NEWS

Oliana partly destroyed by fire
Svana Bjarnason reports on Insta, "Climbing wise itโ€™s hard to analyse the damages. To sum up: the left part of the wall has been severely altered (from the route โ€œMichiโ€), pre-placed quickdraws burned and many holds are now lying on the ground. The first layer of rock is destroyed, itโ€™s breaking off just by touching it. It would need massive cleaning and rebolting. But the routes will never be the same again."

At the same time, she says that the main wall to the right look ok but some holds have broken off. The plan is to return to the site in September to try to secure and rebuild the site and she has started a Crow funding campaign where several famous climbers have donated up to Euro 200.

So in practice, many routes have been destroyed and might never be climbable again?
No, most of the routes seem to be ok but itโ€™s impossible to know for sure, weโ€™ll have to test the holds because there might be micro-cracks, which means holds can break off at any time. But On the main sector, there are 6 routes left of the route called Mishi (so 7 including this one) that were severely altered. I donโ€™t know if weโ€™ll manage to do something with it or if the rock is too damaged. In any case, it will never be the same route again. And thereโ€™s another sector left of the main wall that also seems to be destroyed (16 routes). Iโ€™m usually not climbing there but there are easier routes there and some people do climb it.

Most of the main sector doesnโ€™t look that impacted but still, we found some holds on the ground, for example, a big chunk of the route ยซ Pacha Mama ยป fell from 25-30m. What hasnโ€™t broken off yet might someday, it seems the rock has been a bit fragilized. As long as we havenโ€™t pulled on some holds we canโ€™t know for sure

Variant 8C by Taylor McNeil
Taylor McNeill, who previously has done four 8C'd and one 8C+, has done Drew Ruana's Variant (8B+) in Mt Evans.

"I did the easier start a few days ago, We can build you v14 (8B+). After I worked the moves for the harder start. Sorted it out fairly quick and got pretty lucky. Hurt my knee last summer on this one, so pretty stoked to come back healthy and finish it up. Two days last summer and two days this year to do WCBY, got lucky and did variant my next sesh. Probably the better line and start. Insomniac (8C+) is the hardest link to be made in the cave, and Iโ€™m stoked to put some effort into that next"

What are the differences in difficulties for the three lines?
Wcby starts with a 7A, then the crux sequence which is about 8B, followed by a 7C+ exit. Variant adds a 7C+/8A straight into the 8B crux and finishes the same. Insomniac climbs an 8B into the start jug of Wcby. So itโ€™s 8B to 8B+

Japan dominated the qualification in the Innsbruck Boulder World Cup. In total, they got four female and six male competitors into the Top-20 semifinals. Yoshiyuki Ogata and Futaba Ito were the only ones able to flash all five problems. Winners of the other groups were Rei Kawamata also from Japan and Stasa Gejo from Serbia. Japan impressively had eight male contestants in the Top-23. Team USA also had five athletes making it to the semis. The most surprising negative sensation was that Oriane Bertone was #33. Complete results

The male semifinal will take place on Thursday at 1 pm followed by the final at 7.45 pm. Then on Friday, the female semifinal will run following the same schedule. Here is how to watch the Innsbruck World Cup.

The Crew 8c+ by Delaney Miller
Delaney Miller reports on Insta that she has done The Crew (8c+) in Rifle (CO). (c) James Lucas

"The route meant a lot to me. I started working on it last year and thought it would go down easily. Then I had a few minor injuries come up that really hindered my progress. I spent the winter recovering and rebuilding, and I'm damn proud of myself for making this breakthrough. A huge thanks to everyone who supported me in the process, and especially to Chris Knuth for having the vision. I've climbed one other route of the grade, Solid Gold in Utah, but this one was on another level."

The 27-year-old has been an active competition climber for ten years until 2018. In 2015, she had her best year being Top-13 four times in the World Cup. Three months ago, she published an article in Climbing focusing on the competition career. "It's an honest reflection of when you chase a dream and don't quite succeed, but ultimately walk away with a trove of memories". In November 2020, she did her first 8c+, Solid Gold but no media has reported it although she is the Digital Editor of Climbing Magazine.

