam.......He became a JFL student because of Guro Dan (both were Ed Parker black belts at the time)

Bruce studied Judo in Washington state while attending college. 

Bruce did not study arts the same as Guro Dan.  He was unwilling to strap on a white belt (like Guro Dan has), start from scratch and learn from someone else's system before he opined.  He observed other arts and formulated opinions based upon his observation, Guro Dan, "emptied his cup" got on the mats and did other arts.  Guro got certified in seven types of Kali, thre Silat, Muay Thai through Arjan Chai, and a BB from JJ Machado.  Bruce would not and did not do this.  How would he learn transitions in BJJ from not doing BJJ, how would he learn to prevent a takedown unless he got good wrestlers in front of him and allowed them to try and take him down? 

Like I already stated, you were unaware that Bruce did in fact study judo while in Washington.  Linda Lee Caldwell and her heretic bunch, the JFJKD association have the certificate Bruce received while studying judo......I was a charter member until they "ex communicated" Guro Dan and made statements that unless JFL did it, it wasn't authentic. 

As far as Bruce's abilities, he was EXTREMELY formidable for the day.  Was he a natural, absolutely.  Could he pick stuff up easily, YES.  Was he the be all end all of martial arts, NO.  Carlson Sr, Helio were actually functionalizing all of Bruce's theories in Brazil.  If I compared a 1969 ZL1 Camaro to it's present day 2010 Z-28, the Z-28 would beat it in EVERY category.  That is evolution, and that is what Bruce espoused.  "More than instructing my family in such precepts, I will teach them to walk on." 

Judo Gene has gone on record saying he would have no problem with Bruce.  Gene has taught for Richard at his IMB instructors seminars for years, and you can find Gene's opinions on Bruce, his abilitys via the web. 


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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #14 on: March 20, 2009, 09:07:18 AM »
What people don't realize is just how good Bruce Lee was back in the day. Everyone says how he would get trashed by todays MMA fighters when it was HIS inovations that made it possible for those guys to be fighting the way that they do. Put anyone of these guys in Lee's time and they would get creamed for the simple fact that they wouldn't have the skills to compete with him. It's just simple facts and not hero worship as many claim. Lee was a bad ass and as bad as they come.

All Norris joking aside, Chuck Norris was a real bad ass himself and was no joke when it came to fighting. Even he didn't want any part of Bruce because he knew.

There is more than just idol worship when it came to what Bruce Lee could do in a fight or any MMA fight.

doison

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #15 on: March 21, 2009, 03:21:32 PM »
I studied with Richard Bustillo in 1986-1988 at the IMB academy.  I have hosted Richard in Hawaii at least 6 times, even helped Burton Richardson host Guro Dan, on Dan's first trip BACK to Hawaii.  Been around the JKDC scene almost as long as WC. 

Did a couple of seminars with "Vu" (Matt Thornton was at one of them, that will tell you the time frame).    I have done privates with Damon Caro, Jeff Imada, Cass Magda, Burton Richardson.  So I have been around.  So I think my JKDC information is up to date.  As most in the JKDC world know, Vu has his own agenda, and has been off the radar for quite some time.  His organization, PFS, was quite strong at one point, and had a TON of talent that have left because of his "personal" problems.  What he wrote was from his book that was printed in 1988, which was later used in a TRS ad.  If you ask people who were close to Vu, you will get a mixed bag of opinions on the credibility of his information.  That is all I will say.  I have a friend, a Machado Black Belt who teaches BJJ at the Inosanto academy who might be a better source of information about JFL than Vu, because he hears it from Guro's mouth, not someone who speaks with Guro Dan infrequently, like Vu if at all. 

Never intoned that Sifu Larry taught Bruce anything.  Sifu Larry did in fact do Judo in NC before getting drafted and going to Vietnam.......He became a JFL student because of Guro Dan (both were Ed Parker black belts at the time)

Bruce studied Judo in Washington state while attending college. 

