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MMA Origins: American Experiments

Antonio Inoki scoring a leg kick on Muhammad Ali

Antonio Inoki scoring a leg kick on Muhammad Ali

A short aside from the developing lines of Mixed Martial Arts evolving out of the lines of Japanese Judo and the European Catch Wrestling. The United States of the early 1900s was a young nation coming of age, and it had a love for all things sport. At the time the term of "the big three sports" would have referred to baseball, horse racing and boxing.

The sport of boxing was about 50 years from being sperated from other combat arts with the Marquess of Queensberry Rules which were introduced in 1866. These rules removed all wrestling from matches, instituted the three minute round and made gloves mandatory. While not immediately enforced in every boxing match, these rules slowly filtered through the world of pugilism and created the sport of boxing as we know it today. Catch and Amateur Wrestling were also popular in the United States and these arts combined with boxing and fencing made up the vast majority of martial arts in America.

That all changed with the ending of the Second World War. A whole generation of American young men traveled to Europe and Asia and had their eyes opened to the greater world of martial arts. Those stationed in the Pacific islands after the war ended had plenty of free time when not on peace keeping duties, and many U.S. troops filled that time by going to local martial arts academies. Karate and Judo were the most popular choices.

When these soldiers came home, some of them brought the arts home with them. They opened schools or found schools already established and began training students in the United States. At this point, boxing and amature wrestling were firmly established as the combat sports in the United States, but Judo and Karate became extremely popular alternatives. As they grew, the establishment began to resent the new competition. Arguments would rage about judo vs boxing or karate vs boxing.

In 1963, a man named Jim Beck issued an open challenge in Rouge Magazine for any judoka to take on a boxer. In his article titled "The Judo Bums" Beck clearly confuses Karate with Judo, but claims that any boxer could beat any Judo man. The proposed match would have a $1000 cash prize for the winner and that cash prize drew the attention of Gene LeBell, a U.S. Judo champion who also had international success. LeBell contacted Beck and the match was set for December of 1963 in Salt Lake City.

When Gene arrived he was surprised to find it was not Beck he would be fighting, but rather former Top 5 Light Heavyweight Boxer Milo Savage. The rules were set that both men would wear gi tops, and Gene was forbidden from using kicks or karate chops and the fight would have an unlimited number of rounds and only stop with a finish. Milo would wear fingerless leather gloves and is accused of both wearing brass knuckles under his gloves and greasing. Gene suspects that Milo learned some Judo for the match as he was able to stop some takedowns, but in the 4th round, Gene threw Milo to the mat, took the boxer's back and applied a choke.

Milo passed out and Gene Lebell became the winner of the first sanctioned Mixed Martial Arts fight in the United States.

Here is a fantastic video made about Lebell and the match by the FightNerd, the whole thing is amazing but skip to 2:35 if you just want to hear about the match:

After the jump, Muhammad Ali's foray into MMA...

Star-divide

Despite its historic place now, at the time the Lebell vs Savage match was barely a blip on the U.S. sporting map. Both the martial arts and boxing would go on to continue to grow in popularity as both would welcome their biggest starts to the American stage. For the martial arts, the mid-1960s witnessed the rise of Bruce Lee in the U.S. conciseness. His movies caused an explosion in interest in Asian martial arts. Meanwhile the iconic sporting star of Muhammed Ali would launch boxing to the top of the global sporting world.

In 1976, Ali was a year removed from his epic third match with Joe Frazier and had dispatched three challengers rather easily. He was looking for something to make headlines with and when Japanese professional Antonio Inoki reached out to him for an exhibition match, Ali agreed.

The agreed upon match was originally a "work", meaning that outcome would be predetermined. Inoki was a student of the transformative catch wrestler Karl Gotch, and was a skilled grappler. Inoki was know for liking "shooting" or having live matches and when Ali saw Inoki grapple live he became concerned that Inoki would go off script. Many think this was Inoki's intention and Ali requested several rules of the match be changed two weeks before the match.

