NEWS

Sara Gearhart does No More Greener Grasses (8A+)
Sara Gearhart, who the last 18 months has done a dozen 8Aโ€™s and five 8A+โ€™, has sent No More Greener Grasses (8A+) at Mount Blue Sky.

โ€So cool to come back to a boulder after a few seasons and feel how much you've changed as a climber. Dry fired and hit the rock the go before the send. More proud of myself for getting up and trying again than anything else. As far as grade, seems to fit the girls better but we take those! Happy to have done such a beautiful classic.โ€

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
I tried the boulder in Fall of 2021 and thought it was hard, I wasn't able to do the crux move. Coming back this year it felt really different and much easier. I think this boulder fits my size well and the beta I used did not feel too difficult in the end. Felt very lucky to get a good weather window after the past few weeks in the alpine (it's been so rainy/snowy!) Projecting this boulder is very special because there are always other women working on it :)

What are your summer plans?
I'll be here in Colorado for a few weeks if the weather improves! I'd love to spend time working on evil backwards and some new projects! If it stays really rainy I'll go back to salt lake city to train for the summer :) it's been hard in Colorado since I work full time and the evenings have been very wet/rainy. Fingers crossed!

You manage to crush boulders whilst working full-time?
I work as a federal consultant for health care improvement and quality measurement! It's very interesting and I enjoy it but it is very time consuming. I wish I had mornings free at least!! That would be amazing :) but it's a pretty good balance overall.

Natalia Grossman wins overall for the third year in a row
Natalia Grossman, who started the season being #8 and #11 due to having suffered stomach problems for months due to food poisoning, won her third consecutive Boulder World Cup overall. Grossman skipped one event as actually all the Top-6 did but Oriane Bertone, who skipped the last two. Overall, team USA was superior having three girls in the Top-10. Complete results

Garnbret superior with 4 flashes in Innsbruck
Janja Garnbret, who missed the three first WC events due to a broken toe, and then got the silver in her comeback in Prague, flashed all four final boulders in Innsbruck in a superior style. Runner-up was Natalia Grossman who flashed the two first and was one second late to top the third boulder. Miho Nonaka got the bronze and she also flashed the two first boulders. Complete results (c) Jan Virt/IFSC

Garnbret commented to IFSC, โ€ I'm grateful, grateful for my team, because they were always with me in the past few months, a lot of tears, a lot of crying, a lot of tough moments, doubts, negative thoughts, they were always there. So I'm really grateful for them.

I received many messages from people supporting me, and it warmed my heart. Today I was just happy, I enjoyed climbing so much, and I cried when I topped the fourth boulder. I did feel relieved, because I thought I almost forgot how to compete, but I guess I didn't. And I flashed the slab as well!

I don't really pay attention to the other competitors. I always try to be the best version of myself, and to be stronger every year than the year before, but I do feel that the field is getting stronger. That is why we compete. You want to win when everybody has their best day.

With a stronger field there is more fun, and more challenges. Sometimes the boulders in finals are a bit too easy, but I think that tonight we had the perfect round."

Brixen female finalists struggle in Innsbruck
In comparison to the Brixen World Cup, all Top-10 underperformed relatively speaking, in the first two rounds in Innsbruck. Natalia Grossman, who won in Brixen, was fifth in the Innsbruck semifinal. Chaehyun Seo, #2 in Brixen, was #19 in Innsbruck and Stasa Gejo dropped from #3 to #15. Out of the other seven Top-10 in Brixen, only four participated and they were on average around #30. On the other hand, Futaba Ito, who was #45 in Brixen, is #2 after the semifinal. Four of the six finalists in Innsbruck did not participate in Brixen, and Oriane Bertone skipped the last Boulder World Cup which would have given her a shot at winning the overall, as out-placing Grossman in Innsbruck, more or less, would have given her the title. Complete results.

Elnaz Rekabi was #23 scoring 35 and was very close to making it to the final as she had her hands on one top.

Reinhold Scherer: Tyrolean Rock Star with a Lasting Legacy
Advertorial: Reinhold Scherer is a legendary figure in Tirolโ€™s rock climbing scene. One of the true pioneers of the sport, he made a name for himself climbing some of the hardest routes in the region before making the switch to coaching and supporting some of the worldโ€™s best young sport climbers on their way to multiple World Cup and World Championships medals.

