# Duel in the Den - Kids, White and Blue Belts

> Competition in Chula Vista, California, United States | July 06, 2024 – July 07, 2024

## Overview

**Event Type:** Competition

**Description:** RULES

White belts 5 minute rounds

Blue belts 6 minute rounds

Regulation rounds

• No points, no judges, submission only

Illegal Techniques

• Slamming

• No neck cranks (Anything that traps both shoulders and puts downward pressure on the

neck) For example a full nelson.

• No spiking your opponent on their head while attempting a takedown.

• Flying kani basami (scissor takedown) is not permitted.

• Heel hooks or twisting leg locks

• No eye gouging or fish hooking

• No grabbing the ears

• No hair pulling

• No holding of less than 4 fingers or less than 5 toes.

• No thumbing

• No scratching and pinching

• No kicking

• No biting

• No squeezing or putting pressure on the groin area

• No hands, knees or elbows on face

• No slippery substances allowed on body or clothing

• No striking of any kind

• No grabbing clothes

EBI Overtime (1 round)

If there is no submission after the regulation time limit, each competitor will have the chance to try to submit their opponent as fast as they can, while the other has a chance to escape. There will be a coin toss to determine which competitor will choose if they are starting on offense or defense.

How to win in overtime:

• Submit your opponent faster than he or she can submit you.

• If there is no submission by end of overtime, the competitor with the fastest combined escape time in that match will win.

One overtime round means that a competitor had a chance at both offense and defense. There are up to three overtime rounds maximum per match.

Example of one overtime round:

Top of the 1st round = Competitor A on offense, Competitor B on defense.

Bottom of the 1st round = Competitor B on offense, Competitor A on offense.

Each part of the overtime round is two minutes maximum.

Example: Bottom of the 1st round, Competitor B is on offense, Competitor A is on defense. Neither competitor submitted or escaped after 2 minutes, meaning the competitors stop and move on to the Top of the 2nd round.

The competitor on offense gets to choose if they want to start in back control or armbar. Offense options:

•**Back control**with a seatbelt grip (grip must be in the middle of the opponent’s chest). The defensive competitor may only secure his grips in a “pull up” fashion on the offensive competitor’s arms, but cannot sneak his or her hands inside the offensive competitor’s grips. Competitor on defense must sit up with perfect posture and may not lean forward or sideways until the referee officially starts the OT round.

•**Armbar**with one arm fully threaded in and holding the armbar, and the other hand on the mat. Competitors must be lined up perpendicularly with the competitor on defense flat on his back with his feet planted flat on the floor. The defensive competitor can only choose a figure four (aka “rear naked choke grip”) defense, or a gable grip (aka “palm to palm grip”). No other grips allowed at the start of spider web OT.

• Switching from back control or spider web to any other submission (including the truck position, but excluding any other leg lock positions) once the time starts is permitted, as long as the transition is directly into a fully locked submission. Example: switching from armbar to fully locked triangle means the round is still going.

If there is a submission in the top of the round, the competitor who was submitted needs to secure a submission faster than he or she was submitted.

Example: Top of the 1st round, Competitor A submits Competitor B in 30 seconds. This means that in the Bottom of the 1st round, Competitor B needs to submit Competitor A in less than 30 seconds otherwise Competitor B loses.

If there is a submission in the bottom of the round, the competitor who achieved the submission wins the match (since the other competitor was unable to submit their opponent in the top of the round).

An escape is when a competitor is fully free from the submission position as determined by the referee.

• If you are on defense and your opponent is controlling your arm across your body, you must first clear your elbow before it will be considered an escape.

• Switching from either position to mount means the offensive player no longer has a locked in submission, and is thus considered an escape.

• Submissions from defensive positions count as an escape, not a submission.

Always keep escaping, even if you think you’re clear, keep escaping until the referee calls time. If competitor on defense thinks he’s out and makes gestures to the referee to stop the action, that means the escape is NOT complete. Keep escaping keep moving until the referee is clear that an escape has been achieved.

**Status:** Scheduled

## Dates

**Start:** July 06, 2024
**End:** July 07, 2024
## Location

**Venue:** Chula Vista

**Location:** Chula Vista, California, United States


## Pricing

**Price:** $50
## Links

- Source: https://smoothcomp.com/en/event/12947
## Tags

Kids

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**Last Updated:** March 06, 2026

**Data Source:** BJJ.Space (https://bjj.space/events/duel-in-the-den-kids-white-and-blue-belts)
