Sound good tonight.

I’ve been in a lot of rings, fought a lot of men, but this is the first time they handed me the bell and the microphone together.

Now, when I used to talk before a fight, folks said, “Aley, hush up.

” Tonight, they gave me a stage or suit and told me, “Keep talking.

” I’m confused, but I’m happy.

Please welcome the one and only Bruce Lee.

Good to have you, my man.

New York City, ABC Television Studios, February 18th, 1972.

Friday evening, 7:30 p.m.

The Dick Kavitt Show, live broadcast, coast to coast, millions watching.

And tonight the studio audience of 200 people knows they are about to witness something unprecedented.

Two men sitting on the famous talk show couch under bright studio lights.

Two legends from different worlds about to answer the question that everyone has been asking.

for years.

Who would win in a fight between the greatest boxer in the world and the greatest martial artist in the world, Muhammad Ali, age 30, the heavyweight champion of boxing, 6’3 in 210 lb, of sculpted muscle and lightning reflexes.

The man who floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee, who has beaten every challenger, who has defended his title against the strongest, the toughest, the most dangerous fighters on earth.

He sits on the left side of the couch wearing a sharp suit, blue shirt, perfectly tailored.

His presence commands the room.

Bruce Lee, age 32.

The martial arts phenomenon, 5’7 in, 140 lb, of lean muscle and explosive power.

The man who has revolutionized martial arts in America, who has shown the world a new way of fighting, who has created his own system.

Jeet Kune Do the way of the intercepting fist.

He sits on the right side of the couch wearing black pants, black shirt, simple but elegant.

His energy fills the space.

The host, Dick Kavitt, age 35, sitting behind his famous desk, knows he is about to ask the most anticipated question in combat sports history.

The studio audience leans forward.

The cameras are rolling.

Millions are watching.

At home, this is live television.

Anything can happen.

For months, the media has been speculating.

Sports Illustrated ran an article.

Alli versus Bruce Lee, who would win.

The debate has consumed sports bars, martial arts schools, boxing gyms across America.

Everyone has an opinion.

Boxing fans say Ali would destroy Bruce with one punch.

Martial arts fans say Bruce would be too fast, too technical for Ally to hit.

The debate has become cultural boxing, the western art, traditional, established, American versus kung fu, the eastern art, mysterious, exotic, foreign.

This is more than a hypothetical fight.

This is east versus west, old versus new, power versus speed, size versus skill.

Dick Cavitt clears his throat.

The studio falls silent.

He looks at both men and asks the question.

Gentlemen, the whole world wants to know, if you two ever fought, who would win? The audience erupts, cheering, whistling, clapping.

This is what they came for.

This is the moment everyone has been waiting for.

The question that has been burning in everyone’s mind.

Now, finally, both men are here together to answer it.

Ali looks at Bruce.

Bruce looks at Ally.

Both men smile slightly.

They know this question was coming.

They know there is no good answer.

If Ally says he would win, he looks arrogant.

If Bruce says he would win, he looks delusional.

If either refuses to answer, they look afraid.

But what happens next shocks everyone in the studio and millions watching at home.

Alli speaks first.

He turns to Dick Kavitt then turns to the audience and says loudly clearly for everyone to hear.

Bruce would whoop me.

The studio goes silent, confused.

Did Ally, the greatest boxer in the world, just say a 140 lb man would beat him? Ally continues, “Look, I’m a boxer.

I punch.

I move.

That’s what I do.

I’m the best in the world at that.

” But Bruce, he points at Bruce.

He knows things.

I don’t know.

He kicks.

He uses elbows, knees, fingers, pressure points, all kinds of stuff that ain’t in boxing.

If we fought under boxing rules, I’d win easy.

But if we fought his way, no rules, street fight, he’d whoop me.

He too fast, too smart, I couldn’t catch him.

The audience murmurs.

This is not what they expected.

Ally is known for bragging, for declaring, “I am the greatest for predicting knockouts, for trashtalking every opponent.

” But here on live television, he is praising an opponent.

He has never even fought.

Dick Kavitt turns to Bruce.

Bruce, what do you think? Do you agree with Ally? The audience leans forward, waiting for Bruce’s response.

Bruce pauses.

He looks at Ally with genuine respect.

Then he speaks quietly, but his voice carries through the studio.

Ali is too humble.

He would destroy me in a fight.

The audience gasps now.

Both men are saying the other would win.

Bruce continues.

Ali is the heavyweight champion of the world.

He weighs 70 lb more than me.

He is 8 in taller.

His reach is enormous.

and he has the fastest hands I have ever seen in boxing.

One punch from Ali would put me in the hospital.

I respect martial arts, but I also respect reality.

Size, weight, power, these things matter.

I am fast.

I am technical.

But Ally is a giant compared to me.

And he is the most skilled giant in the world.

Dick Cavitt looks confused.

He expected a debate, an argument, perhaps even tension.

Instead, he is watching two champions praise each other, refuse to claim superiority.

This is not what anyone expected.

The audience doesn’t know how to react.

Some are applauding the mutual respect.

Some are disappointed.

They wanted a rivalry.

A confrontation.

Boxing versus kung fu.

East versus west.

Instead, they are watching two men who clearly respect each other too much to play that game.

But Dick Cavitt is a good host.

He pushes further.

But hypothetically, if you had to fight, no rules, who would win? The audience applauds the question.

