a real fight with Bruce Lee where there were no limits
In the 60s, in the United States they were already operating dozens of schools of martial arts open to the public, something unthinkable just two decades before outside of Asia. In that same period, some real combats between practitioners of different styles were resolved in private spaces and without official regulation, far from any sporting format. In fact, it would not be until the 90s when competitions like the Ultimate Fighting Championship They would begin to systematize these types of confrontations between different disciplines. A local rivalry turned into legend. In California in 1964, long before Bruce Lee became a global icon, he had already earned an uncomfortable reputation within the Chinese martial arts community. He was young, brilliant, provocative and increasingly convinced that many traditional styles were full of beautiful forms and great plasticity, but of little use when it came to a real fight. Plus: his speech, his public demonstrations and his decision to teach anyone, regardless of race or origin, placed him at the center of a tension that went far beyond personal ego. In that climate of tension with the character, a guy named Wong Jack Mananother young master, but with a diametrically opposite profile, quieter, more classic and more linked to a disciplined and traditional idea of kung fu. The clash between the two would soon take the inevitable form of a reckoning. A real fight with the myth. The decisive thing about that upcoming fight was not only who was going to hit first or exactly how long it lasted, but the simple fact that anyone would even accept face Lee in the most uncomfortable conditions possible: a private, tense confrontation with practically no rules, where both understood that it was not a simple exhibition, but of knock down the rival no matter what. As in every battle of the past of which we only have the words, they say that Wong wanted to introduce certain elementary limitsbut the most repeated version maintains that Bruce imposed his idea of total fighting, a real test, without concessions, without a safety net and without the protection of spectacle. There was the true magnitude of the episode: it was not a tournament, nor a choreography, nor a public demonstration to impress students or onlookers, but a physical clash. between two conceptions of combat, two temperaments and two ways of understanding martial arts. That someone decided to stand up to Bruce Lee in that context explains why the episode has survived decades as one of the most fascinating (and most difficult) stories of the Lee myth to fix. Wong Jack Man Two opposite styles. The popular image invites us to imagine an almost cinematic scene, two masters launching perfect techniques in a solemn duel, but the stories agree on something much more earthly: That was a messy, abrupt, exhausting combat and very far from the romantic ideal of kung fu. Most accounts agree with a beginning where Bruce dated overwhelming aggressionseeking to close the distance, chain straight blows and give no respite. Wong, however, chose to movedodge, defend and try to contain the gale without fully deploying his most dangerous arsenal, especially his long-range kicks. It was not, in any case, a “nice” fight, but an awkward collision between the iconic speed of Lee and Wong’s evasive resistance. That is precisely why the confrontation has mattered so much: because it stripped martial arts of much of its theatricality and revealed something more raw and revealing. Bruce Lee in a still from Enter The Dragon The great dispute impossible to close. What exactly happened inside that room remains one of the controversies most persistent in the history of Bruce Lee and martial arts. The version of his wifeLinda Lee, maintains that Bruce ran over Wong within minutes, chased him when he started to back away, and ended up forcing him to surrender on the ground. Wong Jack Man defended just the opposite: that Bruce attacked like a wild bull, that the fight lasted more than twenty minutes and that there was no clear victory, but rather exhaustion and a confusing ending. A third testimony, that of the teacher William Chenmoves in an intermediate zone and talks about a long, even and no clean ending. This disparity has fueled the myth for decades, but it also reveals a fundamental truth: The actual fights rarely resemble the later heroic tales, let alone Lee’s own films. Each side remembers what happened according to its pride, its memory and the need to protect a reputation that was already at stake. Frame from Game of Death More than a fight. If you like, that fight not only pitted two men against each other, but to two paradigms. Bruce Lee had long denounced what he considered a “classic disorder” of rigid postures, showy movements and techniques that were impractical for the street. Faced with that defended an almost revolutionary idea for the time: that what was important was not the purity of style, but real effectiveness. Wong represented, at least symbolically, the other pole: the elegance of tradition, the authority of lineage, the discipline of established systems. That is why that night in Oakland has ended up being read as a kind of dress rehearsal for what would become decades later. the central debate of mixed martial arts. More than a fight about personal honor, it was a brutal test of which parts of kung fu survived when ritual and rhetoric were eliminated. Lee’s pride. Possibly also, this was the most important consequence of all. Even accepting the version more favorable to Bruce Leethe fight did not develop as he expected. It does not seem that he obtained a clean, quick and overwhelming victory, but a rather dirty fight which left him exhausted, frustrated and feeling like his system still had serious limitations. According to your own wordschasing his rival and hitting him without finishing him as he wanted made him understand that the modality of Wing Chun It wasn’t enough for him. That … Read more