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According to bjjheroes, Camarillo became head AKA grappling coach in 2003, well before Cung made his MMA debut in 2006.
https://www.bjjheroes.com/bjj-fighters/dave-camarillo
It's possible Shields or Shamrock were gaslighting Le while training there. I'm sure those guys and others were clowning him in the grappling department and he probably was less than confident there. But I suspect Le's MMA style was more heavily influenced by the following:
1) He was old. Le debuted in Strikeforce at 34 and the UFC at 39. We've seen other wrestlers change up their styles and shy away from TDs in mid-30's due to injuries and slowing down with age. Guys like Sherk and Hendo come to mind. High amplitude freestyle/Judo style throws like Le was doing are brutal on your knees and back over time.
2) The Andy Wang effect. TUF brought in more casuals but increased the need to "be exciting." A guy like Le probably realized he'd never be Charles Oliveira on the ground and figured he'd be more popular and make more money if he fought like Anderson Silva rather than Jon Fitch.
I guess I think at the very least they might have planted some seeds in his head regarding his ground-game.
You make good points though. Earlier you talked about whether or not his takedown game would have been as effective in MMA and that's an interesting question. I wonder if he would have a special level of timing and transitional ability with his strikes and takedowns that others than may have been better pure wrestlers lacked though. I guess we will never know the answer at this point. It's just one of those things I always wanted to find out. Like you say, and like @EndlessCritic noted, he wasn't a spring chicken when he entered MMA and you can't ignore that.
Like many, though, I just had been speculating for years and years what would happen if Cung Le took his striking and takedown wizardry into the MMA world and I can't help but be disappointed that we didn't see him trying to implement the full array of other-worldly striking combined with the flying scissors, suplexes and throws.
I also have to wonder if his desire to do movies didn't add to his distractions from the MMA game. Wasn't he doing a movie, for example, before his Rich Franklin fight? I seem to recall him dividing his time in a way that went way beyond what fighters would normally do.