I found this article on Bruce Lee's encounter with Wong Jack Man interesting.
Who knows what really happened? But I see there's a entire book written about the event (and an upcoming movie?)
***
From the article, one of Wong Jack Man's students was Peter Ralston, whose book I bought years ago. Ralston has apparently transcended martial arts, but has a youtube channel.
*** [7/20/14]
OK, how about his fight with Lau Dai-Chuen?
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Jameis Winston wins Heisman
In an anticlimax of a ceremony Saturday night, Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston became the 79th winner of the Heisman Trophy.
In real terms, Winston claimed the most coveted individual award in sports nine days earlier. That’s when Florida State Attorney Willie Meggs announced that his office would not file charges against Winston after he was accused of a 2012 sexual assault. That decision removed the only major impediment between the quarterback and the Heisman.
Winston won the award in a landslide – receiving 668 first-place votes to end up with 2,205 points total – despite being left off 115 of the 900 ballots that were returned. It was the fifth-largest margin of victory in the modern history of the award. At 19 years old, he's also the youngest player to ever win the Heisman.
The only real drama Saturday night was seeing who would finish second in the balloting. That honor went to AJ McCarron of Alabama, who ended up with 704 points. He was followed by Northern Illinois quarterback Jordan Lynch (558), Boston College running back Andre Williams (470), 2012 Heisman winner Johnny Manziel of Texas A&M (421) and rounding out the ballot was Auburn running back Tre Mason (404).
In football terms, Winston was the easy choice. He leads the nation in pass efficiency, throwing for 3,820 yards with 38 touchdowns and 10 interceptions, and completing 67.9 percent of his passes. And his team in undefeated and ranked No. 1 in the nation, with every victory by two touchdowns or more.
Winston’s star began to rise immediately. In his first college game, on Labor Day night at Pittsburgh, the redshirt freshman completed 25 of 27 passes for 356 yards and four touchdowns. It ranks among the most impressive debut games in college football history.
His 252.2 passer rating for that game was his highest of the season, but Winston’s numbers never dipped very far. In 13 starts, he has yet to have what could be considered a bad outing. The Hueytown, Ala., product has never had a college game completing less than half his passes, has thrown a touchdown pass in every game, and only against Miami did he have a game with more interceptions (two) than TDs (one).
He becomes the third Florida State quarterback to win the Heisman, following Charlie Ward in 1993 and Chris Weinke in 1999. Both of those QBs went on to win the national championship a few weeks later.
In recent years, Heisman voters have been increasingly willing to disregard old-school voting doctrine. This is the second year in a row that the award has gone to a redshirt freshman in his first season of college football competition, with Manziel in that role last year.
One trend that is alive and well is voter fixation on quarterbacks. Winston is the fourth consecutive QB to win the Heisman, and the 12th in the last 13 years.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Anthony Carter: basketball coach
CEDAR
PARK, Texas » Former University of Hawaii star Anthony Carter might be a
perfect basketball coach based solely on the mentors in his life.
It's not
every day a well-traveled professional player suits up for the likes of
Pat Riley, George Karl and Gregg Popovich in one NBA lifetime.
Recently
hired as an assistant coach for the Austin Toros of the NBA Development
League, the 38-year-old plans to take advantage of his lineage.
Three NBA teams contacted Carter before the San Antonio Spurs, the owner
of the Toros, hired him. Once he decided to enter coaching, he
called Riley for advice.
"Pat
Riley instilled in me that hard work pays off, never take practice or a
game for granted because you never know when it's your last,"
Carter said. "And he taught me how to get in shape two months before
training camp. I did that my whole career and that's a big reason
why I stayed around for so long, because I had a great work ethic."
Carter
could have landed the head coaching job in Austin, but deferred because
of his lack of coaching experience. He's happy to be in one of the
NBA's model organizations. His playing background with the Miami Heat
and the San Antonio Spurs will come in handy in the coaching
realm. He plans to incorporate their coaching philosophies.
"Those
are the top two family organizations I think, first class," he said. "He
(Popovich) knows how to give guys rest and knows when to push
guys, how far to push guys. I've been doing that on our team."
After two
memorable seasons in Hawaii, Carter went undrafted, spending the
1998-99 campaign with Yakima of the now-defunct Continental
Basketball Association (CBA). The following year things got a lot better
for Carter after he landed in Miami, playing for Hall of Famer
Riley.
Carter
spent four seasons with the Heat, one in San Antonio, two in Minnesota,
five in Denver, one in New York and one in Toronto before calling
it a day. As much as Riley and Popovich hold sway over Carter's budding
coaching career, he also learned a lot under the guidance of Karl.
Karl
thought so much of Carter, he asked him to be an assistant coach in his
waning days with the Nuggets in 2011. Carter wasn't ready to hang
them up for good, but appreciated the thought.
"He is a
player's coach and this is a player's league," Carter said. "I took away
from him that you let the players play if they're playing the
game the right way. Another thing I took from him is if you're starting
practice at 10, he doesn't want you there at 10. He wants you
there 30 minutes early so you're already stretched (and ready to go)."
Spending
14 seasons in the NBA while also paying his dues in the CBA and abroad
gave him instant credibility with his current team.
"I tell
them all the time, I didn't know I was going to get called up to the
NBA," Carter conceded. "I never thought that I could make it to
the NBA until I did.
"That's
what I'm trying to instill into these guys, is to just go out and play
and play every possession like it's your last. I was undrafted. I
played in the CBA and made it to the NBA, so I know where they're all
coming from and all of them can relate to me."
Saturday, December 07, 2013
2013-2014 baseball deals
12/6/13 - Robinson Canoe leaves Yankees for Mariners for $240 million for 10 years
12/4/13 - Jacoby Ellsbury leaves Red Sox for Yankees for 7 years, $153 million
12/4/13 - Jacoby Ellsbury leaves Red Sox for Yankees for 7 years, $153 million
Friday, December 06, 2013
2013 College Football Coaching Changes
12/12/13 - Boise State hires Bryan Harsin as head coach
12/6/13 - Chris Peterson leaves Boise State for Washington
12/2/13 - Steve Sarkisian leaves Washington for USC
9/29/13 - Lane Kiffin fired by USC
12/6/13 - Chris Peterson leaves Boise State for Washington
12/2/13 - Steve Sarkisian leaves Washington for USC
9/29/13 - Lane Kiffin fired by USC
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