NEWS

After the final, the IFSC results did show that 16 year old Oceanina Mackenzie was #4. Then the french team made a protest saying she did an incorrect start at problem three, which was approved, meaning she lost her zone and dropped to #6. If Oceanina would have stopped trying after she got her zone, she would have been given at least one more try after the competition. One problem with such late calls is that in theory, a person like Oceanina could have topped the boulder and possibly advanced to the podium. Judges make mistake and if such situation will happen in Tokyo in could mean an anticlimax. Would if saying that any protest must be handed in within five minutes and then automatically an aster-ix (*) would be shown next to the result. It is super strange for everyone involved that the current ranking is changed after the medal ceremony and after the live-streaming is stopped.

Extrema Cura 8c by Pietro Bassotto (55)
Pietro Bassotto reports on Insta that he has done Extrema Cura in Gravere as his first 8c. Kind of impressive being 55 years old, video. Pietro started to climb more than 30 years ago and in 1989 he was #13 in a Speed World Cup. In 2010, being 47 years old, he did his first 8b+. In the last six months he has done four 8A's and two 8A+'. Lately, he has also done his first 8a onsight. When it comes to comps, nowadays he prefers boulders and last year he won la Tout ร€ Blocs Tab among the veterans. "The reasons for my improvement are basically three: 1. I climb more in comparison to when had small children. 2. I am always very motivated. I am lucky to have a son "Davide" who climbs on 8c+/9a and 8B/+. He pushes me, especially when we train and climb together. 3. I only train the maximum strength to have the stimulus always high. I do pull-ups, I train on the wall of my house and I do Boulder outdoors.

Based on a poll with 300+ unique votes, who will win in Meiringen? 24 % Adam Ondra 18 % Tomoa Narasaki 16 % Jernej Kruder 12 % Jongwon Chon 07 % Jakob Schubert 06 % Alex Megos 15 % Others

Jakob Schubert ended #43 and did not make it to the Top-20 semi-final. Japan participated with ten guys and their worst results was #30 and in total, seven guys made it to the semifinal. World Champion Kai Harada was #21. Nathaniel Coleman from USA and Nathan Philips GBR won the two groups. Other than that Adam Ondra and Tomoa Narasaki were runner-ups in their groups and Slovenia had three guys Top-13. The semifinal starts on Saturday 11.00 followed by the finals at 19.00. Complete results

Coup De Grรขce 9a by Sean Bailey
Sean Bailey reports on Insta that he has done Coup De Grรขce 9a. "All time dream line." (c) Keenan Takahashi In Meiringen, Sean was #59 and the next weekend he is competing in Speed and Boulder in Moscow.

Seven guys from Japan Top-10 just confirm that their domination in the sport is about getting unique. If Japan would have been allowed to send 50 male, it just might have been that they would have had 12-15 in the semi final. Their strong positive trend and the reasons for this have been discussed in several articles, see above. Team spirit and playful training focusing on technical challenges during endless hours instead of hard physical training seems for fewer hours seems to be the recipe. My best example of this was from Munich in 2017. Immediately after the final, the whole Japanese team stepped up on the scene and started trying the boulders in their sneakers. This kept going for 45 minutes and everyone was screaming "Gamba" and laughing until they started bleeding. At the same time, the rest of the gang was already down in the basement for the after party. Several coaches have told me the same story and that goes also for the Cafe Craft guys. They told me that they have never ever seen guys playing around in their gym for so many hours. In the end they started to follow them around and even after seven hours, the spirit was the same. The extreme domination by Japan is a risk for IFSC and possibly it is time to start adapt to the Japanese mentality in order to catch up, juat like Adam Ondra and Jongwon Chon have done.

Ondra superior in the 9a+ stats
99boulders have updated their 9a+ stats and the graph shows how superior Adam Ondra is. In total, their are some 80 male and three female who have done at least one 9a+ or harder. Interestingly, you can then almost divide by four per each grade to get to one 9c in the top of the pyramid. Further more, this factor of 4 continues also on the 9a grade with some 350 guys having done at least one 9a. The most popular 9a+' are La Rambla with 26 ascents, followed by Papichulo 19 and Biographie 17.

The Story... 8C by Leon Fraunholz (18) and Giani Clement
Leon Fraunholz and Giani Clement have both done their first 8C, The story of 2 worlds Cresciao. (c)Felix Hoffman and (c) Hannes Kutza Leon: "Last year I have finished school and since then I am travelling around with my van. In case of that time is not a limited factor while projecting, thats the main reason why I took the decision to try something harder. Since I stopped competing I put my focus on rockclimbing. From that point on I am trying to climb outdoors as much as possible. Giani and I tried Story very often together so it was extra special that we have sent it in the same session, congrats again Giani!" Giani: "I tried the Dagger jan/Feb 2018 and scored after 10 sessions on it at the end of February 2018. In December 2019 I ventured to the sitstart. It took me 12 sessions to link the start moves into the dagger and in total about 35 sessions within 4 months to complete it. I tried the Boulder especially with my friend Martin Keller. Together we worked out the Boulder and motivated each other."

Three Degrees of Separation 9a (+) by Lucien Martinez
Lucien Martinez has made the second repeat, after Adam Ondra, of Chris Sharma's Three Degrees of Separation 9a+ at Cรฉรผse. The name relates to three extreme dynos linking the route. Video of Lucien working the dynos. (c) Jan Novak