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Foremost, respect to my opponents. I cannot get better without them and I respect them for stepping out on the mat. This was my second match at the Ohio State Judo tournament advanced brown and black belt division. People keep asking me about belts color, rank, and how are green belts competing in the advanced division. In judo, most sensei’s promote you on how you perform against brown and black belts in a tournament. I did one tournament at novice (state qualifier), because I had to as my first tournament as a white belt, and I ippon’ed everyone. So I was promoted to green belt and am now competing in the advanced (brown/black) division so that I can get better. Also, your belt color on the mat often has absolutely nothing to do with your rank, but your designated color for scoring. In my first, third, and fourth match, I competed against black belts who wore white or orange (he got yelled at for that) to designate who was who. So you will see blackbelts walking around with white belts on all the time. Nobody cares in judo. What matters is how you do on the mat. I will post matches 1 and 4 a little later, because they were long and the breakdowns will take time. Judo is about respect and I respect all my opponents. If I did anything wrong, this guy would have thrown me. I saw his match before this one and he is good. I just caught him. He is a good sport and I talked to him and everyone else in my bracket. Respect is so important