We're rare, but we exist. Eddie gave me my black belt last October; I felt a little underprepared but I don't think anyone who has rolled with me would really dispute that ranking. But, at at that time I had *never* worn a gi. Never worn one, never seriously watched gi matches or techniques, never really thought about it. Nothing against the gi at all, just never did it. Since then, I've been to about 4 gi classes, and I can tell you that at *best* I'm a blue belt with the pajamas on. I almost got put to sleep by ~150lb blue belt; in no-gi, I tap him ~10 times in an 8 minute roll. I'm not exaggerating in the slightest. The two styles are just completely different, and I expect that gi training prepares you for nogi better than nogi prepares you for gi. Whatever the reason, my particular skillset translates poorly. Though if I catch you in rubberguard with the gi on, you're completely fucked.
It would be beyond idiotic for me to show up at a gi tournament with my black belt and think I could last more than a minute. At the same time, I could see how people would be pissed off if I take gold in advanced/expert nogi and then show up the next day as a blue belt in the gi. The reason is that people like me are rare; most grapplers have put on the gi for an extended period at some point. Shit, even Josh Barnett has worn one from time to time.
Erik, you're in a similar situation though not quite as extreme. By the rules of the tournament you should enter advanced nogi and white belt gi divisions. However, this is awkward for everybody. The only graceful solution is to only compete as a white belt in the gi and forgo nogi enirely, unsatisfactory as that may sound. Eventually (hopefully), your skills in the gi will catch up to nogi and then you'll be able to compete plausibly in an advanced division.
In general, you should defer to your instructor's opinion, but never feel pressured to do something that violates your ethics.
It would be beyond idiotic for me to show up at a gi tournament with my black belt and think I could last more than a minute. At the same time, I could see how people would be pissed off if I take gold in advanced/expert nogi and then show up the next day as a blue belt in the gi. The reason is that people like me are rare; most grapplers have put on the gi for an extended period at some point. Shit, even Josh Barnett has worn one from time to time.
Erik, you're in a similar situation though not quite as extreme. By the rules of the tournament you should enter advanced nogi and white belt gi divisions. However, this is awkward for everybody. The only graceful solution is to only compete as a white belt in the gi and forgo nogi enirely, unsatisfactory as that may sound. Eventually (hopefully), your skills in the gi will catch up to nogi and then you'll be able to compete plausibly in an advanced division.
In general, you should defer to your instructor's opinion, but never feel pressured to do something that violates your ethics.