316 BJJ ranks #25 nationally with 112 fighters and a 4085.7 power score, but their story is about beginner development at scale. 79 white belts (71% of roster) post a stunning 97% win rate — well above the typical 75-85% range for beginners — while grey belts maintain 84.5% wins with 34.5% finishing rate. They rank in the top 25 because they've cracked the code on mass beginner success rather than elite athlete production.
The data reveals a high-volume finishing culture that works across belt levels. 36.3% submission rate (above the 30% median) combined with 0.56 golds per fighter shows they prioritize technical development over trophy hunting. White and grey belts both finish 34%+ of wins early — consistency that indicates systematic coaching rather than individual talent. Hayze Martin (90th percentile, 83% finishing rate) and Kylie Keach (81st percentile, 90% tap rate) exemplify the technical finishing approach they instill from day one.
316 BJJ is built for families wanting proven beginner development over elite competition pipelines. Their 97% white belt win rate destroys most programs' 80% average, making this ideal for kids starting their journey. If you want S-tier athletes, look elsewhere — their highest-rated fighter ranks 70th percentile. But if you want your white belt to actually win matches while learning proper technique, few programs match their beginner success rate.
Win rate across 39 tracked tournaments, benchmarked against large-size academies.
Among 55 large academies, above average gold rate.
Finish rate, scoring patterns, and how 316 BJJ closes out victories.
Similar-size avg: 52%
Placement distribution across all tracked competitions.
Similar-size avg: 4% gold
Fighter tier distribution across the competitive roster.
9% of roster is Elite or higher
Performance metrics segmented by belt level.
Strongest: White (79 fighters)
Match frequency and competition cadence over 14 months.
Similar-size avg: ~564/year
What percentage of athletes return after their first competition.
Similar-size avg: 50%
Cross-belt consistency and ranking performance.
Similar-size avg: 4%
| # | Fighter | Belt | M/F | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mia de la Rosa | White | 17-17 | ||
| 2 | Kylie Keach | Intermediate | 10-5 | ||
| 3 | Hayze Martin | White | 12-7 | ||
| 4 | Ricardo Sandoval | Blue | 11-3 | ||
| 5 | Koda Ortiz | Grey | 5-1 | ||
| 6 | Faith Napa | White | 9-2 | ||
| 7 | Waylon Garret Dyson | Grey | 14-8 | ||
| 8 | Israel Cordeiro | Grey | 11-5 |
| # | Fighter | Belt | M/F | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mia de la Rosa | White | 17-17 | ||
| 2 | Kylie Keach | Intermediate | 10-5 | ||
| 3 | Hayze Martin | White | 12-7 | ||
| 4 | Ricardo Sandoval | Blue | 11-3 | ||
| 5 | Koda Ortiz | Grey | 5-1 | ||
| 6 | Faith Napa | White | 9-2 | ||
| 7 | Waylon Garret Dyson | Grey | 14-8 | ||
| 8 | Israel Cordeiro | Grey | 11-5 | ||
| 9 | Maximilian Sandoval | Orange | 3-6 | ||
| 10 | Zander Wittmayer | White | 3-1 | ||
| 11 | Anderson Taylor | White | 4-1 | ||
| 12 | Ryan Paradiso | Grey | 3-0 | ||
| 13 | Ezra Belino | White | 3-0 | ||
| 14 | Madeline Westbrook | White | 4-1 | ||
| 15 | Daniel Osokin | Grey | 2-2 | ||
| 16 | Owen Wayne Pierce | White | 2-0 | ||
| 17 | Aaron de Souza | Grey | 2-1 | ||
| 18 | Eleanor Wisman | White | 2-2 | ||
| 19 | Brydon Bennett | White | 2-1 | ||
| 20 | Josiah Lumaban | Grey | 3-0 | ||
| 21 | Anders Peavy | White | 2-1 | ||
| 22 | Bennett Pierce | White | 2-0 | ||
| 23 | Alexander Osokin | Grey | 3-3 | ||
| 24 | Grayson Patterson | White | 4-4 | ||
| 25 | Lincoln Wilson | White | 6-9 |