NEWS

Toby Roberts does Gancho Perfecto 9a (+)
Toby Roberts, the Olympic gold medalist, reports on Instagram that he has done Gancho Perfecto (9a) in Margalef. At just 15 years old, in 2020, Roberts completed his first 9a route, though he has since focused more on competition climbing. (c) Javi Pec

Now 19, Roberts recently won the Lead World Cup although he skipped last weekend's event in Seoul. In the Boulder World Cup, he placed 6th and would have needed to win the final event to secure a double victory.

Lana Skuลกek does Talk is cheap (8c)
Lana Skuลกek, who two weeks ago did her first 8c, has ticked Talk is cheap! (8c) in Miลกja Peฤ. Two months ago, the Slovenian was #8 in the Euro Championship.

โ€ I tried Talk is Cheap for the first time just before Strelovod (8c) and it was the first project I envisioned for myself. Circumstances led me to climb Strelovod first, and then I went back to Talk is Cheap. During my first attempt, I managed to do all the moves. In the next few attempts, I changed the beta a bit, and I felt like I could climb it.

Yesterday, everything fell into place, and I succeeded. Iโ€™m very happy and proud of myself because I wouldnโ€™t normally consider this type of route my style, and I think I proved a lot to myself with this achievement. Moreover, the conditions were far from perfect; the top was actually quite wet.โ€

Japan #1 in Lead team ranking 3rd year in a row
For the first time since 2019, Japan claimed the top spot in both the men's and women's team rankings. On the other hand, if Janja Garnbret had competed in more than two of the five World Cups, Slovenia likely would have won the women's category. Nonetheless, Japan secured another dominant victory in the overall team rankings.

Japan wins Boulder team ranking for the 11th straight year
Since 2014, Team Japan has consistently won the Boulder team ranking each year, largely due to the dominance of their male athletes. The trend is that their superiority has grown stronger in the last few years.

Leo Vail completes Trip tik tonik (9a)
Leo Vail has, after 19 sessions, completed Trip tik tonik (9a) in Gorges du Loup. Since May 2023, the 25-year-old climber from Marseille has been based in Paris for a route-setting academy. After over a year away from the cliffs, he relocated to Nice two months ago. Passionate and more motivated than ever, he started his big 9a project although having just done one 8c. (c) Nicolas Vaillant

โ€œI did my first 8c before my year in Paris. I shared my climbing time between Fontainebleau and training indoors. It was a good opportunity to progress. I felt stronger when I came back, so I decided to work a big big project. TTT was a dream line near house and in my perfect style. It was the first time I worked I route as this. I didn't expect it to happen like this.โ€

Paul Zauner ticks Hades (9a)
Paul Zauner has, after some 50 sessions, done Hades (9a) in Gรถtterwandl. In 2020 he logged it as a project in his scorecard and commented, โ€Life goal to climb this route. Moves are pretty doable but there are no good rests and its damn overhanging.โ€ (c) Luigi Dellarole

Can you tell us more sending your โ€life goalโ€ route?
I actually got a lot to tell๐Ÿ˜ For most people this is just another young dude who sends another randome 9a, for me it means that i accomplish my main life goal.

Climbing 9a was obviously always a dream but it felt so far away that I never thought its even possible for someone like me. The first time I stumbled across Hades was when I was 16 and my incredible strong friend Gundi climbed this route. I have never been at the crag before but from that day on I was very curious about the "Gรถtterwandl" (Gods-wall).

Beeing 19 years old, I moved to Innsbruck, which is just an hour drive away from Hades and has one of the best Gyms in the world. After doing most of the classics I couldn't hold myself back and gave Hades a try. This was 4 years ago and I could surprisingly do almost all the single moves. That day I fell in love. I was by far not strong enough but the sequences are so enjoyable that I came back over and over again.

As said, the single moves are not the problem but it's consistent ~30ยฐ overhanging and there are a lot of hard moves without a rest. The route starts with some physical ~8a+ meters into a rest which is not really a rest but we call it like that because you can clip a draw and chalk up๐Ÿ˜… Then you go straight into a 10 move 7C/+ boulder problem with the hardest move at the end so you want to arrive there with no pump whatsoever...

The first time that I arrived at this last heartbreaking move was last spring and I was so surprised getting there that I forgot what to do. Getting there and sticking the move is a whole different story tho, a year ago I sometimes couldn't even do the single move isolated.
This year, for the first time in my life a started with some training as my roommate luckily forced me to go on the spray wall with him once a week. This really helped me to build the missing body tension and I started feeling stronger than ever. About a month ago I felt ready to send bodywise. I knew its possible if the perfect conditions arrive. I just needed to be prepared at every time! I checked the forecast multiple times a day, hoping for temperatures between 13-15ยฐ and humidity under 50%, finally last sunday looked promising!

I already knew it a week before and tried to be as ready as possible, making sure to have a climbing partner, doing rest days, getting sleep, eating well, not hurting myself.

It rained a lot the days before and I was worried of some holds getting wet but everything was just perfect. I did my warm up routes as always, and got super psyched while two friends tried the route too. Then it was my time to climb, I knew I had possibly two tries this day if I fell early but i wanted to have it done. I felt ready and you only get condis like this a few days a year. After around 50 sessions I had the moves dialed I just needed to do them without the tiniest mistake. The crux felt so solid, arriving at that last hard move i knew I could do it, that was the best feeling.

For the first time in a hundred tries I felt strong enough to dominate the route. There are still some sketchy dynamic moves and a slab with tiny crimps at the end but I knew I could do it. My mind was going crazy at this last few meters, it just felt sureal to be up there without a fall, after so many days coming here, only trying this one route... doing the last moves in disbelief, trying to focus as u can definitely still mess it up! No idea what to do now, having my life goal done at age 23...๐Ÿ˜‚ onto the next one I guess.

Leo Bรธe completes Change P1 (9a+)
Leo Bรธe, who did his first, out of 13, 9aโ€™s last year, has sent Change P1 (9a+) in Flatanger. (c) Adri Martinez

โ€Double send with Josh and good support from the team! Took me around 5-6 days and done just before the end of the trip. I canโ€™t believe that Change is possible for me! Next year we will try the full line!! The grading is difficult, the boulder either suits you or not. For me it suited well, but still super hard from the start. Low end 9a+ could seem right for me personally.โ€

Loic Zehani FAโ€™s Taille land (9a)
Loic Zehani, who earlier in 2024 has sent 15 routes 9a to 9b, has done the FA of Taille Land (9a) in Baume canouille. โ€Nice ultra physical route bolted by Franรงois. About thirty moves in big overhang and rather homogeneous with two harder sections. I fell about eight times at the top with a very bad and hard mรฉthod, to redpoint directly with a mรฉthod found by my father just before. So a dozen attempts instead of four!โ€