
Entrenamiento de élite, mucha energía y una comunidad sólida en Denver.
Easton Training Center - Denver es un gimnasio y centro deportivo ubicado en 1304 S Santa Fe Dr, Denver, CO. Las reseñas destacan un coaching experto, instrucción acogedora y clases con mucha energía, con elogios a entrenadores como Tim, Rob y Eliot Marshall. El centro está asociado con Muay Thai y jiu-jitsu brasileño en Denver. Una reseña señala preocupaciones sobre la inclusividad y la rendición de cuentas dentro de la cultura.
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Entrenamiento integral de Jiu-Jitsu Brasileño para todos los niveles, enfocándose en la técnica, la defensa personal y la preparación para competencias con instructores expertos.
Clases dinámicas de golpes que mejoran la condición física, la coordinación y las habilidades de artes marciales en un entorno de apoyo y alta energía.
Entrenamiento personalizado uno a uno con entrenadores de primer nivel para acelerar el aprendizaje y lograr metas específicas de condición física o de competición.
Clases introductorias estructuradas diseñadas para ayudar a los nuevos estudiantes a aprender los fundamentos en un entorno seguro y acogedor.
Entrenamiento y apoyo especializados para atletas que aspiran a competir en torneos de artes marciales, con refinamiento de la técnica y estrategia.
I’m sharing this after a lot of reflection, because I think context matters. I am autistic, and while I understand that a gym cannot accommodate everything, my experience at Easton felt less like accommodation and more like being merely tolerated. Across both the Denver and Boulder locations, in both Muay Thai and BJJ, I consistently felt ostracized and left out. If you don’t fit their mold, the culture seems to shift from inclusion to quiet exclusion rather than working with your limitations or differences. This was a repeated pattern over time, not an isolated incident. I’ve now been training for five years. I currently train at a gym where I feel genuinely accepted, supported, and safe. I have also cross-trained at other gyms and have built positive relationships with instructors and teammates elsewhere. Easton is the only place where I consistently felt unwelcome and unsafe, which is why I feel confident that this review is valid and not simply a “bad fit.” I started at Easton in the Muay Thai program and immediately noticed how cliquey it felt. At the Denver location, the head Muay Thai instructor never introduced himself and came across as unapproachable. I experienced a similar dynamic at the Boulder location. Over time, the more instructors got to know me, the less they seemed to want to interact, as if I was being perceived as “difficult” rather than simply different. In BJJ, I wanted to compete but did not feel supported in that goal. As someone inexperienced with competition at the time, I asked black belts for guidance and was turned away. I asked instructors for help and was repeatedly told to take private lessons, which I could not afford. I also asked peers who competed if they could include me or offer guidance, and there was little interest. The environment felt cliquey and exclusionary. What ultimately solidified my decision to leave was seeing how serious concerns are handled. A friend of mine experienced sexual harassment from an instructor. The issue was brought forward, and nothing was done. It became clear that when complaints involve instructors who are higher up or well-established within the organization, accountability is unlikely. Certain instructors appear to be treated as untouchable, and concerns raised about them do not lead to meaningful action. Additionally, Easton does not host open mats and openly discourages cross-training. I’ve personally seen peers receive harsh reprimands for training at other gyms while still being members at Easton. As paying customers, students should not be expected to show blind loyalty or be discouraged from learning elsewhere. This gym may work well for people who fit neatly into their system and never challenge it. However, for autistic kids and adults, folks seeking competition support, or anyone who values autonomy, safety, and accountability, this may not be the environment it claims to be.
I have been training at Easton for almost 2 years. This a good, welcoming place. Great instruction from the coaches and super friendly people. Higher belts always feel willing to help you learn. Big shout out to Tim and Rob, they’re the best
I attended a Wednesday evening 7p kickboxing class here while I was visiting from out of town. The coach was extremely knowledgeable and welcoming, with a banger playlist, paying attention to all students and fine tuning technique. It was a bit more of a beginner class, which is not a bad thing! No one is above reviewing basics. I got the workout I needed and also learned a few things to work on. It was clear the instructor has all the skills to teach a higher level class as well, that just wasn’t the one I ended up at.
What makes a training center world-class??? It’s not the mats… (not the building) It’s the people. Easton Training Center Denver is the real deal. 5 stars all day errrday… The culture… the coaching… the energy… (unmatched) And shoutout to Eliot Marshall… dude is a beast…. But has a heart of gold… His leadership on and off the mats sets the tone… and if you’re not already following him on IG, you’re missing out… Tons of free wisdom every single day. If you’re in Denver and serious about training… there’s only one place you need to be… Easton.
The best gym in Colorado! The owner is one of the best coach in USA and represents USA for the international championships! He’s not only a coach is cares of his students and helps as he can them to teach their goal so if you’re around here make a stop!
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