NEWS

The clock did not work during the first race during the Speed final and it took over 20 min until they re-run the first race. Then everything went smooth until the final race when favorite, Elena Krasovskaia, slipped and Laura Lammer won. Third was Sandra Lettner followed by Hannah Meul, Mao Nakamura and Vita Lukan. In the qualification, Lammer was #6 but as she won and defends her results from the qualification in Lead and Boulder, she has good chances for a medal actually. Favorite for the gold is Sara Lettner, also from Austria, who was rather superior in the qually.

It did get exciting in the end as only one attempt separated the three who topped all four boulders. Vita Lukan needed 12 attempts, Mau Nakamura 13 and Sandra Lettner 14. On the other hand, this also means that the boulders were a bit to easy. Complete results Laura Lammer, #6 in the qually, leads but if the Lead results remain from the first round, she will be third after Sandra Lettner and Vita Lukan.

As there is no count back to previous round in the Olympics, Lead will be much more about Speed. In the male qualifation in Buenos Aires, we did see three tops separated by time and another seven further down the list. Among the female, nine out of the 21 had to be separated by time as they had the same hold score. In general, many climbers will take chances and climb faster including going for the "+" instead of taking every rest. It just might be that there is a crux midways, where several falls and then it is about to be fastest to that position if you are not one of the top climbers. In the same way, if the route setters have made it too easy, it is about sprinting to the top. The guys starting late will have the advantage listening to the crowd going crazy for the first top. The problem is that without digital split results like in slalom etc, it is very hard to know who is relatively fast etc. One solution is to measure split time 3-4 times to be used once the athletes score the hold.

The Understanding 8C by Vadim Timonov
Vadim Timonov is about to set new standards. Recently he did five 8B+' in just ten days and this week he started by doing The Understanding 8C as well as flashing The bizarre Ride 8A+ Counting just his send the last two weeks, he would have been #10 in the ranking game. Picture from his Insta. "I don't know was his first answer to a question explaining the recent peak so then we asked, Please guess! "Apparently a long break due to injury at the beginning of the year helped to relax and start training in a new way. At the beginning of the year I thought that this year I could forget about comps and projects on the rock. The injury was a rupture of acromion joint after a snow board fall in January which left him with two plates in the shoulder. Vadim begun to train again in May and the "new way" was just that he trained more. Normally he trains alone 4-6 times a week and outdoors on weekends. Interestingly is that he has no sponsor and actually buy even his La Sportiva. Great Scandinavia summer video for the Russian who made it to the semi in the WCH in Innsbruck before a protest took him out to #25.

All male favorites made it to the final
Great male qualification in Buenos Aires although we did see three tops in Lead, meaning time decided the results. All the five ranked favorites made it through to the Top-6 final and the #6 in the prediction was seventh overall due to a foot slip. Complete results (c) Eddie Fowke - Keita Dohi, qualification winner who was the only one topping all four boulders.

Although only a couple male Speed specialists competing in the Youth Olympic Games qualifying, half of the youngster did go sub 7.47. Sam Avezou 7.05 sticks out and in fact only Tomoa Narasaki was faster among the non-Speed specialist in the WCH in Innsbruck. In general, the youngsters werr considerably faster than most of the seniors competing in Combined in Innsbruck. As an example, Combined winner Jakob Schubert had 7.55 and #2 Adam Ondra did 9.32. Complete results It should be mentioned that also many of the girls did climb faster in comparison to the female in Innsbruck but not to that extent as for the male.

Although the commentator did a very good job trying to deliver Combined results live including conditions based on reached hold and ranking in Lead, digital results are vital. Further more, as have been said before, at least every fifth hold must be marked with a number in order to fully get all the excitement. As we saw three tops, they were ranked by who climbed faster. This also mean that it would be great with split times in order to actually understand who is in the lead.

9a FA by Luis Rodrรญguez Martรญn
Luis Rodrรญguez has sent his 4th 9a, Chilam-Salsa in Villanueva del Rosario, Spain. With almost 80m of climbing the route starts on Chilam-Balam 1 8c+ and ends on Salsa Desnivel 8c, a route bolted by Bernabรฉ Fernรกndez and finished by Rafa Fanega. ยฉ Vรญctor Romera "Another king line. Connection between the first pitch of Chilam-balam (8c+) and Maldita envidia (8c). 80 metres of joy!" Luis has recorded 14 routes between 8c+ and 9a and in the 12 months global ranking game he is #8.