NEWS

Adam Ondra flashes Peลกฤena ura (9a)
Adam Ondra has flashed Jernej Kruder's Peลกฤena ura (9a) in Sopota. โ€Freak moment to stick the crux move at the start! Thanks Jernej!!โ€

Jernej put it up in 2020 and he was on hand giving Adam beta, and he first showed him the dyno crux. Adam's flash was also the first repeat of this route.

"I didn't really try it, because I'm a bit injured at the moment. I forgot the exact feet, so I just tried the jumping position. He's just the best climber in the world...it's called progress. So for me, it was just incredible to watch. He said it was his second hardest flash after that 9a+.

In 2012, Ondra flashed Southern Smoke Direct (9a) and five years ago he also flashed Supercrackinette (9a+). The Czech has also flashed three 8c+'. There are four other climbers who have flashed 8c+; Alex Megos (3), Jakob Schubert, Daniel Woods and Seb Bouin.

Florian Wientjes does Floatin (8C+)
Florian Wientjes, who previously has sent 11 boulders 8C to 8C+, has made the first repeat of Ryuichi Murai's Floatin (8C+) in Mizugaki. The German saw videos of the line in 2020 and got really obsessed. "Back then it was just this amazing line but I did not dare to dream about it even after the first ascent. At the beginning of this year, it came more and more into my mind until I decided this year I want to climb this thing." (c) Xaver Louis

How did you prepare for the trip?
Floatin is one of these lines I really wanted to climb. So I decided in the first half of the year that I would go to Mizugaki. I did everything to make this trip possible. For preparation, I started with some basic strength training focusing on fingers and upper body and a lot of board climbing. The last 4 weeks before the trip it got more specific with a lot of campusboard training focusing on contact strength and pull speed.

How was the first sensation trying it?
The first time I grabbed the holds they felt way worse than I expected. I knew I had to give everything to make it possible. I also knew that I gave my very best in the preparation so I never thought that the move was impossible for me. The only thing that came to my mind was that I maybe would run out of time on this trip.

Can you tell us more about the process of projecting it?
In sessions 1-4 I mainly focused on the first move which is definitely the hardest move. I made a little progress every session starting from initiating the bad holds to getting more and more hight to reach the second hold. The second move felt easier and I was able to stick it in my second try. In session 5 I finally stuck the first move and did the second move but fell on the easy top part because I slipped. (The days before it rained a lot and I forgot to clean the top). That was a big bummer... but I knew I could do the move. After 15 min rest I tried it again and was able to link everything together. All in all, I had 19 days in Japan and 9 climbing days in Mizugaki. This trip was all about Floatin but I definitely have to come back to Japan for the more cultural part and to check out the climbing in the southern part of Japan.

Alizee Dufraisse does Kingda Ka (8B)
Alizee Dufraisse has sent Kingda Ka (8B) in Gottardo after projecting it for 13 sessions since the summer. The background of the 36-year-old, who almost never has climbed more than three times a week is very interesting. In 2003, she became the Youth World Champion but later she changed sports and in 2006 she became the French Champion in pole vaulting. Missing qualifying for the Olympics, she changed sports again and won the French Championship. Later in 2010, she got the bronze in the European Championship. Her resume also includes three 9a's and last year she sent Heritage 8B (+). Currenty, she is writing her PhD thesis in Sociology in regard to changes in professional climbing.

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
It is a very beautiful and inspiring boulder which is pretty scary. It has been very tricky for me to find out the beta. Some very balancy moves took like two months to solve. I prefer to invest my time in a boulder I would be proud to do. After like two months of trying it I suddenly found a way with the feet transition and then pretty fast could send it. As the snow was coming it was stressful and I am very happy to be able to do it before the pass closes.

Natalia Grossman is going to the 2024 Olympics
Natalia Grossman secured her Olympic ticket to Paris by winning the2023 Pan American Games in Santiago. Previously, Team USA had pocketed three Olympic spots which went to Jesse Grupper, Sam Watson and Piper Kelly. Watson and Kelly both secured spots in speed. Grossman, first won the Boulder round getting 84.3 points and 14.9 points ahead of Brooke Raboutou. When later, Grossman got 88.1 points in Lead, she secured her Paris ticket, although Raboutou was yet to climb. In the end, Raboutou was runner-up 7 points behind.
(c) Complete results
Grossman commented to IFSC: โ€œI feel just so grateful and proud of all the work I have put in. I changed a lot in this past couple of months, in my climbing and in my life, and to see it pay off feels really good. I tend to run really warm when Iโ€™m climbing, for some reason, which is funny. So I always have fans on, and even though it was pretty cold tonight, I still had three fans to keep my hands cold. Although Iโ€™ve put some pants on for the Lead route, because it got a little chilly!

My friend Oscar was holding his finger up, like, โ€˜First!โ€™, and I almost didnโ€™t believe it. I wanted to wait until I saw it, just because people tend to say things before they happenโ€ฆ it was a very surreal moment!โ€
(c) Lena Drapella/IFSC

Jesse Grupper secures an Olympic spot
Jesse Grupper won the Boulder & Lead in the Pan American Games in Santiago, meaning he secured his ticket to the Paris Olympics. The Lead expert was #4 in Boulder getting 69.4 points, which left the 27-year-old roughly 15 points behind Sean McColl, Sean Bailey and Zach Galla. "On M3 I actually forgot that [the] timer starts at five seconds, not three, so I totally thought that I timed out. It was really shocking to find out that I actually got the top!"

