Minn. R. agency 223, ch. 2202, pt. 2202.0800 - JUDGING
A. All contests will be evaluated and scored
by three judges.
B. The 10-Point
Must Scoring System will be the standard system of scoring a contest. Under the
10-Point Must Scoring System, ten points must be awarded to the winner of the
round and nine points or less must be awarded to the loser, except for a rare
even round, which is scored (10-10).
C. Judges shall evaluate mixed martial arts
techniques, such as effective striking and grappling, effective aggressiveness
, and effective control of the fighting area.
D. Evaluations shall be made in the order in
which the techniques appear in item C, giving the most weight in scoring to
effective striking and grappling, and decreasing weight to effective
aggressiveness, and effective control of the fighting area, in the order
listed.
E. Effective striking is
judged by determining the total number of legal heavy strikes landed by a
combatant.
F. Effective grappling
is judged by considering the number of successful executions of legal take
downs and reversals. Examples of factors to consider are take downs from
standing position to mount position, passing the guard to mount position, and
bottom position fighters using an active, threatening guard.
G. Fighting area control is judged by
determining who is dictating the pace, location, and position of the contest.
Examples of factors to consider are countering a grappler's attempt at take
down by remaining standing and legally striking; taking down an opponent to
force a ground fight; creating threatening submission attempts, passing the
guard to achieve mount, and creating striking opportunities.
H. Effective aggressiveness means moving
forward and landing a legal strike.
I. The following objective scoring criteria
shall be utilized by the judges when scoring a round:
(1) a round is to be scored as a 10-10 round
when both combatants appear to be fighting evenly and neither combatant shows
clear dominance in a round;
(2) a
round is to be scored as a 10-9 round when a combatant wins by a close margin,
landing the greater number of effective legal strikes, grappling, and other
maneuvers;
(3) a round is to be
scored as a 10-8 round when a combatant overwhelmingly dominates by striking or
grappling in a round so effectively that the opposing combatant is only able to
provide a minimal amount of defense; and
(4) a round is to be scored as a 10-7 round
when a combatant totally dominates by striking or grappling in a round so
effectively that the opposing combatant is completely unable to execute
successful defensive maneuvers.
Notes
Statutory Authority: MS s 341.25
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