Overview

The New Jersey State Athletic Control Board’s Mixed Martial Arts Uniform Rules were adopted by Ontario under Regulation 52 of the Athletics Control Act. These rules were published and adopted by that Board on February 18, 2003.

Rules

13:46-24A.1 Weight classes of mixed martial artists

  1. Mixed martial artists are divided into:
    1. Flyweight: under 125.9 pounds
    2. Bantamweight: 126 pounds to 134.9 pounds
    3. Featherweight: 135 pounds to 144.9 pounds
    4. Lightweight: 145 pounds to 154.9 pounds
    5. Welterweight: 155 pounds to 169.9 pounds
    6. Middleweight: 170 pounds to 184.9 pounds
    7. Light heavyweight: 185 pounds to 204.9 pounds
    8. Heavyweight: 204 pounds to 264.9 pounds, and
    9. Super heavyweight: over 265 pounds

13:46-24A.2 Fighting area

  1. the fighting area canvas shall be no smaller than 18 feet by 18 feet and no larger than 32 feet by 32 feet
  2. the fighting area canvas shall be padded in a manner as approved by the Commissioner, with at least one inch layer of foam padding. Padding shall extend beyond the fighting area and over the edge of the platform
  3. no vinyl or other plastic rubberized covering shall be permitted
  4. the fighting area canvas shall not be more than 4 feet above the floor of the building and shall have suitable steps or ramp for use by the participants
  5. posts shall be made of metal not more than 6 inches in diameter, extending from the floor of the building to a minimum height of 58 inches above the fighting area canvas and shall be properly padded in a manner approved by the Commissioner
  6. the fighting area canvas area shall be enclosed by a fence made of such material as will not allow a fighter to fall out or break through it onto the floor or spectators, including, but not limited to, vinyl coated chain link fencing
  7. all metal parts shall be covered and padded in a manner approved by the Commissioner and shall not be abrasive to the contestants
  8. the fence shall provide 2 separate entries onto the fighting area canvas

13:46-24A.3 Stools

  1. a ring stool of a type approved by the Commissioner shall be available for each contestant
  2. an appropriate number of stools or chairs, of a type approved by the Commissioner, shall be available for each contestant‘s seconds. Such stools or chairs shall be located near each contestant‘s corner
  3. all stools and chairs used must be thoroughly cleaned or replaced after the conclusion of each bout

13:46-24A.4 Equipment

For each bout, the promoter shall provide a clean water bucket and a clean plastic water bottle in each corner.

13:46-24A.5 Specifications for bandages on mixed martial artist’s hands

  1. in all weight classes, the bandages on each contestant‘s hand shall be restricted to soft gauze cloth not more than 13 yards in length and 2 inches in width, held in place by not more than 10 feet of surgeon‘s tape, one inch in width, for each hand
  2. surgeon‘s adhesive tape shall be placed directly on each hand for protection near the wrist
  3. the tape may cross the back of the hand twice and extend to cover and protect the knuckles when the hand is clenched to make a fist
  4. the bandages shall be evenly distributed across the hand
  5. bandages and tape shall be placed on the contestant‘s hands in the dressing room in the presence of the inspector and in the presence of the manager or chief second of his or her opponent
  6. under no circumstances are gloves to be placed on the hands of a contestant until the approval of the inspector is received

13:46-24A.6 Mouth pieces

  1. all contestants are required to wear a mouthpiece during competition
  2. the mouthpiece shall be subject to examination and approval by the attending physician
  3. the round cannot begin without the mouthpiece in place
  4. if the mouthpiece is involuntarily dislodged during competition, the referee shall call time, clean the mouthpiece, and reinsert the mouthpiece at the first opportune moment, without interfering with the immediate action

13:46-24A.7 Protective equipment

  1. male mixed martial artists shall wear a groin protector of their own selection, of a type approved by the Commissioner
  2. female mixed martial artists are prohibited from wearing groin protectors
  3. female mixed martial artists shall wear a chest protector during competition; the chest protector shall be subject to approval of the Commissioner

13:46-24A.8 Gloves

  1. the gloves shall be new for all main events and in good condition or they must be replaced
  2. all contestants shall wear either 4, 5 or 6 ounce gloves, supplied by the promoter and approved by the Commission
  3. no contestant shall supply their own gloves for participation

13:46-24A.9 Apparel

  1. each contestant shall wear mixed martial arts shorts, biking shorts, or kickboxing shorts
  2. gi’s or shirts are prohibited during competition
  3. shoes are prohibited during competition