Bruce did not study arts the same as Guro Dan.  He was unwilling to strap on a white belt (like Guro Dan has), start from scratch and learn from someone else's system before he opined.  He observed other arts and formulated opinions based upon his observation, Guro Dan, "emptied his cup" got on the mats and did other arts.  Guro got certified in seven types of Kali, thre Silat, Muay Thai through Arjan Chai, and a BB from JJ Machado.  Bruce would not and did not do this.  How would he learn transitions in BJJ from not doing BJJ, how would he learn to prevent a takedown unless he got good wrestlers in front of him and allowed them to try and take him down? 

Like I already stated, you were unaware that Bruce did in fact study judo while in Washington.  Linda Lee Caldwell and her heretic bunch, the JFJKD association have the certificate Bruce received while studying judo......I was a charter member until they "ex communicated" Guro Dan and made statements that unless JFL did it, it wasn't authentic. 

As far as Bruce's abilities, he was EXTREMELY formidable for the day.  Was he a natural, absolutely.  Could he pick stuff up easily, YES.  Was he the be all end all of martial arts, NO.  Carlson Sr, Helio were actually functionalizing all of Bruce's theories in Brazil.  If I compared a 1969 ZL1 Camaro to it's present day 2010 Z-28, the Z-28 would beat it in EVERY category.  That is evolution, and that is what Bruce espoused.  "More than instructing my family in such precepts, I will teach them to walk on." 

Judo Gene has gone on record saying he would have no problem with Bruce.  Gene has taught for Richard at his IMB instructors seminars for years, and you can find Gene's opinions on Bruce, his abilitys via the web. 



I studied under a golf umbrella, but that don't mean I'm ready to drive a 2010 Z-28.  I know everything there is to know about punching and kicking.  I don't know much about biting, but I do know an insane amount of random facts about Bruce Lee.  I could say all kinds of names that I read off the internet, but the fact remains that Bruce Lee could take down a puma while I watch TV.
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Benny B

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #16 on: March 23, 2009, 08:05:44 AM »
I studied with Richard Bustillo in 1986-1988 at the IMB academy.  I have hosted Richard in Hawaii at least 6 times, even helped Burton Richardson host Guro Dan, on Dan's first trip BACK to Hawaii.  Been around the JKDC scene almost as long as WC. 
Good for you.  :)

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Did a couple of seminars with "Vu" (Matt Thornton was at one of them, that will tell you the time frame).    I have done privates with Damon Caro, Jeff Imada, Cass Magda, Burton Richardson.  So I have been around.  So I think my JKDC information is up to date.  As most in the JKDC world know, Vu has his own agenda, and has been off the radar for quite some time.  His organization, PFS, was quite strong at one point, and had a TON of talent that have left because of his "personal" problems.  What he wrote was from his book that was printed in 1988, which was later used in a TRS ad.  If you ask people who were close to Vu, you will get a mixed bag of opinions on the credibility of his information.  That is all I will say.  I have a friend, a Machado Black Belt who teaches BJJ at the Inosanto academy who might be a better source of information about JFL than Vu, because he hears it from Guro's mouth, not someone who speaks with Guro Dan infrequently, like Vu if at all. 

I have never spoken to Vunak in person, and my comments about Inosanto have come from Inosanto himself in my presence (seminars) or from some of his full instructors that speak to him frequently. Your I-have-the-final-word on all things Wing Chun andJKD is a bit much, bro. I am not here to name drop, and did not mention the specific names of my instructors. I saw no need other than to point out their lineage.

I gave you credit for your knowledge in my initial post, yet you are coming off as a bit of a jackass this point. Whatever. I am confident that I have put in at least as many hours of JKD study than you, but that is neither here nor there. It is not the "quantity" of teachers you have trained with or taken seminars from, but the "quality" of those training sessions.  ;)

Most are fully aware of Vunak's personal problems...they are aware only because he publicly acknowledged his drug and alcohol problems. I love how you call him "Vu" and refer to Bruce as "JKL" as though this makes you such an insider. No offense, but come on, bro.  :)
If you actually read my post, it was not to present Paul Vunak as the final authority of JKD, but to point out his thoughts on Wing Chun, trapping and where he felt it was and was not effective.  Try to pay attention to what I am writing and not seek to be the ultimate authority on every matter. You know a lot of people but you need to know that there are others who have been around the scene for quite some time too.  ;) Another reason I mentioned Vunak is because one of his full instructors was probably my best JKD teacher. He was the one who instructed all of us as his students to admire Bruce for the foundation he provided but to not engage in overt hero worship. Bruce was a man an a human who put his pants on one leg at a time like anyone else. I always will remember that. This particular instructor also taught all of the arts of JKD Concepts at together, as opposed to the Inosanto way of separating each art distinctively until you get to a certain level before bringing them together. We'd go from boxing to savate to judo to shootfighting/bjj in the course of one training session.



