NEWS

Oblivion (9a) by Marco Mรผller
Marco Mรผller, who previously has done eight 9a's, has sent in .

"The route is a linkup between 'Alpenbitter' and 'Renardo Rules', which creates a traverse with a new crux. I think it took me 2 sessions to do all the moves. The crux is going from a tricky heelhook to a bad 2-finger pocket to another pocket. It is super body tension and body position dependent. (I also couldn't do the original kneebar beta, as my torso is a tiny bit too short.) I then started trying from the ground and could almost always reach the traverse. But the key was to get there fresh in order to get into the right body positions. After multiple sessions, I finally stuck the last crux move and kept it together to the end."

Schubert, Anraku and Avezou tied #1 in the Lead qualis
125 men participated in the male Lead qualification and Jakob Schubert (AUT) won group A by getting the highest on both routes. Sam Avezou (FRA) and Sorato Anraku, 16, (JPN) were tied winners in group B. Sean McColl got his best result of the season by being #13, in his 9th World Championships appearance. No other sensational results meaning all big names made it to the semifinal. Interesting is that Japan did not let their #4, 5, 7 and 11 in the overall World Cup participate. Instead, they have probably focused on their athletes having the best chances in the Combined. (c) Lena Drapella/IFSC
Complete results

Sorato Anraku only one to top all four in the semi and Mawem runner-up
Sorato Anraku (JPN) started out last in the semi, as he had won the qualification, and sent all four boulders in great style. The 16-year-old seems to be on another level as he has done throughout the whole season. By doing so he kicked out his teammate Yoshiyuki Ogata from the final, who had just sent Adam Ondra (CZE) out of the final. Both of them including also Yannick Flohรฉ (GER), in 9th position, were all very close to sending one more boulder creating a very exciting semifinal.

Olympian Mickael Mawem (FRA), who has not made any finals in the WC in 2023, was runner-up. โ€œThey werenโ€™t hard boulders, not hard, not physical, not small holds. You just need to climb well and have good timing and thatโ€™s what I think I have, so thatโ€™s cool, thatโ€™s good.

My goal is qualification for the Olympics and now I am in final so that is good. First step was qualification, second was semi-finals and the third step is a medal.

Iโ€™m happy because I think Iโ€™m strong mentally for the finish, the hands, for the last move on the slab. I climb a lot on the slab and doing a lot of coordination the last month and Iโ€™m happy now, not just because of the result but the way I am climbing.โ€


Kokoro Fujii (JPN) was third followed by Mejdi Schalck (FRA), Lee Dohyun (KOR) and Nicolai Uznik (AUT). It should be mentioned that Shauna Coxsey did her debut as a commentator and did a very nice job explaining interesting details. Complete results

Five Slovenians to the semi and Garnbret tops both qualis
There were 100 women competing in the Bern Lead qualification today. Janja Garnbret (SLO) won one group by topping both routes in full control. Number one in the other group was Ai Mori (JPN). Three climbers were tied in third; Brooke Raboutou (USA), Laura Rogora (ITA) and Seo Chaehyun (KOR). In total, Slovenia got all their five girls to the semifinal and France four.

Natalia Grossman was #27 and just missed the semifinal. Oriane Bertone, who like Grossman, is one of the favourites to get a medal and an Olympic ticket in the Combined, was 11th. The french comments to IFSC. (c) Jan Virt

โ€œIt went pretty well. I wasnโ€™t expecting a lot as I havenโ€™t really been training enough I donโ€™t think to be one of the top ones in Lead. I was hopeful. I really wanted to do well because it is the World Championships and Iโ€™ve trained a lot, but I just climbed and it went very well as I happened to be above the bar of 40. I was 40+, and that was a big achievement for me. Itโ€™s the first time I think I have done it in a comp. It was not too pumpy, there were some boulder moves, and it was a lot of fun.

I class myself as mainly a boulderer as I train much more in that, but Iโ€™m starting to feel much more like a Lead climber now because Iโ€™m training a lot. I would say Iโ€™m a combined athlete.โ€

Marine Thevenet does Steppenwolf (8B)
Marine Thevenet, who has completed over 90 boulders 8A and harder, has done Steppenwolf (8B) in Magic Wood. The former lawyer has just started her own business as a sports manager to help climbers and outdoor athletes to find sponsors. (c) Clement Lechaptois

โ€I tried Steppenwolf 2 sessions 2 years ago. At that time, I did some promising attempts :) This year I was really psyched to come back to Magic Wood to finish it since we didn't have the chance to climb in MW last year. I was curious to see if I had made some progress or not!

