A red and white no entry sign against a blue wall, symbolizing prohibition.

What Is a Direct Elimination (DE) Round?

The Direct Elimination round is the knockout phase of a fencing competition. Once pool (qualifying) rounds are completed, fencers are ranked-or seeded-based on their pool results. From there, the tournament moves into DEs.

In DEs:

  • Fencers are placed into a bracket (similar to March Madness)
  • Each bout is win-or-go-home
  • The winner advances to the next round
  • The loser is eliminated from the competition (or placed based on where they exit, depending on the event)

How DE Seeding Works

Your performance in pools determines:

  • Who you fence in the first DE bout
  • Where you start in the bracket

Higher-seeded fencers face lower-seeded opponents early on, which is why strong pool results are important.

Example:

  • Seed #1 fences seed #32
  • Seed #2 fences seed #31
  • And so on

Bout Format in DE Rounds

DE bouts differ from pool bouts:

  • Pool bouts are typically fenced to 5 touches
  • DE bouts are usually fenced to 15 touches
  • There are three periods of 3 minutes each
  • One-minute breaks between periods
  • If tied at the end of regulation, the bout goes to priority overtime

Why DE Rounds Matter

The DE round is where:

  • Tournament placements are decided
  • Medals are earned
  • National and regional points are awarded
  • Mental toughness and stamina become critical

In short:

Pools qualify you. DEs define you.

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