Though he didn鈥檛 seriously take up the sport until 2005, when he was 22, Elias is fast becoming the most complete climber on the planet. Really fast. By 2006, he was redpointing several 5.14a鈥檚 in Red River Gorge and Rifle, Colorado. In 2007, he started ice climbing, eventually taking second place in the prestigious s mixed-climbing competition in 2010. And last May, though he鈥檇 never climbed higher than 13,000 feet, he summited Everest via the technical and treacherous southeast ridge. He credits his rapid rise to punishing workouts and smart nutrition.
Vitals
础驳别:听30贬别颈驳丑迟:听5'9″
奥别颈驳丑迟:听135濒产蝉
Boulder, Colorado
听
TAKING IT EASY: 鈥淚 used to have real problems with overtraining, and it caused elbow issues. Now, if I start to feel like I don鈥檛 want to be in the gym anymore, either physically or mentally, I just take my shoes off and leave.鈥
THE JOY OF MOVEMENT: 鈥淎mateur climbers rely too much on strength. That forces them into rigid body positions. The best thing you can do is scale down to a less difficult wall and learn to move better.鈥
PAIN IS AN ILLUSION: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 use painkillers. I鈥檝e hurt myself taking them in the past. They masked the pain I was having, causing me to go back out and badly injure my middle finger without even feeling it.鈥
NEEDLEPOINT: 鈥淚 do acupuncture. I don鈥檛 know why it works, but it does.鈥
MIX AND MATCH: 鈥淭wo or three days a week I do these intense hybrid climbing and CrossFit-inspired workouts. For instance, I鈥檒l do three to four sets of squats, bent-over rows, hang cleans, and overhead presses, then go do figure-fours across the wall for half an hour. It toughens me from head to toe.鈥
USE A CANE: 鈥淓very athlete should own a . It鈥檚 a self-massage tool that looks like a candy cane with little bars coming out of it. That thing has gotten me through serious tweaks and pains.鈥
THE MIND'S I: 鈥淚 try to meditate every day. I sit for 10 or 15 minutes in the morning when I wake up. I try to calm myself. It helps me focus and let go of the things I have no control over.鈥