Amateur Kickboxing
(Full Contact) Rules
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Amateur Kickboxing Rules is only for 11yrs old upwards.
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Each match is three or five rounds in duration, with each round lasting two minutes.
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Open Tournaments will be two rounds of one minute rounds. With Finals being three rounds of one minute rounds.
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Kickboxing is only allowed for 11yrs+
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The match can end by Knockout, Technical Knockout, Decision, Disqualification, Draw or No Contest.
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In bouts consisting of children a level of control is expected and NO child where can be avoided shall be inflicted with blows to the head, which result in KO or potential KO.
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Both the referee and the ring doctor have full authority to stop the fight.
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The fight is scored by three judges on a ten-point must system (The winner of each round receives ten points, and the loser receives nine or less. If the round is even, both competitors receive ten points).
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If there is a draw after three rounds, the judges’ scores are thrown out and one or two extra three-minute rounds are contested. The judges’ decision will then come from the scoring of each extra round only. If, after the extra round(s), there is still a draw, the judges will decide a winner based on the flow of the entire match, considering even the slightest difference. A fight can only end in a draw if both fighters go down at the same time and cannot get up, or in the case of accidental injury in the late stages of the contest.
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The three-knockdown rule is in effect (three knockdowns in a round results in a technical knockout).
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The mandatory eight count is in effect (the referee must count to at least “eight” on all knockdowns).
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The standing eight count is in effect (the referee has the right to declare a knockdown on a fighter who appears to be in a dangerous condition to continue in the match).
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A fighter can be saved by the bell only in the last round.
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Each match can be two, three or five rounds in duration.
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The three-knockdown rule becomes a two-knockdown rule for all matches except the final.
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One or two reserve fights are held prior to the single elimination matches. If for any reason a fighter who wins and advances through the brackets is unable to continue, a reserve match competitor, or the fighter’s opponent from the most recent match, takes his place. There are certain exceptions to this rule (i.e. a fighter who lost a match by knockout might not be eligible to replace another fighter).