Conversation

Going to dump clips from Lex Fridman’s interview with John Danaher, one of the best MMA+BJJ coaches in the world. Both Fridman and Danaher are BJJ black belts, with experience in Judo. They go very quickly to the interesting edges of both martial arts. Thread.
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First clip is Fridman talking about the hard part about “make mistakes during sparring training” — people think you suck when they beat you. Danaher replies, “You think world champions don’t feel that?”
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“I’m a huge advocate of handicap training, where you place yourself at a handicap (…) (Gary Tonon) has taken that to heart to a level that few people can match.” “I just wonder what his psychology is like?” “You have to understand, Lex, it’s just skill development.”
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Next series of clips is about new technique development. Danaher pioneered the use of body locks as a weapon against strong guard fighters. All of his students use it.
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“How did you discover that?” “… in a room full of dangerous leg lockers, we needed a way to shut down the hips. And once we started using body locks, we saw that this was an excellent way to get around that problem.” Then: a huge amount of trial and error.
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And then, my favourite topic: how do you do good trial and error? (This applies to more than just BJJ; it applies to business and innovation in general). “There’s a spark, you’ll see something (and go), hmm, there’s possibility there. And then you’ll meet a lot of failure.”
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You want to strike this balance between not giving up too early and giving up when it’s clear that it’s too difficult to find a working variation. (Of course, easy to say, but demands a great deal of tacit taste).
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Replying to
What’s interesting about this pedagogical insight is that it leads — via inversion — to all of Danaher’s training approaches. “When you enter into a jujitsu match, you know there are only a handful of ways you can lose (…) works backwards so you don’t get caught in one of them”
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Danaher’s overall training program therefore is split into two prongs: For beginners, work from the ground up. For experts, work from the endgame backwards.
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“It’s interesting. My students have by far the highest submission rate in contemporary jujitsu, but they only learn 6-7 submission holds. (…) if they truly believe that if they get to one of those 6 positions, they’ll win, come competition, they will find a way to get there.”
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