T-Rex 8c (b+) Maggie Odette (49)
Maggie Odette has done her first 8c (b+), T-Rex in Maple Canyon. "Call it soft, I donโ€™t care. Itโ€™s not like Iโ€™m crushing anyone with my scorecard these days, anyway. I canโ€™t give this the same grade as Eulogy or Pipedream. More hard moves with fewer, crappier rests, and about a thousand times more pumpy. Fourth time repeating Millenium on the way to the T-Rex chains."

The Youth World Champion started today in Arco with the Lead flash qualification. In the oldest boy category, Shuta Tanaka who was #3 in the last Lead WC, was #1 and all the three Japaneses were Top-8. Also in the youngest boy category there is a Japanese on top, Satone Yoshida, the only one topping both routes. In the youngest girl category, Ryu Nakagawa has also topped both qualification routes. In both these categories are all the three from Japan Top-4. Complete results It should also be mentioned that their best five juniors do not participate as they competed with good results in the senior world championship last week. Ai Mori (15) - #3 in the Lead WCH Futaba Ito (17) - #7 in the Combined WCH Nanako Kura (19) - #6 in the Bouldering WCH Nishida Hidemasa (16) - #1 in the Lead WC in Briancon Keita Dohi (18) - Youth Olympic winner last year

Crag & route pages updated
Weโ€™ve updated the layout of the crag and route pages. The new page structure lays the foundation for bringing Topos to Vertical-Life Web. Alongside the new layโ€ฆ
Nearly 2,000 hectares of Font Forest destroyed by wildfire
Exceptional wildfires are currently sweeping through parts of France's Fontainebleau Forest. Located around 70 km south-east of Paris, the UNESCO Biosphere Reseโ€ฆ
Hubble 9a by Peter Dawson
peter dawson has done his second 9a, Hubble at Raven Tor after some 15 sessions. It was set up by Ben Moon in in 1990 and until recently considered the first 8c+ in the world. Probably do to adaptation to the current grade inflation, it has been upgraded to 9a. "I thought it was harder than Rainshadow so yeah 9a." Here is the video of the 12 meters long route. (c) Jonathan Bean "I first tried Hubble last November because I wanted to see what it was all about, itโ€™s historic and famous for having a very hard crux. The route is extremely short and after 10 moves you are into 7c climbing to the chains. I started making significant links in spring and by summer I was reaching the final moves. The sequence came together two weeks ago and it was my second 9a. Climbing it was one of my best experiences as I absolutely nailed the sequence and to make such a hard sequence feel quite solid was incredible! The key was gaining the finger strength which I did by trying in the route lots. Next I would like to try Mutation which is another classic 9a at Raven tor."

BJ Tilden, who previously has done four 9A FAs, has repeated his first 9a, White Lightning in Wild Iris. "I always knew this link up was Just too obvious to ignore. I wasn't sure I would ever be ready for another battle with moonshine, but after Ryan Sewell Opened up the link I had to check it out. It's awesome! More different than I thought it would be, and the moonshine crux is still a bastard! I really don't know how much the Heart Full start adds to the grade. It certainly stiffens it up a little!"

The Illusionist 9a by Alexander Rohr
Alexander Rohr has recorded his fifth 9a, The Illusionist" in Flatanger. (c) Jon Solberg Hรธyland "I think i always had the level to do it. But it was very hard test mentally. Sometimes I could not climb on the route for more than a week because it was wet. Now I finally was lucky. Itโ€˜s a route from Adam. It is very good and very hard so I never wanted to bail. I basically never bail, and it was one of the routes I always wanted to do. A real hard route and not a random 9a somewhere from someone and no one knows if it is really is hard. I went to Flatanger last year to do it. Well, it was either raining heavily or super hot. I was close and had to leave empty handed. This July I came back, and again, it was more than 30 degrees and the route was wet on most of the days. So I had the plan B to come back in late August, and here I am."

1. Tomoa Narasaki 2 - 1 = 2 2. Rishat Khabullin 1 - 8 = 8 3. Meichi Narasaki 5 - 2 = 10 4. Mickael Mawem 4 - 4 = 16 5. Kokoro Fujii 6 - 3 = 18 5. Kai Harada 3 - 6 = 18 7. Jakob Schubert 7 - 5 = 35 8. Alex Megos 8 - 7 = 56 (injured) Complete results As Alex Megos got a finger injury on the first boulder, it is expected that Jakob Schubert will win in Lead. If so in practice Tomoa Narasaki has secured the gold after his super impressive boulder round doing all three problems in just four tries. His younger brother Meichi was #2 in boulder win one top and three zones and could in theory win overall. If Kai Harada is second in Lead, he will probably be #2 overall as long as Meichi is fourth or worse. Actually as it stands, Rishat Khaibullin has a chance to get the bronze overall although being dead last but ahead of Megos not participating.

Tomoa Narasaki superior 2 - 1 - 2
Tomoa Narasaki was superior becoming second in Speed, first in Boulder and second in Lead, getting just points. Jakob Schubert was the only one to Top in the Lead and got 35 points overall. The big sensation was that Rishat Khaibullin got the bronze after having won Speed and put on a great fight skipping two clips which just made him fifth in Lead. (An interview is coming up and actually he deos not consider him as a Speed specialist.) It should also be mentioned that he was super lucky in the two most critical Speed events. First he won against big favorite Bassa Mawem due to a fall and later he benefitted from a technical incident. In the re-run he set a personal best beating the world champion Fossali with 0.03 seconds. Fourth was Kai Harada, putting on a spectacular show in bouldering but at the same time a bit unlucky as he touched two Tops but could not stick it. (c) Vladek Zumr Complete results 1. Tomoa Narasaki 2. Jakob Schubert 3. Rishat Khaibullin 4. Kai Harada 5. Meichi Narasaki 6. Kokoro Fujii 7. Mickael Mawem 8. Alex Megos (injured)