Posted in

How Bruce Lee Studied Muhammad Ali’s Fighting Style and What He Discovered

Harold Morgan told me what happened next. Ali stood there for. Maybe 10s just looking at us. He didn’t smile. He didn’t speak. He just looked at us. And I thought to myself, I’ve watched this man fight for 15 years, and I’ve never seen that look on his face. He wasn’t playing. He wasn’t putting on a show. He looked like a man who wanted to do something he wasn’t quite sure about.

"
"

Then Ali spoke, and when he spoke, his voice sounded different. Quieter. No theatrics, no rhymes. Just words. Gentlemen, thank you for coming. What happens in this building tonight stays in this building. You were invited because you are respected men. Men of combat, men who understand fighting. I don’t need to explain to you what this is about.

You already know. A man has claimed that his art is superior to boxing. I have agreed to let him prove it or fail. Ali paused. He looked to the other side of the auditorium, to a door that was still closed. Bring him in. 14 seconds passed. Harold Morgan counted them. He told me he counted because the silence was unbearable.

And counting was the only thing that kept him from holding his breath until he passed out. 14 seconds of absolute silence. 47 people staring at a closed door. Muhammad Ali stood in the center of the ring, his bandaged hands hanging at his sides. The ceiling lights hummed. The concrete walls held the silence like a tomb.

Then the door opened. No sound, no squeaking of hinges. It simply opened as if pushed by something lighter than a hand. And through that door stepped a man who made half the people in that hall doubt what they thought they knew about the human body. Priestley was small, not just smaller than Ali, small in a way that seemed inappropriate for what was about to happen.

Five feet, seven inches, 62kg. He will. Plain black cotton trousers and a white sleeveless undershirt. No shoes. His feet stood bare on the cold concrete floor. His arms were uncovered, and in the distant glow of the ring lights, you could see every single muscle fiber in his forearms, his shoulders, his neck. Not the mass of a bodybuilder.

Something else entirely. His body looked like a weapon that had been stripped of all unnecessary parts. There was no softness anywhere. No excess. Only function. Pure terrifying function. He walked towards the ring without haste, without slowing down, without looking at anyone in the seats. His gaze was fixed on the ring, on Ali, on nothing else.

Harold Morgan described it this way. I’ve been around fighters all my life. Heavyweights, killers. Men who could send you to hospital with a single punch. But I had never felt what I felt when I saw Bruce Lee walking across the floor. It wasn’t necessarily fear. It was more like a kind of recognition. The same feeling you get when you see a predator in the wild for the first time, not at the zoo.

Not on television, in the wild, where it’s real. Where there’s no glass between you and it. Another witness, a martial arts instructor from San Francisco named David Chin, told me something similar. Bruce didn’t walk like a fighter. Fighters have tension in their bodies. They carry their power visibly with them. Bruce moved like water, flowing downhill.

Completely natural, completely effortless and completely unstoppable. Bruce reached the ring. He placed one hand on the top rope and jumped over it in a single motion. He didn’t climb through the ropes like boxers do. He jumped over them. The movement was so fast and fluid that two of the witnesses I interviewed independently described it with the same word superhuman.

He landed softly in the center of the ring. Two meters away from Ali, and for the first time that evening, the two men faced each other. The difference in size was breathtaking. Ali towered over Bruce. His shoulders were almost twice as broad. His fists, even wrapped in simple hand bandages, were huge compared to Bruce’s bare hands.

Standing next to Ali, Bruce looked like a teenager who had wandered into the wrong building. Like a mistake. Like someone who was about to learn a very painful lesson about the difference between film and reality. At least that’s what most of the boxing experts in the audience thought. Harold Morgan admitted to me openly.

I felt sorry for him. Really sorry. I thought Ali was going to hurt this man. I thought we were going to see something ugly. I almost got up and left. But Harold didn’t leave. And what he saw next made him glad he stayed. It made him happy for the rest of his life. Ali looked down at Bruce and Ali smiled. But it wasn’t his famous smile, not the broad theatrical grin he gave the cameras.

It was a small smile, a private one. The kind of smile a man shows when he’s really curious about something. You’re smaller than I expected, Ali said. Bruce didn’t answer. He stood completely still. Arms at his sides, bare feet shoulder width apart on the floor. His breathing slow and steady, his gaze fixed on Ali’s chest.

Not his face. Not at his eyes. At his chest. Ali noticed. You’re not even looking me in the face, little brother. What are you looking at? Silence. Ali leaned a little closer to him. I asked you a question. Bruce spoke for the first time. His voice was calm, quiet, almost gentle. But every single person in that auditorium heard every word.

I’m looking at where I’m going to hit you. The auditorium fell silent. Harold Morgan told me that his cigaret had burned down to his fingers, and he hadn’t even noticed. Ali stared at Bruce. The little smile disappeared. Something changed in the champions eyes. Not fear. Muhammad Ali knew no fear, but something very close to it.

Something he may never have felt before in a fighting context. Uncertainty. Ali took a step back. He rolled his neck. He hopped twice on his toes. The showman returned and built a wall of confidence around that tiny crack of doubt. All right, Ali said, now louder, so the audience could hear him. All right, the little man says he knows where he’s going to hit me.

Well, let him try. Ali turned to a man standing at the edge of the ring. Angelo Dundee, his trainer, his manager, the man who had accompanied him through every important fight of his career. Angelo, tell them the rules. Angelo Dundee stepped forward. He was a compact man in his 50s, with sharp eyes and a voice that commanded authority without ever raising his voice.

He had seen everything the world of boxing had to offer. He had trained champions. He had seen men nearly die in the ring. But even he looked uneasy tonight. Gentlemen, Dundee said, addressing both fighters. The conditions are as follows. This is a controlled fight. Muhammad will stand with his guard down. His hands will remain at his sides.

Read More