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Bruce Lee Fought an Undefeated Japanese Wrestler Before He Became Famous — Beijing, 1957

Open invitation. Open registration. Bruce folded the newspaper and put it in his pocket. He turned his gaze to the produce vendor, paid and left. He stopped in the street. Something strange was happening inside him. It wasn’t anger this time. Something quieter. Something more dangerous. He asked himself. Why do I want to participate? It wasn’t hard to answer, but it was hard to be honest.

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It wasn’t because he thought he could beat Matsuda. Was it because he wanted to prove himself? Maybe. But deeper down, much deeper. There was something else. This fight would tell him something. Either that he was still nothing, just an ordinary, weak, out of place young man, or that the dark persistence inside him wasn’t in vain.

What if it was the first one he walked with that thought. He walked for a long time. The registration office was a small cubicle in one of the city’s old neighborhoods. When Bruce opened the door, the man inside kept reading the paperwork in his hand without looking up to register, said Bruce. The man looked up. He looked at Bruce from head to toe. Then back up.

He didn’t put down his pen with Matsuda? Yes. The man waited a moment. Then he asked slowly, how old are you? 16. A brief silence. Without saying a word, the man handed him the form. Bruce took the form, asked for a pen, and signed it. As he walked out the door. He heard the man muttering behind him. He couldn’t quite make out what he said, but he didn’t want to.

It was already too late. His name had been added to the list. Beijing 1957. A young man whom no one knew yet had stepped into a fight. No one expected against an opponent who seemed poised to crush him and inside him for the first time. A completely different feeling had replaced the anger. No fear. The fight was three days away.

Yes, exactly three days later, Bruce spent those three days barely sleeping at all. He didn’t train at least not in the usual sense. He didn’t punch the wall, repeat forms or do shadow boxing. He just sat, he thought. And sometimes he’d get up and walk for hours, wandering through the city, going nowhere. He hadn’t told yet, man.

It was a conscious decision. If his master found out, he’d try to stop him gently. But firmly. You’re not ready yet, he’d say. And maybe he’d be right. But Bruce had stopped measuring whether he was ready or not. There was no time to be ready. The list was closed. The name had been written. There was no turning back.

Or perhaps there was a way back. But Bruce didn’t want to see that path, actually. Yet man had only recently discovered Bruce Lee. He thought Bruce Lee was very raw, but he didn’t hide from those around him that there was a gem within him. On the second day, he got the chance to watch Matsuda. The council had announced that the Japanese wrestler would hold an open training session.

It was a small hall and spectators were allowed. Bruce arrived early, retreated to a corner and spoke to no one. When Matsuda entered, the hall fell silent. This wasn’t an exaggeration. It truly fell silent. The man wasn’t just big. He carried his size like a threat. He planted each step on the floor like a statement.

Even while warming up, there was an economy to his movements. Not a single unnecessary muscle twitch. This is what a man who had been winning for ten years looked like. Someone who had forgotten how to doubt himself. Bruce watched. Matsuda, took down his sparring partner, a man from his own team. Quite a large man.

Four times in two minutes. On the fourth time, the man didn’t reach out to get up. He just lay there staring at the ceiling. A few people in the crowd laughed, a few clapped. Bruce didn’t clap. A single question kept circling in his mind. How do you approach a man like this? The answer didn’t come. And its absence felt like something tightening in his stomach.

That night, the worst hours arrived. He lay in bed, staring at the ceiling. The sounds of the city drifted in from outside. A distant dog. Someone slamming a door. The wind. Ordinary sounds. The world carried on. Oblivious. And for the first time, Bruce truly thought maybe he’d made a mistake. This wasn’t courage. He thought to himself.

It was foolishness. Matsuda was a professional. He was a fighter, seasoned by years of experience, tested and hardened. And what was he? A kid who’d only half learned. Wing Chun hadn’t even mastered the forms yet, and didn’t even know what he was looking for in Beijing. He looked at his slender arms. He could see them even in the dark.

How thin they were. He stayed like that for a while. Then he closed his eyes. But sleep didn’t come. Instead, something else came, a feeling. Hard to put into words, but familiar. This feeling had come before, when someone on the street gave him a sidelong glance. When others in the training hall ignored him, when he looked at himself in the mirror and felt that what he saw wasn’t enough.

It wasn’t anger. It was what lay beneath anger. Shame. And for Bruce Lee, shame had never been a feeling that diminished him. It had always been a feeling that drove him to action. He opened his eyes. The morning of the fight was cold. The arena was a small indoor hall, old, with stone walls darkened by dampness, a low ceiling.

It had a capacity of 200, but there were over 300 people inside. Some were standing. Some were crammed together. The air was heavy with cigaret smoke and the smell of sweat. When Bruce entered the locker room, he was alone. He wrapped the bandage around his hands himself, slowly, carefully where his fingers trembling. They were.

But that didn’t surprise him. He’d been expecting it. The sound of the crowd came from outside. A loud, impatient, greedy sound. Crowds always made him feel this way when they came to a fight. As if they were waiting for something to shatter. The door opened. One of the council’s organizers entered an old, bespectacled man.

He looked at Bruce, hesitating as if he wanted to say something. You can still back out, he said finally. He’d said it. Not in Turkish, but in Cantonese, Bruce’s native language, as if to ensure the message got through. Bruce finished wrapping the final layer of the bandage. He clenched his fists, then opened them. No, he said.

The man said, nothing more. He closed the door when he stepped into the arena. The crowd’s noise changed instantly. First silence, then murmurs. Then he heard a few people laugh. Not loudly but clearly. People glancing sideways, whispering to one another. Was this the opponent Matsuda was facing? Bruce kept walking.

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