In boxing, a majority decision is a winning criterion in which two of the three judges agree on which fighter won the match, while the third judge indicates that neither fighter won (i.e., a "draw") . Each of the three judges allocates a score (round by round) for each fighter. If all scheduled rounds are completed (i.e., no knockout (technical included)), each judge totals the points for all rounds. If the same fighter scores more points than the other on two of the judges scorecards, but the third judge scored equally for both fighters (a draw), the official victory is awarded to the agreed-upon (by a 2 to 1 majority) fighter. A majority decision is different from a split decision, which occurs when two judges pick the same fighter as the winner, while the third judge decides that the opposite fighter won.