Gracie jiu-jitsu ranking system

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The Gracie jiu-jitsu ranking system is the particular method of signifying competency and moral character of a jiu-jitsu practitioner, developed by founders Carlos and Hélio Gracie, and utilized by members of the Gracie family.

Similar to the IBJJF Brazilian jiu-jitsu ranking system, the Gracie system has a number of key differences. Most notable is the half-color ranks included in the junior level, making for a much larger series of ranks for practitioners under the age of 16 years old.

Bars and stripes / degrees

A blue belt with three stripes.

Having its roots in Japanese martial arts of jujutsu and judo, Gracie/Brazilian jiu-jitsu adopted a similar colored belt system to signify a practitioner's progression within the art. However, to differentiate jiu-jitsu from the other disciplines, a solid bar was included on the belt.

As a practitioner advances, stripes are awarded and placed at equidistant intervals on the solid bar as intermediate signifiers between belt ranks. Generally a student will receive four stripes before advancing to the next full rank.

For most belt ranks, and most Gracie schools, each stripe is awarded at the discretion of the instructor, without any specific curriculum or qualification requirements. However, with adult ranks, (particularly the lower colors of blue and purple), proficiency in a set series of techniques may be required prior to consideration for stripe promotion. At the Gracie Jiu-Jitsu Academy of Torrance, California (founded by Rorion and his brothers Rickson, Royler, and Royce, and now run by Rorion's sons Rener and Ryron), not only is there a defined set of techniques, but a student is required to test their skills and be graded by their instructor for a minimum level of competency before being awarded a stripe. The academy also requires a minimum amount of class hours attended, as well as overall time as a student before qualifying to test for a stripe.[1]

Junior belt ranks

Junior belt colors
(16 and under)
White 75px
White-Yellow 75px
Yellow 75px
White-Orange 75px
Yellow-Orange 75px
Orange 75px
White-Green 75px
Yellow-Green 75px
Orange-Green 75px
Green 75px

When the Jiu-Jitsu Federation of Guanabara was created in 1967, it adopted the judo colored belt system developed thirty years prior by Mikonosuke Kawaishi, but instituted a separation between adults and children. Hélio Gracie, president of the Federation, felt that children could not be tested on the adult-level moral qualifications he held for normal rank advancement. For this reason, the colors of yellow, orange, and green were reserved for practitioners under the age of 16. (Both children and adults of any age begin training as a new student wearing a white belt.)

In the 1990s, Brazilian judo clubs began awarding grey belts for children advancing from white belt. In the same interest of providing children with more frequent rank promotion within Gracie jiu-jitsu, Pedro Valente Sr. and his sons proposed an adaptation to the youth belt system. It involved intermediate belts consisting of half-colors, awarded between full colored belts. Each half-color promotion includes a color previously attained, and the next full color rank. For example, between the white and yellow belt, a student earns a white/yellow belt. Between yellow and orange, a student earns a white/orange, and then a yellow/orange.

This change provides a full ten belts (as opposed to the previous system of only four), allowing instructors to award children more frequently, and increase motivation among young students. The new system was approved by Hélio in 2005, and he added that it was the most efficient and simple way to give children self-confidence.

Each rank has a recommended maximum age, beginning with the white/yellow belt at age 5 and under. Each subsequent belt has the recommendation for each subsequent year of age, ending with the green belt at age 13 and below. Under this schedule of promotion, a junior student would receive a stripe roughly every three months, and a new belt after each year of training until the age of 13. After green, the next belt rank is blue, which has a required minimum age of 16.

Although typical, it is not necessary for a student to go through each rank individually. Notably, Grandmaster Relson Gracie reported that he started competing at the age of 6 or 7 as an orange belt (prior to the half-color system), and remained at that rank until he turned 16, when his father Hélio awarded him a brown belt.[2]

Adult belt ranks

File:GJJ BlackBelt (professor).svg
White borders on the ends of the bar signify a fully certified professor.
Black belt degrees
(19 and over)
Black 0–6 75px|75px
Black/Red 7-8 BJJ black red belt.svg
Red 9–10 BJJ Red Belt.svg
Adult belt colors
(16 and over)
White 75px
Blue 75px
Purple 75px
Brown 75px

After turning sixteen years old, a student is eligible to advance to the rank of blue belt. As with the junior system, stripes are generally awarded signifying progression toward the next rank. However, in the adult ranks, promotions occur much less frequently than in the junior ages. Beginning with blue belt, a student will typically spend at least 2 years at each full rank before advancing to the next belt.

Beginning with black belt, each stripe earned is referred to as a "degree" (e.g. "2nd-degree black belt"), and typically requires a minimum of 3 years of teaching experience before consideration.

In keeping with the bar design to differentiate from other martial arts systems, the black belt for a non-instructor includes a white bar. It is only when a black belt-level practitioner is in the process of becoming a professor and is teaching students, that this white bar is replaced with a red bar. Upon successful completion of full instructor requirements, a white border is added on each end of the bar, signifying professorship.

Once a practitioner advances beyond the 6th degree of black belt, an alternating red and black belt is awarded, along with the title of master. This belt is often referred to as a "coral belt," and is used to designate 7th and 8th degree black belt practitioners.

Beyond 8th degree, the 9th and 10th degrees are signified with solid red belts. Noted practitioners Renzo & Royler Gracie have stated that the red belt in Gracie/Brazilian jiu-jitsu is reserved "for those whose influence and fame takes them to the pinnacle of the art".[3] Red belt holders are often addressed within the art by the title grandmaster. The 10th degree has been given only to the pioneers of the art, the Gracie brothers: Carlos, Oswaldo, George, Gaston and Hélio.[4][5][6]

See also

References

Notes

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