Rompiendo un par de lanzas a favor de bruce lee la persona, que no la figura de brusli, hago un copy/paste via wikipedia (si, wikipedia, pero con datos; que no teine que ser una mala referencia la pobre):
Lee defeated three-time Hong Kong Inter-School amateur boxing champion Gary Elms by way of knockout in the third round in the 1958 Hong Kong Inter-School amateur Boxing Championships held between 12 Hong Kong schools. Lee used Wing Chun traps and high/low-level straight punches.[44]
The following year, Lee became a member of the "Tigers of Junction Street," and was involved in numerous gang-related street fights. "In one of his last encounters, while removing his jacket the fellow he was squaring off against sucker punched him and blackened his eye. Bruce flew into a rage and went after him, knocking him out, breaking his opponent's arm. The police were called as a result".[45] The incident took place on a Hong Kong rooftop at 10 pm on Wednesday, 29 April 1959.[46]
In 1962, Lee was challenged by a man who had been holding a grudge against Lee while the two were practicing at a YMCA in Seattle.[47] The man was described by Jesse Glover as a karate man who also had a blackbelt in judo, though Glover, who was a brown belt in judo at the time, claimed to be better than the man in judo.[47] After weeks[48] or months[49] of provocation by the man, Lee agreed to fight the man for three two-minute rounds, with the winner being the one who knocked the opponent down or out in two out of three rounds.[50] The match took place at YMCA's handball court, with Glover as the referee and Ed Hart as the time keeper.[50] Lee wore street clothes and used a Wing Chun stance while his opponent wore a gi and used a karate stance.[50] According to Glover, Lee used his right forearm to deflect an initial kick from the man and simultaneously landed a left punch to the face.[50] Lee deflected more punches using the forearm, controlling the center line and landed more punches to the man's face until he was against the wall.[50] The man attempted to grab Lee's arms, which Lee responded by a double fist punch to the face and chest, followed by a kick to the nose, which produced a nosebleed and a knockout, at which time Glover stopped the fight.[50] Taki Kamura said the fight lasted 10 seconds.[51] Ed Hart stated "the fight lasted exactly 11 seconds – I know because I was the time keeper – and Bruce had hit the guy something like 15 times and kicked him once. I thought he'd killed him".[48]
In Oakland, California in 1964 at Chinatown, Lee had a controversial private match with Wong Jack Man, a direct student of Ma Kin Fung known for his mastery of Xingyiquan, Northern Shaolin, and T'ai chi ch'uan. According to Lee, the Chinese community issued an ultimatum to him to stop teaching non-Chinese. When he refused to comply, he was challenged to a combat match with Wong. The arrangement was that if Lee lost, he would have to shut down his school; while if he won, then Lee would be free to teach Caucasians or anyone else.[45] Wong denied this, stating that he requested to fight Lee after Lee issued an open challenge during one of Lee's demonstrations at a Chinatown theatre, and that Wong himself did not discriminate against Caucasians or other non-Chinese.[52] Lee commented, "That paper had all the names of the sifu from Chinatown, but they don't scare me".[53]
Individuals known to have witnessed the match included Cadwell, James Lee (Bruce Lee's associate, no relation), and William Chen, a teacher of T'ai chi ch'uan. Wong and witness William Chen stated that the fight lasted an unusually long 20–25 minutes.[52] According to Bruce Lee, Linda Lee Cadwell, and James Yimm Lee, the fight lasted 3 minutes with a decisive victory for Lee. "The fight ensued, it was a no-holds-barred fight, it took three minutes. Bruce got this guy down to the ground and said 'do you give up?' and the man said he gave up" – Linda Lee Cadwell.[45]
Wong Jack Man published his own account of the battle in the Chinese Pacific Weekly, a Chinese-language newspaper in San Francisco, which contained another challenge to Lee for a public rematch.[52] Lee had no reciprocation to Wong's article, nor were there any further public announcements by either, but Lee had continued to teach Caucasians.
Lee's eventual celebrity put him in the path of a number of men who sought to make a name for themselves by causing a confrontation with Lee. A challenger had invaded Lee's private home in Hong Kong by trespassing into the backyard to incite Lee in combat. Lee finished the challenger violently with a kick, infuriated over the home invasion. Describing the incident, Herb Jackson states,
One time one fellow got over that wall, got into his yard and challenged him and he says 'how good are you?' And Bruce was poppin mad. He [Bruce] says 'he gets the idea, this guy, to come and invade my home, my own private home, invade it and challenge me.' He said he got so mad that he gave the hardest kick he ever gave anyone in his life.[54]
Bob Wall, USPK karate champion and Lee's co-star in Enter the Dragon, recalled one encounter that transpired after a film extra kept taunting Lee. The extra yelled that Lee was "a movie star, not a martial artist," that he "wasn't much of a fighter". Lee answered his taunts by asking him to jump down from the wall he was sitting on. Wall described Lee's opponent as "a gang-banger type of guy from Hong Kong," a "damned good martial artist," and observed that he was fast, strong, and bigger than Bruce.[55]
This kid was good. He was strong and fast, and he was really trying to punch Bruce's brains in. But Bruce just methodically took him apart.[56] Bruce kept moving so well, this kid couldn't touch him...then all of a sudden, Bruce got him and rammed his ass with the wall and swept him up, proceeding to drop him and plant his knee into his opponent's chest, locked his arm out straight, and nailed him in the face repeatedly". – Bob Wall[57]
Ahora una opinión personal:
Si bien Bruce Lee le puso interés al tema, una cosa que siempre me ha hecho dudar de su falta de experiencia práctica en cuanto al tema del contacto real en forma general, a diferencia de lo que hacia con sus alumnos que al fin y al cabo no dejaba de ser una práctica
endogámica , es esa tendencia a dar las patadas laterales desde una distancía tan larga (con paso de carga), cosa que se puede ver en todos sus libros. En comparación con otros especialistas en patada lateral y experiencía de contacto como los practicantes de sanda, la mécanica fija de Buce Lee estaba muy lejos de ser 100% práctica.
La otra lanza va en cuanto a la faceta de actor:
No me atrae la forma de actuar suya, pero básicamente porque era un actor que actuaba para un público asiático. Así que en estandares occidentales puede resultar "malo", pero es que estamos viendo películas de chinos pensadas para chinos. Aunque Bruce Lee, desde un punto de vista occidental también se podía apañar, como se puede ver en una serie (no la que hacía de kato) tipo de época americana. No recuerdo el nombre, pero ya se hablo por aquí alguna vez, si alguien quiere buscar.
Por otro lado, en occidente el gran público, que no los cuatro gatos que veían pelis de chinos, no tenía ni pajolera idea de quien era Bruce hasta "Operación Dragón". Algo así como lo que le paso a Jet Li con la pelí de "Arma Letal 4". Pero Bruce la diño, y a partir de ahí viene el boom brusliniano y como el parchis, donde se comió una le contaron veinte.