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Never intoned that Sifu Larry taught Bruce anything.  Sifu Larry did in fact do Judo in NC before getting drafted and going to Vietnam.......He became a JFL student because of Guro Dan (both were Ed Parker black belts at the time)
Well, it sure as hell appeared that you were making that correlation. I'm glad you cleared up that Hartsell was Bruce's STUDENT and never his teacher. A direct quote from Hartsell's bio:
Larry Hartsell began his martial arts training in Kenpo karate with Ed Parker in 1961. He earned a black belt from Parker and went on to earn a black belt in judo as well.

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Bruce studied Judo in Washington state while attending college.
 
[Bruce] enrolled at the University of Washington in March 1961 majoring in drama, and likely also took courses in philosophy, psychology, and various other subjects.
I have seen no "specific" mention that I can recall of Bruce studying Judo at UW, but he likely did, as he was always looking to learn different ways of how to fight.  I KNOW as fact that he took a wrestling class while at UW.

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Bruce did not study arts the same as Guro Dan.  He was unwilling to strap on a white belt (like Guro Dan has), start from scratch and learn from someone else's system before he opined.  He observed other arts and formulated opinions based upon his observation, Guro Dan, "emptied his cup" got on the mats and did other arts.
 
What is your point in making this comment? True, Bruce never strapped on a white belt. This is in part because Bruce was considered the best and most famous martial artist in the world by most at the time. His feeling was, "why should I give someone else the ability to say I was their student, when they learned more from training with me than I did training with them? This just gives them an opportunity to make money off of my name." Bruce was interested in an exchange of knowledge, not a student teacher relationship.


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Guro got certified in seven types of Kali, thre Silat, Muay Thai through Arjan Chai, and a BB from JJ Machado.  Bruce would not and did not do this.  How would he learn transitions in BJJ from not doing BJJ, how would he learn to prevent a takedown unless he got good wrestlers in front of him and allowed them to try and take him down? 
Is all this to imply that this made Sigung Dan a "better fighter" than Bruce? Sigung Dan will tell you otherwise. Dan was always good at being a student...I give him the highest credit for being able to humble himself time and again given his stature and body of knowledge. But as I stated, when Dan would introduce these new techniques to Bruce, Bruce would become better than Dan in short order. Watch "The Game of Death" and see how much Bruce was aware of stick fighting and could kick Dan's ass even those that was one of Sigung Dan's beloved Filipino arts.  ;)

What makes you think when Gene LeBell, Hayward Nishioka, or other grapplers trained with Bruce that they didn't go to the ground?  ::) Again, bjj DID NOT EXIST in Bruce's world of ma at the time. Had it become aware to him, he'd go to the mat, get taken down, improve his ground skills to an exceptional level in short order. The Machado and Gracie guys would learn as much from Bruce about the weaknesses of their art in the street as Bruce would learn from them, however. I guarantee you that.
 

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As far as Bruce's abilities, he was EXTREMELY formidable for the day.  Was he a natural, absolutely.  Could he pick stuff up easily, YES.  Was he the be all end all of martial arts, NO.  Carlson Sr, Helio were actually functionalizing all of Bruce's theories in Brazil.  If I compared a 1969 ZL1 Camaro to it's present day 2010 Z-28, the Z-28 would beat it in EVERY category.  That is evolution, and that is what Bruce espoused.  "More than instructing my family in such precepts, I will teach them to walk on." 


Bruce was the most knowledgeable and forward thinking martial artist of our time. Your hero worship of the Gracie family notwithstanding, to quote Ronnie Coleman, "You are just one white man's opinion."  ;D


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Judo Gene has gone on record saying he would have no problem with Bruce.  Gene has taught for Richard at his IMB instructors seminars for years, and you can find Gene's opinions on Bruce, his abilitys via the web.
 