13:46-24A.10 Appearance

  1. all contestants shall be cleanly shaven immediately prior to competition, except that a contestant may wear a closely cropped mustache
  2. hair shall be trimmed or tied back in such a manner as not to interfere with the vision of either contestant or cover any part of a contestant‘s face
  3. jewelry or piercing accessories are prohibited during competition

13:46-24A.11 Round length

  1. each non-championship mixed martial arts contest shall be 3 rounds, of 5 minutes duration, with a one-minute rest period between each round
  2. each championship mixed martial arts contest shall be 5 rounds, of 5 minutes duration, with a one-minute rest period between each round

13:46-24A.12 Stopping a contest

The referee and ringside physician are the sole arbiters of a bout and are the only individuals authorized to enter the fighting area at any time during competition and authorized to stop a contest.

13:46-24A.13 Judging

  1. all bouts will be evaluated and scored by 3 judges
  2. the 10-Point Must Scoring System will be the standard system of scoring a bout
  3. under the 10-Point Must Scoring System, 10 points must be awarded to the winner of the round and 9 points or less must be awarded to the loser, except for a rare even round, which is scored (10-10)
  4. judges shall evaluate mixed martial arts techniques, such as effective striking, effective grappling, control of the fighting area, effective aggressiveness and defense
  5. evaluation shall be made in the order in which the techniques appear in above, giving the most weight in scoring to effective striking, effecting grappling, control of the fighting area and effective aggressiveness and defense
  6. effective striking is judged by determining the total number of legal heavy strikes landed by a contestant
  7. effective grappling is judged by considering the amount of successful executions of a legal takedown 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
  8. fighting area control is judged by determining who is dictating the pace, location and position of the bout. Examples of factors to consider are countering a grappler‘s attempt at takedown 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
  9. effective aggressiveness means moving forward and landing a legal strike
  10. effective defense means avoiding being struck, taken down or reversed while countering with offensive attacks
  11. 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 contestants appear to be fighting evenly and neither contestant shows clear dominance in a round
    2. a round is to be scored as a 10-9 round when a contestant 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 contestant overwhelmingly dominates by striking or grappling in a round
    4. a round is to be scored as a 10-7 round when a contestant totally dominates by striking or grappling in a round
  12. judges shall use a sliding scale and recognize the length of time the fighters are either standing or on the ground, as follows:
    1. if the mixed martial artists spent a majority of a round on the canvas, then:
      1. effective grappling is weighed first, then,
      2. effective striking is then weighed
    2. if the mixed martial artists spent a majority of a round standing, then:
      1. effective striking is weighed first, then,
      2. effective grappling is then weighed
    3. if a round ends with a relatively even amount of standing and canvas fighting, striking and grappling are weighed equally

13:46-24A.14 Warnings

  1. the referee shall issue a single warning for the following infractions:
    1. holding or grabbing the fence
    2. holding opponent‘s shorts or gloves, or
    3. the presence of more than 1 second on the fighting area perimeter
  2. after the initial warning, if the prohibited conduct persists, a penalty will be issued
  3. the penalty may result in a deduction of points or disqualification

13:46-24A.15 Fouls

  1. The following are fouls and will result in penalties:
    1. butting with the head
    2. eye gouging of any kind
    3. biting or spitting at an opponent
    4. hair pulling
    5. fish hooking
    6. groin attacks of any kind
    7. intentionally placing a finger in any opponent‘s orifice
    8. downward pointing of elbow strikes
    9. small joint manipulation
    10. strikes to the spine or back of the head
    11. heel kicks to the kidney
    12. throat strikes of any kind
    13. clawing, pinching, twisting the flesh or grabbing the clavicle
    14. kicking the head of a grounded fighter
    15. kneeing the head of a grounded fighter
    16. stomping of a grounded fighter
    17. the use of abusive language in fighting area
    18. any unsportsmanlike conduct that causes an injury to opponent
    19. attacking an opponent on or during the break
    20. attacking an opponent who is under the referee‘s care at the time
    21. timidity (avoiding contact, or consistent dropping of mouthpiece, or faking an injury)
    22. interference from a mixed martial artists seconds
    23. throwing an opponent out of the fighting area
    24. flagrant disregard of the referee‘s instructions, and
    25. spiking an opponent to the canvas on his or her head or neck
  2. Disqualification occurs after any combination of 3 of the fouls listed above or after a referee determines that a foul was intentional and flagrant.
  3. Fouls will result in a point being deducted by the official scorekeeper from the offending mixed martial artist‘s score.
  4. Only a referee can assess a foul, however, if the referee does not call the foul, judges shall not make that assessment on their own and cannot factor such into their scoring calculations.
  5. If a foul is committed, the referee shall:
    1. call time
    2. check the fouled mixed martial artist‘s condition and safety, and
    3. assess the foul to the offending contestant, deduct points, and notify each corner‘s seconds, judges and the official scorekeeper.
  6. A fouled fighter has up to 5 minutes to recuperate.
  7. If a bottom contestant commits a foul, unless the top contestant is injured, the fight shall continue. To not jeopardize the top contestant‘s superior positioning at the time, the referee may:
    1. verbally notify the bottom contestant of the foul
    2. assess the foul and notify both corners’ seconds, the judges and the official scorekeeper when the round is over, and
    3. terminate a bout based on the severity of a foul. For such a flagrant foul, a contestant shall lose by disqualification.