Why did you think Solid Gold was so much easier?
It was more my style, with more sustained climbing and worse rests. I did that in November 2020. The Crew has a series of hard boulder problems separated by kneebar rests, and I'm really bad at kneebars. I'd also venture to say that The Crew is just harder for the grade, although I don't actually have the experience climbing 14c's (8c+) to say that with any kind of authority.

IOC has published the Paris 2024 qualification process: Top-3 in the World Championships (Bern 2023), 5 Continental winners and the Top-10 from an Olympic qualifying series during March to June 2024. There will also be one host country and one Universality quota place per gender. In practice, as the USA will probably fulfil their quota places and likely no Universality climber will make it to the Olympic series, it is most likely that the Top-12 from the series will get an Olympic ticket.

Only invited athletes, based on the 2023 results, will be allowed to compete in the Olympic series, and there will be a quota of max participants per gender and nation. No specific details for these series have been given: "Exact procedure to be determined." The tricky part of the formula is the max quota and the possibility that the USA, Japan and some European countries fulfil their quota after the Continental Championships, which take place in 2023.

Another big dilemma is what will happen with the World Cup 2024 as most of the best climbers will focus on the Olympics even more than before Tokyo 2020. There are many tough decisions that have to be made, and there will also be two zones in bouldering and a totally different scoring system in the Olympic qualifications compared to the current World Cups and WcH format.

Resisting Arrest 9a FA by Kinder (42) and C Hรถrst (21)
Joel Kinder has done the FA of Resisting Arrest (9a) in Robbers Roost which Cameron Hรถrst repeated ten minutes later. Andy Raether bolted it in 2010 and then Joel took it over 2019. One month ago he invited some friends to try it out and in the beginning they thought it might be 9a+ (c) JP Melville

"I started trying it and realized that this was not specifically my story. Normally with the first ascents and routes, I put up I like to see them through on my own and finish the story. But this climb was different as Andy had bolted it. I had prepped it and it was more or less at a very approachable spot which made it a great opportunity to include everybody that was interested in trying the thing. And the word spread fast as the route is such high quality. There were a few of us grouped up sharing beta and sessioning together. Itโ€™s like when you go bouldering and youโ€™re all climbing on the same thing together and thereโ€™s such high energy. I feel like with sport climbing and especially first ascents you donโ€™t get that vibe much.

Cam and I are both ultra-focused and we feed off of each other. Iโ€™ve climbed a lot with Cam in the past year. He is seriously one of my favourite people to climb with. Heโ€™s young and strong as f-ck and I learn a ton from him. But he also learns from me because Iโ€™m an old guy with all of the experience. Ha ha, itโ€™s so classic.

Iโ€™m really grateful to be able to put as much time into my Climbing as I have been able to. Iโ€™m older now but whatโ€™s weird is Iโ€™m climbing better than I ever have in my entire life. And I am sitting here with a giant question mark over my head as to why? All I know dude is that Iโ€™m having a good time, I love climbing and I donโ€™t have to answer to anyone (except my wife hehe). That feels f-cking good."

Kinematix 9a by Jules Marchaland
Jules Marchaland, who did his first 9a one month ago, has done his third, Kinematix in Gorges du Loup. "I'm very happy to do this route which is a connection between Total Eclatch a short 8c+ very physical, and Honk a 8b+ very resistant! The whole of the two-section is a very hard resistance effort! I took two sessions to readjust the movements before being able to put good runs and after three falls in the last three movements, I did it! So happy to do it quite quickly!"

Interesting is that he did his first 8c+ at age 16 in 2017 but then his motivation dropped and he did not do any hard routes until 2021. "I have been training very hard for several months and the work has paid off. I knew I had a good level and I am very happy to see the results of the training."

What are your next plan?
Yesterday I went to spot the movements in "Just two fixโ€ a 9a/+ that Pierre Le Cerf did last summer! It's really not easy and really very long. We'll see what happens after a few sessions but it's not for now.