Yes.

Make them answer definitively.

Alli and Bruce look at each other.

Something passes between them.

An understanding, a recognition.

They are both being pushed into a game.

They don’t want to play, but they are on live television in front of millions.

They have to give an answer.

Ali speaks first.

Okay, here’s the truth.

In a boxing ring with boxing rules, I win easy.

Bruce admits that he’s smart.

He knows boxing is my world.

But on the street, no rules, no ring.

Anything goes.

Bruce probably wins because he knows how to fight that way.

I don’t I’ve been training for boxing my whole life.

Punches, defense, movement.

That’s it.

But Bruce, he trains for everything.

Elbows, kicks, throws, joint locks, eye strikes, all that dirty fighting stuff.

That’s real fighting and he the master of that.

The audience is riveting Ali the man who never backs down from anyone is acknowledging that in a real fight.

Bruce might beat him.

This is humble Ali aside the public rarely sees.

Bruce responds, “Elie is giving me too much credit.

Yes, I train in many techniques, but technique only goes so far against size and power.

Ellie has been hit by George Foreman, by Joe Frasier, by Sunny Lon, the hardest punchers in boxing history.

And he survived.

He took their best shots and kept fighting.

I have never been hit by someone that powerful.

I don’t know if I could take even one of Ali’s punches.

He hits me clean one time.

I’m finished.

He’s too strong.

Dick Cavet tries again.

So neither of you will say definitively who would win.

Both men shake their heads.

No.

Ally says because we respect each other too much to play that game.

People want us to fight, want us to compete, want to see east versus west, boxing versus kung fu.

But that’s not what this is.

This is two martial artists from different traditions respecting each other’s path.

Bruce adds in my system.

Jeet Kuneo, I teach that martial arts is not about who is the best.

It’s about self-expression, self-nowledge, using what works, discarding what doesn’t.

Ali does that in boxing.

He created his own style.

Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.

No one fought like Ali before Ali.

He revolutionized boxing the same way.

I’m trying to revolutionize martial arts.

We are doing the same thing in different arenas.

Ali nods.

That’s right.

Bruce gets it.

People think boxing and kung fu are so different.

But at the highest level, it’s all the same.

It’s about speed, timing, strategy, reading.

your opponent adapting.

Bruce does that.

I do that.

We both trying to be the best version of ourselves.

Not better than each other.

Better than we were yesterday.

The studio audience is silent now.

Not from confusion, but from understanding.

They came for a fight, for conflict, for rivalry.

Instead, they are witnessing something more profound.

Two masters from different worlds, recognizing each other as equals, refusing to diminish, the other to elevate themselves.

Dick Kavitt realizes he is watching something historic.

This is not just a talk show segment.

This is a moment of mutual respect between two of the greatest combat athletes in the world.

He decides to let it play out.

So Dick says, “If I understand correctly, you both believe the other would win in a fight.

” Ally and Bruce.

Both nod.

Yes.

Ally says, “In his element, Bruce wins.

In my element, I win.

But we both smart enough to know our elements are different and we both respect what the other can do.

Bruce adds, “And more importantly, we both know that a real fight between us would prove nothing.

If I won, people would say Alli wasn’t prepared for martial arts techniques.

If Alli won, people would say size and power beat skill.

Either way, the debate continues.

The only way to truly settle it is for both of us to train in each other’s arts for years until we both know both systems.

Then maybe we could have a fair test, but that will never happen.

We both have our own paths.

The conversation shifts for the next 20 minutes.

Alli and Bruce talk about training, philosophy, the mental aspects of combat, the importance of confidence, of strategy, of adapting to your opponent.

The audience watches fascinated.

These are not just fighters.

These are philosophers, thinkers, masters of their crafts.

At one point, Ali asks Bruce to demonstrate a technique.

Bruce stands up, asks Ally to throw a punch.

Ally throws a slow jab.

Bruce demonstrates how he would intercept it, redirect it, counter simultaneously.

The audience applauds.

Ally tries it himself, laughing.

Man, that’s hard.

My brain don’t work that fast.

Bruce then asks Ally to show his footwork.

Ally stands, demonstrates the famous Alli shuffle, the speed, the rhythm.

Bruce tries it, can’t quite get it.

You make it look easy, Bruce says.

But that timing is incredible.

Years of training in your muscles.

Ally grins.

That’s right.

Just like your kung fu is in your muscles.

The segment ends with both men standing shaking hands for the cameras.

The audience gives them a standing ovation.

Not for a fight.

Not for a rivalry, but for mutual respect for class, for showing that two of the greatest fighters in the world can acknowledge each other’s greatness without diminishing their own.

In the years that follow, this interview will be referenced countless times.

Sports historians will analyze it.

Martial artists will study it.

Boxing fans will debate it.

Some will say Alli was being too humble.

Some will say Bruce was being unrealistic.

But those who were there that night in the studio or watching at home knew they witnessed something rare.

Two legends at the peak of their powers refusing to play the game that everyone wanted them to play.

Refusing to claim superiority over each other.

Instead showing that true mastery includes humility includes respect for other masters one year and 5 months after this interview.

Bruce Lee will die July 20th 1973 age 32.

Too young too soon.

Ali will speak at Bruce’s memorial.

He will say, “Bruce was a true fighter, not just in body, but in spirit.

He respected everyone.

He feared no one.

He was my friend and he will mean