13:46-24A.16 Injuries sustained during competition

  1. if an injury sustained during competition as a result of a legal maneuver is severe enough to terminate a bout, the injured contestant loses by technical knockout
  2. if an injury sustained during competition as a result of an intentional foul is severe enough to terminate a bout, the contestant causing the injury loses by disqualification
  3. if an injury sustained during competition as a result of an intentional foul and the bout is allowed to continue, the referee shall notify the scorekeeper to automatically deduct 2 points from the contestant who committed the foul
  4. if an injury sustained during competition as a result of an intentional foul causes the injured contestant to be unable to continue at a subsequent point in the contest, the injured contestant shall win by technical decision, if he or she is ahead on the score cards
  5. if the injured contestant is even or behind on the score cards at the time of stoppage, the outcome of the bout shall be declared a technical draw
  6. if a contestant injures himself or herself while attempting to foul his or her opponent, the referee shall not take any action in his or her favor, and the injury shall be treated in the same manner as an injury produced by a fair blow
  7. if an injury sustained during competition as a result of an accidental foul is severe enough for the referee to stop the bout immediately, the bout shall result in a no contest if stopped before 2 rounds have been completed in a 3-round bout or if stopped before 3 rounds have been completed in a 5-round bout
  8. if an injury sustained during competition as a result of an accidental foul is severe enough for the referee to stop the bout immediately, the bout shall result in a technical decision awarded to the contestant who is ahead on the score cards at the time the bout is stopped only when the bout is stopped after 2 rounds of a 3-round bout, or 3 rounds of a 5-round bout have been completed
  9. there will be no scoring of an incomplete round. However, if the referee penalizes either contestant, then the appropriate points shall be deducted when the scorekeeper calculates the final score

13:46-24A.17 Types of bout results

  1. The following are the types of bout results:
    1. Submission by:
      1. tap out: when a contestant physically uses his hand to indicate that he or she no longer wishes to continue, or
      2. verbal tap out: when a contestant verbally announces to the referee that he or she does not wish to continue
    2. Technical knockout by:
      1. referee stops bout
      2. ringside physician stops bout, or
      3. when an injury as a result of a legal maneuver is severe enough to terminate a bout
    3. Knockout by failure to rise from the canvas
    4. Decision via score cards:
      1. unanimous: when all 3 judges score the bout for the same contestant
      2. split decision: when 2 judges score the bout for one contestant and one judge scores for the opponent, or
      3. majority decision: when 2 judges score the bout for the same contestant and one judge scores a draw
    5. Draws:
      1. unanimous: when all 3 judges score the bout a draw
      2. majority: when 2 judges score the bout a draw, or
      3. split: when all 3 judges score differently and the score total results in a draw
    6. Disqualification: when an injury sustained during competition as a result of an intentional foul is severe enough to terminate the contest
    7. Forfeit: when a contestant fails to begin competition or prematurely ends the contest for reasons other than injury or by indicating a tap out
    8. Technical draw: when an injury sustained during competition as a result of an intentional foul causes the injured contestant to be unable to continue and the injured contestant is even or behind on the core cards at the time of stoppage
    9. Technical decision: when the bout is prematurely stopped due to injury and a contestant is leading on the score cards
    10. No contest: when a contest is prematurely stopped due to accidental injury and a sufficient number of rounds have not been completed to render a decision via the score cards