So what? As stated, Gene was a much bigger guy than Bruce and like most tough guys, infinitely confident in his abilities. I think Gene would choke out the Bruce he knew in the mid 60's, but not without a struggle. The Bruce of the early 70's? I'm not so sure.

The bottom line is Bruce's impact on the martial arts is FAR greater and is a much bigger inspiration to martial artists around the world than the great Gene LeBell will ever be. Bruce's impact, inspiration, and wisdom was what this thread was all about anyway. Not how many famous martial artists any of us can name drop, how many of our UFC "idols" could beat him up (so pointless), or how superior our Gracie/Machado "heroes" are to Bruce Lee.  ;)

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #17 on: March 23, 2009, 08:06:31 AM »
What people don't realize is just how good Bruce Lee was back in the day. Everyone says how he would get trashed by todays MMA fighters when it was HIS inovations that made it possible for those guys to be fighting the way that they do. Put anyone of these guys in Lee's time and they would get creamed for the simple fact that they wouldn't have the skills to compete with him. It's just simple facts and not hero worship as many claim. Lee was a bad ass and as bad as they come.

All Norris joking aside, Chuck Norris was a real bad ass himself and was no joke when it came to fighting. Even he didn't want any part of Bruce because he knew.

There is more than just idol worship when it came to what Bruce Lee could do in a fight or any MMA fight.
In full agreement.  :)
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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #18 on: March 24, 2009, 04:55:11 AM »
Bruce lee is smart.....

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #19 on: March 26, 2009, 07:33:24 AM »
Bruce lee is smart.....

Furiously smart
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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #20 on: March 29, 2009, 10:17:55 PM »
bruce was the pioneer of modern mma imo,bruce took the whole tma thing and changed it forever.alot of people back then thought he was nuts cause of his theories and practice,little did they know the man was way ahead of his time.i have nothing but respect for bruce lee cause of his courage to step out and show people that there is nothing wrong with combining tma,s moves from different styles,he took what worked from every art and threw out what didnt work from every art and made a combat efficiant style that we see today in the ufc and mma fights.mma, bruce had charisma,intelligence,determination and admiration that only comes along once in a blue moon in a man.guys like bruce will never be forgotten even though he lived a short life,he lived a meaningful life and was loved by millions of people.
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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #21 on: March 30, 2009, 08:30:38 AM »
I believe so too, but Bruce really had no interest in competing in sport fighting. He was friends and coached and gave tips back in the day to sport fighters like Chuck Norris, Mike Stone, Joe Lewis, etc.

In case there is anyone living under a rock who hasn't seen the so-called "Lost Interview" by now, I'll post it here. Bruce's wisdom and way of thinking has always intrigued me just as much as his fighting ability, if not more so. Very well read and philosophical young guy. Pretty fucked up about the level of racism he had to deal with in his time.

Enjoy.  :) I find the interviewer (Berton) a bit of a jackass. LOL

Bruce Lee on the Pierre Berton Show. December 1971. Part 1.


Part 2.


Part 3









begining of part 2,-----put your whole hip into it........ ANNNNNND SNAP IT!!!! :o

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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #22 on: March 30, 2009, 05:51:17 PM »
Praising a "martial actor" that never walked into a ring or a real fight... only on getbig...  :(
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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #23 on: March 30, 2009, 06:55:48 PM »
Praising a "martial actor" that never walked into a ring or a real fight... only on getbig...  :(

bruce had tons of street fights,.i read his biography and he talks about his street altercations alot,more when he was in his late teens,his parents sent him to america for a month just to stop his constant streetfighting in his neighborhood
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Re: Bruce Lee - Some Rare Footage
« Reply #24 on: March 30, 2009, 11:15:02 PM »
bruce had tons of street fights,.i read his biography and he talks about his street altercations alot,more when he was in his late teens,his parents sent him to america for a month just to stop his constant streetfighting in his neighborhood

I guess the "for a month" turned out to be pretty much the rest of his life