The new rules removed all grappling from the match and limited the strikes Inoki could throw, most importantly leg kicks could only be thrown if Inoki had one knee on the mat. The referee would be the only man really qualified to over see a boxer vs grappler match, none other than Gene Lebell.

The result of these new rules was Inoki staying outside of Ali's range and diving forward with leg kicks on Ali and then laying on his back while Ali offered to help him up. In short, it was MMA's first real clunker of a fight.

While the fight took place in Japan, it did draw interest in the United States because of Ali's star power. It was declared a draw but Ali suffered major damage to his legs and passed on the press conference to be taken directly to the hospital. It is claimed that this fight had a serious impact on Ali's mobility for the rest of his career and Ali never recorded another knock out win after this match as his decline started very suddenly.

These early forays into MMA did show an U.S. interest in this idea of match style against style, but it wouldn't be until the 1990s that another serious experiment in MMA would take place for American audiences.

More Reading on Early U.S. MMA

Happy Belated Birthday Gene LeBell

Gene Lebell Official Stories

The Joke That Almost Ended Ali's Career

MMA Origins:

Exploring Fight Sport's Ancient Roots

Getting Medieval

Vale Tudo and the Original MMA Rivalry

Carlson Gracie Changes Jiu-Jitsu and Vale Tudo

Catch Wrestling Travels To Japan

8 recs  |  15 comments

Comments

3:11 - 3:20 in the Inoki v Ali video had me laughing pretty hard

Great write up, nice vids.

Rec'd. Great read
Fun stuff

but a quick note about Milo Savage: he was a career mw (160 lbs), 39-years-old, and basically retired when he fought Lebell. Gene exaggerates a lot about this match.

Also, I’ve read that Ali was the one who turned it into a shoot after getting a bunch of crap from the boxing community about embarrassing the sport. His camp also forced the rule changes which ironically ended up screwing up his legs. Who knows for sure how it came about?

Also it’s interesting to note that Inoki was living in Brazil when the Heroes of the Ring (Vale Tudo with boxing vs BJJ vs wrestling vs capoeira vs luta livre) was on TV . So it’s possible that his inspiration for his mixed fights was part Rikidozun and part vale tudo.

interesting

the FightNerd also goes along with the Light Heavyweight, but a quick look at Boxing Reference confirms he was a middleweight.

arum thought it was going to be a show not a real match as he had already signed the norton fight for yankee stadium later in the year.he asked for the rules when he realised ali could be injured and harm the norton fight

According to Snowden, Meltzer, and others, originally it was to be a “worked” match, with Ali beating up Inoki who would win at the last second with a “Pearl Harbor” sneak attack. But Ali heard so much shit from the boxing society that he tried dropping out and then agreed only if it was a real match. Of course they came up with a ton of rules to protect him and the Japanese were forced to go along with it because they’d already put a ton of money into it. That’s how we ended up with this farce.

And another interesting fact about Lebell that’s often ignored, a few weeks after he reffed the Ali-Inoki match he returned to LA and assisted in a murder. No one ever touches on that part of his life.

nice

love these old vids

It is claimed that this fight had a serious impact on Ali's mobility for the rest of his career

So it’s possible that MMA ruined Ali?!?

Crazy.

Great article! Love any type of MMA origins/MMA history piece.

i saw a source that he had serious damage

and had blood clots in his legs, but I couldn’t confirm with a more reliable source.

not really he was already on the slide as his lackluster win against jimmy young showed he still go had quality wins against guys like shavers,norton and spinks but he didn’t look great.the inkoi fight didn’t ruin him but it didn’t help him.he really should have retired after manila fraizer ruined his hips.

Does Ali still do interviews?

Because someone needs to get on that and ask about this event before it’s to late, Inoki as well.

Well, that Ali fight was disturbing. And what type of choke was that in the first video? It didn’t look like a RNC…

not sure, there isn't a good angle of it

put it looks like a gi collar choke

phenomenal read!

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