Sektor Jiu Jitsu ranks #10 nationally with 128 fighters and a 1.05 golds-per-fighter ratio — just above the 0.9 national median but well below elite programs exceeding 2.0. Their power score of 5872 places them in the top 15 academies, driven primarily by volume and consistent finishing rather than championship efficiency. The formula works: 65% submission rate across all belts puts them at the 75th percentile for technical finishing.
Scale meets execution in their multi-belt development system. Grey belts (44 fighters) and white belts (33 fighters) both maintain 56% and 52% gold rates respectively — solid but not spectacular performance that becomes impressive when multiplied across 77 competitors. Yellow belts shine brightest with 70% gold rate (90th percentile), suggesting their intermediate development pipeline excels. Christopher Beserra (99th percentile, Elite tier) and Arthur Wang (97th percentile, Elite tier) prove they can produce top-tier talent alongside their broader base.
Sektor suits families wanting proven development over boutique efficiency. Their 128-fighter roster dwarfs most top-10 programs while maintaining above-average technical standards — harder to achieve than small academy perfection. If you prefer 3+ golds per fighter, look elsewhere. If you want a program that takes 44 grey belts and turns 56% into champions while finishing nearly 7 out of 10 matches early, Chino delivers exactly that scale-with-quality formula.
Win rate across 91 tracked tournaments, benchmarked against large-size academies.
Among 55 large academies, above average gold rate.
Finish rate, scoring patterns, and how Sektor Jiu Jitsu 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.
28% of roster is Elite or higher
Performance metrics segmented by belt level.
Strongest: White (67 fighters)
Match frequency and competition cadence over 15 months.
Similar-size avg: ~684/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 | Dominic Hernandez | Grey | 51-12 | ||
| 2 | Christopher Beserra | Grey | 31-5 | ||
| 3 | Giuliana Trinity Onopa | Yellow | 24-7 | ||
| 4 | Ireland Marie Lewis | Yellow | 25-4 | ||
| 5 | Brie Kennedy Chirgwin | Grey | 54-25 | ||
| 6 | Kennedy Marie Sepulveda | Yellow | 22-4 | ||
| 7 | Anthony Robert Rodriguez | Blue | 72-35 | ||
| 8 | Arthur Wang | Grey | 35-8 |
| # | Fighter | Belt | M/F | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dominic Hernandez | Grey | 51-12 | ||
| 2 | Christopher Beserra | Grey | 31-5 | ||
| 3 | Giuliana Trinity Onopa | Yellow | 24-7 | ||
| 4 | Ireland Marie Lewis | Yellow | 25-4 | ||
| 5 | Brie Kennedy Chirgwin | Grey | 54-25 | ||
| 6 | Kennedy Marie Sepulveda | Yellow | 22-4 | ||
| 7 | Anthony Robert Rodriguez | Blue | 72-35 | ||
| 8 | Arthur Wang | Grey | 35-8 | ||
| 9 | Gabriel Drew MacIas | Grey | 27-6 | ||
| 10 | Nolyn Emmanuel Trinh | Yellow | 12-4 | ||
| 11 | Haru Domingo | Grey | 21-7 | ||
| 12 | Jacob Tafesh | White | 10-2 | ||
| 13 | Anthony Raymond Magana | Orange | 13-8 | ||
| 14 | Evelyn Cai | Grey | 28-9 | ||
| 15 | Tristyn Aguilar | Grey | 24-7 | ||
| 16 | Kendall Brie Edwards | Grey | 12-2 | ||
| 17 | Mason Dyer | Grey | 9-7 | ||
| 18 | Devin Alvarez | White | 8-1 | ||
| 19 | Devin At | Yellow | 10-7 | ||
| 20 | Reagan Elizabeth Sepulveda | Grey | 16-8 | ||
| 21 | Chance Figueroa | Grey | 5-5 | ||
| 22 | Myles Han | Grey | 20-6 | ||
| 23 | Bethany Teav | White | 4-0 | ||
| 24 | Eliza Mayberry | Grey | 21-12 | ||
| 25 | Genesis Ruiz | Grey | 8-2 |