In his favoured discipline Lead he was dominant, making it to the third last hold with 92.1 points compared to the runner up Sean Bailey with 57.1 points. Third was Zach Galla another three points behind. Complete results (c) Lena Drapella/IFSC

Grupper said to IFSC: "It feels unreal, for sure, itโ€™s an incredible moment for me. Iโ€™ve dreamt about this since I was a little kid, and it is so meaningful to see it through to fruition and have it actually happen. I knew that I had some points to make up for from the Boulder round. I was proud of the Boulder round, honestly, I think Iโ€™ve pulled out some moves that I donโ€™t know if I would have been able to do a year ago, but I also wanted to fight as hard as I could on the Lead wall. Coming out, I took it one move at a time, I knew that every move would matter, especially on that headwall, and Iโ€™m really glad that I was able to pull that out and make it happen."

Mattรฉo Soulรฉ, 16, sends La guerre des Wolfs (9a+)
Mattรฉo Soulรฉ has done La guerre des Wolfs (9a+) in La verriรจre after projecting it for some 35 sessions. It is a link-up between La Guerre des Nerfs, which he sent last year, and the Black Wolf project, bolted by his dad.

"It's very hard both physically and mentally since the crux is at the top of the route. I would say it is an 8c+/9a start into a bad rest on a big inverted hold, followed by a crux which must be worth perhaps an 8A boulder. It's clearly the hardest route I've ever done and invested so much."

Can you tell us more about the Black Wolf project?
You have to do an 8c+ approach to get to the first crux which in my opinion is not far from an 8A+/B boulder, then you do an 8B boulder to get to a bad rest and then do the 8A boulder that I also did. This is the hardest route I have ever tried. I think it's at least 9b but possibly harder. It is 25 meters long.

Alex Totkova, 18, does Ora Estete (8c)
Alex Totkova, who last year won the Youth World Championship, has done Ora Estete (8c) in Vratsa, after four sessions of work. In 2020, at age 15, she sent Victimes del futur (9a) but later her focus has been competitions.

"I am super happy that I am enjoying rock climbing again and I am super excited for what will come, as I get slowly in shape. The route was bolted by my coach Fazata [in the picture] and the FA was from him last year. I am really grateful for the send, because on this day I felt, tired so I had to make it with no mistakes, which is my priority to work on. (Trying to make the moves more technically rather than by force.)"

Can you tell us more about your cooperation with your trainer, Ivailo?
He is my coach for 7-8 years. We train together several times a week. He is like my father for climbing. He is the person who motivates me not only by talking but by his own decisions and actions.

Why have you chosen to not compete in Laval?
We decided to pause the comps and be fresh for the next season.

As autumn arrives, we fondly recall our summer adventures with Tobi Ebner. Join us on a journey through Germany and Austria, conquering crags and sharing stories with fellow Wild Country athletes. Watch the video to relive these incredible achievements:
Jakob Kronberger in Salzburger Land: El Conjuro (9a+?)
Moritz Welt in Frankenjura: Lazarus (9a+)
Birte Gutmayer in Ettringen: Fegefeuer (trad) Chri Kappacher in Steinplatte: Sleepwalker (8b)
Don't miss this unforgettable adventure! ๐Ÿš—๐Ÿง—โ€โ™‚๏ธ

Jakob Schubert sends Qui (9a+)
Jakob Schubert reports on Instagram that he has sent Qui (9a+) at the Geisterschmiedwand. The Austrian projected it last year, and he sent it on his second go this year. It was put up in 1996 by Stefan Fรผrst, as an 8c+, and Adam Ondra did the first repeat in 2019 suggesting an upgrade to 9a+ and he commented, "possibly something has broken, but very possibly it has not got much harder due to breaks." Later Alfons Dornauer and Roland Hemetzberger sent it confirming Ondra's upgrade. (c) Misha P

IFSC has presented the competition calendar 2024, which differs from all previous years due to the Olympics. The calendar comprises of five Boulder and six Lead World Cups but there is a big risk that the interest will be relatively low from the best athletes. The two events scheduled that will likely attract the largest number of top athletes participating are the Olympic Qualification Series events in Shanghai and Budapest.

9-10 April, IFSC World Cup in Shanghai, China โ€“ Boulder;
12 -14 April, IFSC World Cup in Wujiang, China โ€“ Lead, Speed;
3-5 May, IFSC World Cup in Salt Lake City, USA โ€“ Boulder, Speed;
16-19 May, Olympic Qualifier in Shanghai, China - BoulderLead
20 -23 June, Olympic Qualifier in Budapest, Hungary - BoulderLead
26-30 June, IFSC World Cup in Innsbruck, Austria โ€“ Boulder, Lead;
5-10 July, Olympic Games in Paris, France - BoulderLead
12-14 July, IFSC World Cup in Chamonix, France โ€“ Lead, Speed;
17-19 July, IFSC World Cup in Brianรงon, France โ€“ Lead, Speed;
6-7 September, IFSC World Cup in Koper, Slovenia โ€“ Lead;
20-22 September, IFSC World Cup in Prague, Czech Republic โ€“ Boulder; and
2-6 October, IFSC World Cup in Seoul, South Korea โ€“ Boulder, Lead, Speed.