You can do whatever you want to do! I never removed the tensioner. I have always used what I guess is "JWT method" with the wood block.
Take one cam gear off at a time. Nice and slowly. See how the lobes of the cams look in my picture? That is some stage of cylinder number one at top dead center, not true, but some stage of top dead center.
This is the beauty of doing one side at a time. You zip tie the side you are NOT going to work on (let's just say at two spots on the cam gear.
Do your work on the opposite side. Take the chain off and lay to the side, take the cam gear off, remove old cam, check rockers and such, install new cam in the same orientation and tighten the cam gear.
Use my link and the picture to help to re-establish the proper amount of links, rollers, dots, whatever between the already zip-tied cam gear and the newly installed one. The cam lobes should be super close to the same orientation, but more important is the newly installed cams position in relation to the zip-tied other side cam gear.