In 2016, the International Olympic Committee voted听to include听climbing in the 2020 Olympics. But听when it听announced that it would听combine听the three main forms of competitive climbing鈥攕peed, boulder, and sport鈥攊nto a single format and offer only one set of medals, many听climbers were understandably apprehensive.
To get a better understanding of the听format and听how climbers qualify for听the Olympics in the first place, we talked to the chief executive officer of , Marc Norman.
The Format
The combined format requires every climber to compete in all three disciplines. Twenty men and twenty women will earn spots, and each country has a maximum allowance of two athletes per gender. Norman says that athletes will first complete in听speed, then boulder, and finally sport.
Speed
Speed climbing is the most controversial style听补苍诲 is basically a 15-meter (49.2-foot) vertical race. Two competitors go head to head on a standardized听route; the fastest to the top wins. Speed walls around the world are standardized,听all using the same amount and the same placement of holds. A speed wall will be the same in Beijing as听in Boston; this way, climbers can train on the exact route they鈥檒l be climbing at the Olympics.听When the IOC originally announced it would include speed, Adam Ondra, arguably the best climber in the world, told Black Diamond that听speed climbing 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 have much in common with the climbing philosophy, in my opinion.鈥
On the other hand, speed is fast-paced and exciting for spectators. The current world record is 5.48 seconds for men and 7.32 seconds for women.
Boulder
Route setters create a set of three unique and challenging boulder problems on a wall that鈥檚 four meters (13.12 feet) high. Each athlete has four minutes to complete each climb and will be听scored on either how far they get or how many tries it takes them to complete it. The boulder problems are scored separately and combined at the end.听
Sport
Each athlete attempts to lead-climb (clipping in a rope as they climb) a route on a wall over 15 meters (49.2 feet) high. The climbers have six minutes to reach the top or get as high as they can without falling.
What Will It Take to Win?
An athlete鈥檚 overall score will be the final ranking in each discipline multiplied together; the lowest score wins. For example, if a climber finishes听sixth in speed, second in bouldering, and third in sport, their end score would be 36, which would be pretty good. On the other hand, if a climber got 17th in speed, first听in bouldering, and fourth听in sport, their end score would be 68. In this scoring system, it pays to be fairly good in all three events听rather than exceptional听in just one. Norman says the athletes will have to be really good in at least two disciplines and decent in the third to have a chance at winning.
Who Will Be Climbing in the Olympics?
Norman predicts that most of the climbers will be younger听up-and-comers. He thinks the average age will be around 21. That鈥檚 because many young climbers are all-arounders, whereas some of the biggest names in climbing鈥Tommy Caldwell,听Alex Honnold, 鈥攁re hyperfocused on one discipline. Honnold told , 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 even be able to qualify [for the Olympics].鈥 Even though Honnold is the best free soloist alive, he doesn鈥檛 climb in competitions at all.
How Do Climbers Get into the 2020 Olympics?
In general, there are three main ways for climbers to snag one of the 20 spots听per gender听in the Olympics. One female and one male spot are reserved for Japan, the host nation. One more spot for each gender is picked by what鈥檚 called the tripartite commission鈥攖he national Olympic committees, International Olympic Committee, and international federations听decide to听give an entry to a nation that might need additional support. An important thing to remember is that every climber in the Olympics must compete in all three disciplines, so all the qualifying competitions use a combined ranking from speed, sport, and bouldering.
The next seven places go to the top climbers in each gender from the Combined World Championship听on August 20 and 21 in Tokyo. If one country has more than two athletes in the top seven, then only the top two will get invitations and the additional invitations will extend to the next ranking athlete from a different country.
The next six spots will come from the top performers in the World Cup, a series of international competitions running from April to October.听The top 20 athletes from the World Cup will enter the International听Federation of听Sport Climbing听Olympic Qualifying Event from November 28 to December 1 in Toulouse, France. The top six ranked competitors for听each gender will then move on the Olympics.
The last five spots will come from the first-place winner from five continental championships specifically held for Olympic qualifications. These championships will take place throughout spring 2020 in听Johannesburg,听Moscow,听Sydney,听Los Angeles, and Morioka, Japan.
Who Will Be Climbing on Team USA?
USA Climbing chose听climbers based on the results of an invitational competition held in January, bouldering nationals, and sport and speed nationals. These are the climbers who made the cut:
Women
Men
There鈥檚 no guarantee that any member of the U.S. climbing team will make it to the Olympics; they鈥檝e now got to compete for one of the 40 total听available spots. Robyn Erbesfield-Raboutou, a four-time World Cup champion and coach to some of our best climbers鈥攊ncluding Margo Hayes and Brooke Raboutou鈥攖hinks there鈥檚 a good chance we鈥檒l get in, but we won鈥檛 know for sure until after .