The first session this year was disastrous! I had a finger injury in April and I was not able to crimp at 100% with my right hand, but I naively believed that maybe I could compensate with something else ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™€๏ธ Magic Wood quickly reminded me how strong in crimps you should be to send boulders haha! But being less in shape allowed me to find an easier beta for the end than the one I did some years ago. So I came back home with frustration and motivation to come back stronger with a totally fixed finger ๐Ÿ˜ˆ We came back for a short trip of 4 days in mid-July and, this time, I was able to climb at my best :)โ€

Monkey Wedding (8C) by Austin Hoyt, 19,
Austin Hoyt, who previously has sent six 8B+, has done Monkey Wedding (8C) in Rocklands.

โ€All in all Monkey Wedding took me about eight days to piece together on this a little more than a month long trip. I tried it the second day I climbed in Rocklands for the first time, I quickly unlocked all but two moves in a short session. The second day on it was the same situation just working through moves again, finally on the third session I found a sequence that worked for me did all the moves! I ended up going with the original beta that Fred, Paul, and Daniel all do with a little extra small left hand to slide into. On session four and five I managed to fall on the last move four times! Slowly it became more of a mental battle. Come session eight, my last fresh day trying the boulder and I managed to send it! Couldnโ€™t have done it without Bryce Viola!โ€

What is your climbing background?
I began climbing about 11 years ago at High Exposure Climbing in Northvale New Jersey, and I still climb there today! Ever since starting Iโ€™ve been obsessed and likely climb five days a week. Training mostly focuses on board climbing, weight lifting, and a lot of projecting! Luckily Iโ€™m here in Africa with long time friend and training partner Adam Shahar, heโ€™s insanely strong and going to rack up an insane tick list himself! Weโ€™ve pushed each other since day one, without the very friendly competition I donโ€™t know if either of us would ever be where we are now.

Japan dominate the male boulder qualis in Bern
The World Championships in Bern started today with the menโ€™s boulder qualification. Yoshiyuki Ogata and the 16-year-old wonderkid Sorato Anraku, both from Japan, won their respectively groups, doing all five boulders. Runner-ups were Yannick Flohe (GER) and Sam Avezou (FRA) followed by another three from team Japan. It can be mentioned that also France did get five males to the semifinal. (c) Jan Virt/IFSC

Adam Ondra just barely made it to the semi by being #19 with two tops. Overall, 130 males participated and basically there were no big sensational results.

Yannick commented to IFSC, โ€It was pretty good. I did all five boulders. I did the two slabs, and this year I havenโ€™t done any slabs in the World Cups so Iโ€™m happy. I tried to have a little break after the last World Cups and have a good training block to refocus, I think that helps a lot, because there was a lot of competitions and after Villars I was pretty โ€˜comp burned outโ€™ so some structured training helped me to get back to feeling good, and I am feeling good right now.โ€

The World Championships schedule and stats
Here is the schedule for the World Championships in Bern where the medalists in the Combined Lead/Boulder will get a ticket to the Paris Olympics. In total, there will be just over 250 participants in both Boulder and Lead. IFSC has published the stats; A total of 428 athletes are registered to compete at Bern 2023 โ€“ 236 male and 192 female โ€“ setting a record for the highest number of climbers participating at a World Championships."


SCHEDULE AUGUST 1 - 12
1st 09:00 - MEN'S BOULDER QUALIFICATION
2nd 11:00 - WOMEN'S LEAD QUALIFICATION
3rd 09:00 - MEN'S LEAD QUALIFICATION & 16:00 WOMEN'S BOULDER QUALIFICATION
4th 10:00 - MEN'S BOULDER SEMI & 18:30 MEN'S BOULDER FINAL
5th 10:00 - WOMEN'S BOULDER SEMI & 18:30 WOMEN'S BOULDER FINAL
6th 10:00 - WOMEN'S/MEN'S LEAD SEMI & 18:30 LEAD FINAL

9th 09:00 WOMEN'S COMBINED SEMI BOULDER & 13.00 MEN'S COMBINED SEMI BOULDER & 20:30 SEMI LEAD
11th 19:00 WOMEN'S BOULDER & LEAD FINAL
12th 16:00 MEN'S BOULDER & LEAD FINAL