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Chris Sharma keeps on pushing the sport forward at the age of 32
Chris Sharma keeps on pushing the sport forward at the age of 32

Training Secrets from the World’s Best Rock Climber

Chris Sharma may be 32, but he鈥檚 still pushing the sport鈥檚 limits as a pioneer of deep-water soloing.

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Chris Sharma keeps on pushing the sport forward at the age of 32

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Chris Sharma has been dominating the sport of rock climbing almost since the day he took it up at the age of 12. In 1996, at 14, he took home top honors at Bouldering Nationals. A year later he became the first person ever to complete a 5.14c climb in North America (Necessary Evil in Utah鈥檚 Virgin River Gorge). And just this March, a month before turning 32, he became just the second climber to conquer the 5.15c climb La Dura Dura in Spain, currently the hardest sport climbing route in the world.

Chris Sharma's Vital Stats

Age: 32
Height: 6'0″
Weight: 165 pounds
Hometown: Santa Cruz, California

After nearly two decades at the top, Sharma is far from done. His latest venture is bringing the thrill of deep water soloing to a competition format. To that end, he鈥檚 organized the new competition, the first of its kind in the U.S.

Held July 31 to August 2 in conjunction with the Outdoor Retailer summer show in Salt Lake City, Utah, the Psicobloc event features climbers going head to head on a custom-built wall perched over the 750,000-gallon freestyle skiing aerial training pool at Park City鈥檚 Utah Olympic Park. 鈥淚 think in a lot of ways it could be a before and after for competition climbing,鈥 Sharma says of the new highly accessible and thrilling format.

It鈥檚 Not Supposed to Be Easy
As climbers, we're always looking for something that鈥檚 just past our level. Sometimes we get frustrated because it鈥檚 too hard, but our goal is to try to do something that is beyond our limits. If it feels easy then we鈥檙e not actually at our limit.

Go Out and Climb. A Lot
I鈥檒l usually climb four days a week. Other times when I鈥檓 just having fun and climbing a little more recreationally, I鈥檒l climb six days in a row.

Ditch the Gym
I鈥檝e never actually trained. I鈥檝e always just been a climber. Some people like to work in the climbing gym or follow a program and then they鈥檒l go out and try to achieve their goals on rock. I鈥檝e always just gone straight out onto the rock and tried these projects over and over again.

Diet by Feel
I鈥檝e never followed a strict diet. I鈥檓 not a vegetarian, but I don鈥檛 eat a lot of red meat. I try to eat a lot of fish and I鈥檒l eat some chicken and turkey. Once in a while, I鈥檒l have a hamburger. I鈥檒l have a beer or glass of wine for sure. I just gauge it by how I feel.

Supplement Sparingly
Over the last few years, I鈥檝e been taking supplements like glucosamine and chondroitin, plant-based vitamins, and fish oils from Nutriex. When I鈥檓 climbing year-round punishing my body all the time it does give me a little bit of an edge.

Train Until You Crack
To get better you have to break yourself down, and you have to push yourself to that point where you鈥檙e almost getting injured. You really have to have a lot of body awareness to know where that point is so that you actually don鈥檛 injure yourself.

Rest Hard
Eight or nine hours of sleep a night is my sweet spot. I really focus on having these crazy solid rest days where I just lay on the couch and fully let my body regenerate.

Be Your Own Coach
I think it鈥檚 really a mistake to blindly follow a training plan. It鈥檚 important to listen to your body.

Getting Older Means Getting More Regimented
I鈥檝e always had a lot of natural talent, and I kind of coasted on that for a lot of years. Sometimes I wouldn鈥檛 even climb for like a month and then go to a competition and just cruise in and win it. But now I鈥檓 32 and I definitely feel like I have to maintain my level a bit more.

Failure Isn鈥檛 Bad, It鈥檚 a Motivator
Failing on climbs gives me motivation to push my limits. Sometimes it can be frustrating for sure. But that鈥檚 the catalyst to actually push yourself.

Enjoy the Journey
I spent four years working on Those moments of success are so few and far. Ninety-nine percent of the time you walk away not succeeding, and that鈥檚 just part of the process.

Climbing is my lifelong journey. And in the same way you go running and you have days where you really feel in tune, you have some days where you don鈥檛 feel that good. It鈥檚 this never-ending process. Accepting that and enjoying that for what it is, that鈥檚 really where the life of climbing is.

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