My 7 year old son was at Grapplers Quest over the weekend and had a bad experience. In the rules, it clearly stated that neck or cervical cranks were not allowed in the childrens divisions for Gi and No Gi. When the No Gi competition started, I was a bit alarmed when the youngest and lightest (<49 lbs) were allowed to do guillotines. During my sons first No Gi match (50-59 lbs), his opponent placed him (all 53 lbs) in a standing guillotine and raised him off his feet. Now, my son's BJJ academy doesn't allow guillotines so they dont train for it or how to defend against it at that age so he was a bit caught off guard and wasn't able to tap. In addition, the ref didn't stop the move until he was nearly passed out. He only stopped it when the opposing coach yelled out.
The other issue was that he was in the "beginners" division where it clearly states <9 months of training. I am certain the almost all of the kids in his division had much more training time than 9 months. It was more like 2 years on average.
My question is, is a guillotine considered a neck/cervical crank? Also, are these issues typical of Grapplers Quest? It resembled more of an MMA event than the typical (albeit smaller) BJJ events that I've seen.
Based on this experience, I doubt that I will ever allow my son to comptete at Grapplers Quest again...at least not until he is MUCH older. It just wasn't safe. It was down right frightening...at least for a parent
On a side note, he DID return for the Gi event even though he originally didn't want to continue after that scary incident. He said that he didn't want to be a quiter. He only lost 0-2 by a weak take-down. I'm sure that if he was 100%, he would have easily won. I believe it was against the only other true beginner.
The other issue was that he was in the "beginners" division where it clearly states <9 months of training. I am certain the almost all of the kids in his division had much more training time than 9 months. It was more like 2 years on average.
My question is, is a guillotine considered a neck/cervical crank? Also, are these issues typical of Grapplers Quest? It resembled more of an MMA event than the typical (albeit smaller) BJJ events that I've seen.
Based on this experience, I doubt that I will ever allow my son to comptete at Grapplers Quest again...at least not until he is MUCH older. It just wasn't safe. It was down right frightening...at least for a parent
On a side note, he DID return for the Gi event even though he originally didn't want to continue after that scary incident. He said that he didn't want to be a quiter. He only lost 0-2 by a weak take-down. I'm sure that if he was 100%, he would have easily won. I believe it was against the only other true beginner.