Peppi: A few thoughts...
"In one interview Boztepe even stated Bruce realized he will never be number one in wing chun, so he took a different path."
The original sources of this information were Seattle Era students Jesse Glover and James DeMile. Bruce Lee needed to modify his Wing Chun structure due to the monsters that he had to face on a consistent basis. James Demile was 225 pounds, Ed Hart was 240 pounds, Leroy Garcia and Doug Palmer were 210 pounds each, and a teenage Patrick Strong was close to 200 pounds. When Bruce Lee visited Yip Man in 1970, he sparred with several of Yip Man's students.
Book: Bruce Lee The Incomparable Fighter
Page: 78
Bruce convinced the old sifu that the best way to illustrate his art was to spar with his students. When the old man consented, Bruce eagerly moved to the center of the room as the old man waved his hand, ordering his pupils to form a single line. Then he instructed the lead student to step out to face Bruce. "The guy was so baffled by my moves," Bruce said. "I kept moving in and out, letting go kicks and punches, never gave him a chance to recover his balance. I guess he got so frustrated because every blow I let go would have hit him if I didn't control it. JKD is too fast for Wing Chun. The next guy got just as frustrated," Bruce continued, "because I kept throwing fakes and he kept biting. Once he got suckered and almost fell on his face. I didn't even touch him."
"Who knows for sure. But I do think JKD as being taught today is one of the most practical modern systems that is definitely worth trying."
I agree.
"And this book "Jeet Kune Do: The Arsenal of Self-Expression" by Teri Tom has some really cool reviews by customers at amazon, it looks promising for something new."
Unfortunately, rave reviews at Amazon are a dime a dozen and there is nothing new about Teri Tom's new book. Tom continues to bash the Wing Chun aspects of JKD and the practice of JKD concepts. She is an arrogant little thing and she doesn't have the skins on the wall to define what JKD is or isn't. As I've stated in prior posts, her research into the Wing Chun aspects of JKD is slim and Slim left town. The facts are simply not on her side.


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FYI my book is "Wing Chun:unusual discoveries behind the common belief", but I really dropped the JKD part - for good or bad. Linda Lee in "Bruce Lee: only the man" wrote her husband saw the limitations after the fight with Wong Jack Man. There are also different views about the fight itself. In one interview Boztepe even stated Bruce realized he will never be number one in wing chun, so he took a different path. Who knows for sure. But I do think JKD as being taught today is one of the most practical modern systems that is definitely worth trying. And this book "Jeet Kune Do: The Arsenal of Self-Expression" by Teri Tom has some really cool reviews by customers at amazon, it looks promising for something new.
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