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hey Rooke, it's really just a guess, and impossible to know, but like is said earlier, it is fun to speculate...I disagree. Hawkins Cheung is a fantastic Wing Chun exponent. However, aside from Wu Style Tai Chi, he did not pursue other styles as aggressively as Bruce.
A closer example would be Dan Inosanto. So I would think that grappling may have been where Bruce had gone as he aged. After all, Helio was still rolling right up until his last days.
For standup? Harder to tell. Possibly the Southeast Asian arts as Dan did. Bruce definitely was starting to investigate them. But if you pick up the latest edition of Master's Magazine with Guro Dan on the cover, you get to see how Guro Inosanto moves now for standup, and that provides (I think) a closer clue.
Rooke
we'll never really know, but it is kinda fun speculating on the question. my opinion comes from my observations of Hawkins Cheung, who was very close to Bruce Lee from an early age. He's in his early 70's now, you have to think about that for a second...70's.
I do think that Bruce Lee would resort back to the wing chun structure, notice i said "structure". What is wing chun structure? this is an important question in understanding my reasoning.
wing chun IMO is for "defense", it's using your "structure" to be able to "survive" a vicious attack. but alot of people think that wing chun is for "offense", and this isn't true.
when you attack, you don't need the wing chun structure. and i think Bruce Lee when he was young and at his prime, realized this.
but when you're in your 70's, you can't rely on speed and muscle any more, your timing is going to be slow, your reactions slow, your eyes slow etc...this means you are forced to rely on the wing chun "structure" to be able to handle someones aggressive "pressure".
Hawkins Cheung has realized this and i've seen his teaching reflect that over the years..it's changed as he's changed, which is what art is supposed to do, right?
I think that Bruce Lee would have done the same thing, i'm not saying he would go back to studying traditional wing chun, but i am saying that he would be forced to rely on the wing chun "structure" more and more and on his athleticism less and less as he aged. he would have gone from "offense is the best defense" to "defense is the best offense".
Jin
Your concept of evolving, in my book is corrrect. I've said it many many times. Pro-fighters retire, get fat and quit training. Martial artists train for life.
hmm...i don't know if i agree with you, and please don't take offense to what i say, heck..i'm sure Bruce Lee is looking down at us right now and having a good chuckle over our debate over him.Interesting discussion. One thing I'd like to point out is, Sijo Bruce Lee didn't just rely on speed (though he was very fast), he also relied on timing, technique and sensitivity. Those attributes don't go out as much as speed as you age.
I would imagine he would have stayed offensive in his structure, and relied on good timing to gain apparent speed.
If he lived longer, I wouldn't be surprised if he studied more WC, as Sifu Dan Inosanto has, but who knows how much of it would have changed his personal fighting style.
Absolutely. Which is why my speculation tends towards someone who trained WITH Bruce and probably has more in common with Bruce's methods during his final evolutionary stages, than someone who trained at the beginning of Bruce's martial journey. Pure speculation.hey Rooke, it's really just a guess, and impossible to know, but like is said earlier, it is fun to speculate...
POSSIBLY. But again, did your training with Guro Dan indicate that he did so? I would think he would be the benchmark here. Not if he just went to study it (as he's done with many arts), but what elements he integrated into his standup. I didn't see that in the latest Master's Magazine showing his movements. It doesn't mean I'm right, or that he was showing something specific that isn't necessarily what he'd do under real fight conditions. But its my speculation.but i think you misunderstand what i'm saying, i'm not talking about what "style" he would have gravitated towards, i'm saying he would go back to the "structure" of what makes wing chun work.
With utmost respect for you and Sifu Cheung, I suspect you're talking about working in chi-sao or trapping range specifically. We're talking about fighting in general. Are you saying that you couldn't stay outside of range, do a couple high fakes, and take him down with a single-leg takedown, over to an armbar? We're comparing apples and oranges. Sifu Cheung may truly be a master at reading intentions, but the original assertion was Bruce Lee's fighting METHOD and chosen path...not his ability to read. Which, as you said, appears to be something he abandoned for a more aggressive approach. His "next step"may have found OTHER WAYS to counteract slower reflexes from aging, other than reading through WC. Such as BJJ. Or perhaps like Guro Dan has done.when i touch hands with Hawkins Cheung who is in his 70's, 110 lbs (wet), and barely 5 feet tall, i cannot lay a hand on him, it has nothing to do with teacher worship, it has to do with his structure is so damm good, i can't get past it, and when i try to "answer" it with my athleticism, it makes it worse for me and easier for him, because he "intercepts" my physical skills. i know this will be hard to imagine, but it's true, and the only way to convince several of you of the power of wing chun "structure" is to go to Hawkins Cheung's school in LA and touch hands with him.
on his athleticism less and less as he aged. he would have gone from "offense is the best defense" to "defense is the best offense".
Jin
Rooke, Good post. But I too say all of it. But saying all of it means narrowing it down, just maybe not down to 2 or 3 areas. Maybe several primary areas and several sub-primary areas.
Thats enought to round out anyone. Within those categories your specialty may be diferrant than your training partner. So your specialty would be his sub-primary.Hi James. You may have stated it better. A handful of primaries with some sub-primary areas. Once you "master" a primary, then maintenance takes alot less time, so sub-primaries can be examined in more detail. But "all of it" is still AWFULLY broad.
Let's keep the idea of a "martial" situation within reason (ie: we'll forgo the easy extreme like "Oh, I bet you can't fly an apache").
1) Kicking
2) Punching
3) Trapping
4) Clinch Fighting
5) Throwing
6) Grappling
7) Ground and Pound
10) Blade/s
Rooke
For the very reason you state "atheticism" is lessing over the years and at a advance age one can neither afford the time & strenght that is involved fighting someone with youth on their side...You would just have to "take them out"......This is another major difference from WC's way of thinking....
John McNabney