And as if that wasnโ€™t enough, โ€œReiniโ€, as he is known by all, is also the man behind the Kletterzentrum Innsbruck, one of the biggest and most modern indoor rock climbing centres in the world. Climber. Coach. Businessman. We met in the mountains with this man of many talents and endless energy to find out what makes him tick and how his priorities in life and on the rock have changed over the last 30 years. More info about Reini.

Youtube shorts: Toby Roberts tops out and wins in Brixen
Youtube shorts: Toby Roberts had to top out the final Boulder in Brixen in order to advance from outside the podium and win gold. Dohyun Lee, who had just made the zone, was in the lead. On Toby's third attempt, he makes the zone, which the two leaders from the semi, Tomoa Narasaki and Sorato Anraku had not managed to do. Then the biggest boulder fight of his comp career begins Youtube shorts filmed by his father Tristan. Toby spends over one minute on the wall and tops out to a roaring crowd with 15 seconds remaining.

Seb Bouin shares some thoughts on his year long climbing spree
Sebastien Bouin had a record breaking 2022, doing the FA of DNA (9c), Suprรชme Jumbo Love (9b+), Nordic Marathon (9b/+) and he also repeated Change (9b+). Add to that another ten 9a's and harder over the last year, making the 30-year-old one of the undisputed champions of redpointing.

What does a normal climbing week look like at home and as well as during a trip?
At home, I usually climb outdoors during the day and train in the gym during the evening. It permits me to keep my motivation up and improve my physical capacity. I usually do 2 days on, one day off. On a trip, it's a bit different, I try to be as fresh as possible to do my best in the projects. I can train if needed, but I will keep under control my shape, and try to not be as much tired [over fatigued].

What is it that inspires you the most in climbing?
Finding a beautiful and hard project in a stunning place is what I am climbing for. I am always searching for this.

How many routes have you bolted and made the FA of?
30 ? 40 ? [I] don't really remember all.

Which of your FA's do you think are most likely to become must-do-classics?
All the routes in Pic St Loup and La Ramirole I think. All these routes are quite amazing in a stunning place. La Rage d'Adam (9b+) is maybe the favourite because it's the only one which is not a marathon. (c) Julia Cassou from 2019.

What are your 2023 plans and ambitions?
]which he sent last week], Norway, Italy, Spain...

What advice would you give to upcoming youngsters?
Keep dreaming about your project, and keep your motivation high, it will bring you a long way.

Ultra Instinct (8C) by Will Bosi
William Bosi has repeated Ultra Instinct (8C) at Forest Rock and here is the video. The FA was done this spring by Orrin Coley after working it for three years. The 24-year-old is a superior #1 in the 8a ranking game, his 12 399 points is the highest ever achieved on 8a since we started with the scorecards in 2000.

Can you tell us more about UI and the potential sit start as well as continuing the roof?
It took 4 sessions in total, one last year where I did the higher start. Then one where it was mostly wet and I couldnโ€™t really try. Then finally to redpoint sessions last week. Itโ€™s a cool boulder as itโ€™s just big pure power moves! There is definitely potential for a sit start and Iโ€™m hoping to try that soon but I think it will make it a lot harder! You could also continue into the roof I think but it would start getting way too high

Cameron Hรถrst FA's Martial Law (9a+)
Cameron Hรถrst, who made his first out of nine 9a's in 2019 at age 18, has made the FA of Martial Law (9a+) at Robber's Roost. In the 8a ranking game, the 22-year-old is #13.

"Martial Law is a direct, harder start to an existing route called Arrested Development (8c+). The direct start was bolted/prepped by Andy Raether and Joe Kinder. A couple of weeks ago Joe invited me down to Vegas to try this Martial Law project with him. After a couple of sessions on the climb, I got super psyched and felt like I could do it with some effort."

It is a super bouldery and resistant route about 20-move, nonstop, intro section straight into the crux of arrested development. The grade seems to feel like a super super hard 9a or 9a+. Im deciding to propose 9a+ because I feel like it is harder than the 9a/+ I did (Bone Tomahawk). I also discussed it with Joe (who has done numerous 9a+ FAโ€™s) and we both feel it is of the 9a+ standard. Getting to have the FA of Martial Law is a huge milestone in my climbing career. I am super thankful to Joe and Andy for welcoming me to try it!"


Today, he also sent Dad Bod (9a) at the same crag, calling it 8c+.
โ€Believe this is the 4th ascent? The Way Andy and Owen did it is def 9a. However, in the first (hardest) crux there is an obvious right knee scum that makes it V9/10 rather than V12. It is way too obvious not to use, so it will be the way people do it moving forward. I propose the climb should be checked at 8c+.โ€