Decisions in combat sports


In combat sports, a decision is a result of the fight or bout that does not end in a knockout, submission or other finish, in which the three judges' scorecards are consulted to determine the winner; a majority of judges must agree on a result. The judges' result can either award a win/ loss, or draw.
If no judges are in attendance/ scoring and the fight reaches the time limit with no finish, the fight goes to no decision.

Scoring

If a fight reaches the time limit with no finish, the outcome of fight is decided based on the judges' scorecards. In most professional boxing and mixed martial arts fights, there are three judges.
In a "ten-point system", a judge must award a fighters whom s/he judged as have "won the round" ten points, while the other boxer receives nine points or less. If a judge feels that there was a no clear winner in a round, s/he must award both fighters ten points. This doesn't include point deductions from referees, so there could be rounds where neither fighter scored ten points.
At the end of the bout, each judge will tally the scores to determine which fighter had won, if any, according to the judge's tally; a fighter that "won" a majority of rounds usually emerges with more points. If a fighter ends up with a higher number of points, that fighter "won" on that judge's scorecard. A fighter has to "win" on at least two scorecards to win the fight. If neither fighter "won" on at least two scorecards, the match is a draw; in championship fights, the champion usually retains the title in a draw, if not, it is "vacated" - the title belongs to no fighter and is vacant. The scores do not necessarily have to be identical in unanimous decisions.

Summary