John Danaher Explains Why He’s Against The Use Of Round Timers
John Danaher has shared a unique perspective on BJJ training structure – explaining why he deliberately avoids using round timers during sessions at his academy.
Specifically, Danaher believes that removing time constraints forces athletes to rely on their technical skills rather than simply enduring until the round ends:
When you tell someone this is going to be a five-minute round, if it’s going badly for them – in their head they’re just saying: “One minute, two minutes left survive.”
By eliminating timers, he creates an environment where survival depends solely on technical proficiency, not waiting for the clock to run out:
The only thing when you’re not going to get saved by the clock that will save you is your technique and so it creates a mindset in students where the only thing they know they can rely on is their own technique.
Danaher further explained that while students may initially learn techniques through structured drilling, their progress can stagnate when they rely too much on time limits to escape tough positions (instead of problem-solving in real-time):
They will learn the technique, but when they learn to rely on the clock to save them – the progress quickly dissipates.
Sloth Jiu-Jitsu: you can be slow and unathletic and still kick butt in Jiu-Jitsu.