K-PoP: Bruce Lee Enters the Octagon

July 22, 2012

Bruce Lee statue in Victoria Harbour, Hong Kong, photo courtesy of Johnson Lau

Martial arts legend, international movie star, and pop icon
Bruce Lee passed away 39 years ago this past week (on July 20, 1973). After his only son Brandon died during a
movie shoot, people assumed that his lineage had ended. 

They were wrong.

The Dragon’s sons can
be seen all over TV and Pay-Per-View with the rising popularity of mixed
martial arts and the billion-dollar growth of the Ultimate Fighting
Championship, which is rapidly eclipsing boxing as the world’s preferred combat
sport. 

K-PoP caught up with two professional fighters to discuss
the “original mixed martial artist.” They were Vietnamese American Nam Phan, a UFC
featherweight from Orange County, CA, and Hawaiian middleweight Kendall Grove,
the season 3 winner of The Ultimate Fighter. 

What was Bruce Lee’s
influence on you growing up?

KG: As a kid, I always wanted to be him, to emulate
him. After watching “Game of Death,” I
even made makeshift nunchuks and ran around the house with them. I thought I
was him! (Laughs) Later on, I really got
into his philosophy on fighting, how adaptive it was. His art and style motivated me to fight
smarter, too.

UFC featherweight Nam Phan, photo courtesy of UFC.com

NP: Of course I was a
fan growing up. We used to do imitations
and then practice his moves on each other and get in trouble. As an Asian American, he was the only role
model we had. He inspired us and still does to this day, to be strong and not
back down.

How did Bruce
influence MMA?

NP: Are you kidding
me? Bruce was the first mixed martial artist! He was more important to MMA than even Royce Gracie (a pioneering former
champion who introduced ground fighting to the sport). Bruce was about using whatever works -- boxing,
judo -- and trying to improve as a human being and fighter. 

Hawaiian Middleweight Kendal Grove, photo courtesy of mixedmartialarts.com

KG: He was the
pioneer. He didn’t believe his style was the best and wanted to mix styles to
create a new, more effective style. But
back then, that was seen as a big no-no, to cross train. But now MMA fighters use every martial art. Look at (champions) Anderson Silva, Jon Jones, and Junior Dos Santos. In fact, if you look at the gloves Bruce wore in his first fight in “Enter the Dragon” (an epic collision between Bruce and Sammo Hung) they are pretty much just like the gloves we use in the
cage today and that movie is almost 40 years old. 

If Bruce fought in
the UFC as 135 lb. bantamweight, how would he do?

NP: With his mindset,
he’d do well. He already has the mind of
a mixed martial artist to go with a lot of talent and skill. 

The UFC Octagon, photo courtesy Josh Hedges/ © Ultimate Fighting Championship

KG: He would have
evolved because he was always learning. With his speed, power, and philosophy, I think he’d be dominant, a
champion or contender for sure.

If you had to get
into the Octagon with the master, what would happen?

KG: Because he’s so
fast, I wouldn’t try and stand with him. I’d try to take him down and ground and pound him.

NP: Oh, that’s
easy. He’d use his infamous one-inch
punch
and knock me to infinity, make my heart explode. I’m dead. The first fatality in the UFC! (Lots of laughs)

It’s good to see that kids still respect their elders
nowadays.

Next up:  Phan makes his national TV debut on August 4, fighting on
UFC on FOX.  Grove recently won a split
decision in the ShoFight promotion and expects to fight again this coming
September. 


K-PoP is short for Ky-Phong
on Pop Culture.
Ky-Phong Tran is an award-winning writer and teacher based
in southern California and he’ll be writing about music, art, literature, Los
Angeles, fatherhood, and other musings. 

 

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Contributor: 

Ky-Phong Tran

Columnist

Ky-Phong Tran is a public school, latch-key kid from North Long Beach, CA. He's written for the Nguoi Viet Daily News, New America Media, the Orange County Register, the San Francisco Chronicle, and of course, Hyphen, which published his short story "A Thing Called Exodus." In 2010, he was a Work-Study Fiction Scholar at the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. He holds an MA in Asian American Studies from UCLA and MFA in Creative Writing from UC Riverside. He's into pop culture, street art, music festivals, literature, clever people, and keen ideas.

Comments

Comments

R.I.P Bruce Lee. I watched Enter the Dragon the other day and you are still the man.