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Gene
LeBell
Gene
LeBell started young in the world of fighting. Genes mother, Aileen
Eaton, owned and operated the Olympic Auditorium. The Olympic was built in
1927 for the Olympic Games in 1932. It has housed some of the greatest
boxers and wrestlers of all time - Muhammad Ali, Jerry Quarry, Gorgeous
George, Jimmy Londos, John "The Golden Greek" Tolos, Sugar Ray Robinson,
Andre the Giant, Archie Moore, Sonny Liston, Joe Frazier, Henry Armstrong,
Gene Fullmer, Emile Griffith, Floyd Patterson, Lauro Salas, Ike Williams,
Mando Ramos, Danny Lopez, Carlos, Palomino, Jimmy Carter, Art Aragon,
Sugar Ramos, Carlos Ortiz, Willy Pep, Lou Thesz, and a thousand more - and
Gene was warming up the mat with them as early as age 6. One wrestler in
particular, Ed Strangler Lewis, started Gene off in the world of
grappling (not wrestling, wrestling has different rules). Ed explained
that with grappling you could do just about anything to your opponent. You
could hit the guy, do heel locks, ankle locks, arm bars, back locks, neck
locks, tweak the nose or choke him out.
Needless to say, when Gene entered his
first out of school judo tournament at the age of 14, the officials were
horrified to see Gene performing illegal grappling moves on his
opponents - tossing them into the air and jumping on them, dropping elbows
on them, and simply terrorizing his competitors. Unfortunately it was a
short day for Gene, the officials ended up disqualifying him from the
event stating that he used too much strength. "I don't count
disqualifications as losses. If you've never been disqualified, you've
never been afraid of your opponent."
Undaunted, Gene worked even harder to
improve his skills, training every day in martial arts and boxing, and
competing in tournaments on the weekends. Gene was gearing up for
something big.
At the age of 20, Gene LeBell had 14 years
of hardcore training from the best in the world, and he set his sights on
the National Judo Championship in 1954 at the Kesar Pavilion in San
Francisco. Gene tore through the ranks of competitors with everything he
had. After the smoke cleared, Gene LeBell was the last man standing - he
had won the National AAU Heavyweight Judo Championship and the USA Overall
Judo Championship back to back. Skeptics called it a fluke - they said
that Gene had more luck than talent, and wrote him off. Gene has often
said "the harder you work, the luckier you get." He came back and took the
national championships again in 1955, this time at the Olympic Auditorium
where he had trained during his youth.
After taking two consecutive Judo
Championships, Gene decided to try his hand at Pro Wrestling. "I had won
over 200 trophies, and if I cashed them all in, they wouldn't make a
single house payment." The highlight of his professional wrestling career
was in Amarillo Texas when he beat Pat O'Connor (from Australia) for the
world's heavyweight wrestling championship. Then, while flaunting the
championship belt, Gene accidentally hit the commissioner and split open
his head. Even though it was an accident, Gene was disqualified, and his
belt was taken away. "At least I was the champ for 12 seconds."
Unbelievably, lawsuits were actually filed against Gene, and he decided to
take a trip to Hawaii while the heat died down.
On Dec 2 1963, in Salt Lake City Utah,
Kenpo master Ed Parker told Gene about a boxer named Jim Beck - a man who
claimed that a professional boxer could easily best any martial artist.
Gene agreed to step into the ring and prove Jim wrong, but upon arrival
Gene realized that they had pulled a bait-and-switch; instead of Jim Beck
stepping into the ring, Gene was facing off with Milo Savage - the no 5
ranked light heavyweight boxer in the world. Unfazed, Gene held true to
his end of the bargain and took his place in the ring. Milo Savage was
wearing brass knuckles - not only that, Milo was greased from head to toe,
making it nearly impossible to keep a hold of him. After 4 hard fought
rounds, Gene choked out Savage. He stayed out for 20 minutes (for those
that would like to see it, this fight is available on VHS in the Products
<http://www.genelebell.com/tscart.htm> section).
During Gene's more than 25 years of
wrestling he did far more than wrestle. He was also doing stunt work for
movies and television, and still is today. In his ongoing career to date,
Gene has appeared in more than 1,000 movies and TV shows. Gene is
considered one of the greatest martial artists of all time, in addition to
being a teacher of champions. He has taught grappling to such greats as
Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Benny "the Jet" Urquidez, Gokor Chivichyan, Bob
Wall, Ed Parker Hayward Nishioka, and Bill "Superfoot" Wallace just to
name a few. Gene says "It wasn't a one-way street. I learned a lot from
each of these champions."
Some are surprised to discover that Gene
got his pioneer spirit from his mother Aileen Eaton, former owner of the
Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles for 38 years. She was one of the only
female boxing/wrestling promoter's in the history of those sports. Not
only did Muhammad Ali fight for her, but so did legends such as Sugar Ray
Robinson, Sonny Liston, Joe Frazier, Archie Moore, Henry Armstrong, Hene
Fullmer, Emile Griffith, Floyd Patterson, Lauro Salas, Ike Williams, Mando
Ramos, Danny Lopez, Carlos Palomino, Jimmy Carter, Art Aragon, Sugar Ray
Ramos, Carlos Ortiz, Willy Pep and so many more. One can easily see why
Gene LeBell would grow up to become the world class athlete, competitor
and teacher he is.
On February 26, 2005, the USJJF's Central
Technical Committee (CTC) through its National Program of USA
TRADITIONAL KODOKAN JUDO (USA-TKJ), officially announced the Recognition
of Life-Time of Achievements, Outstanding Leadership & Original
Contributions to Traditional Judo by Gene LeBell and his Promotion to
the Traditional Kodokan Judo Dan Grade of Kudan, 9th Degree Black Belt.
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