国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Miho Nonaka climbs a bouldering wall during the 2016 IFSC Boulder World Cup in Munich, Germany.
Miho Nonaka climbs a bouldering wall during the 2016 IFSC Boulder World Cup in Munich, Germany. (Photo: Elias Holzknecht/Red Bull Conten)

Why Outdoor Climbers May Not Like the Olympics

Athletes who love climbing outdoors aren't positioning themselves to perform well at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Here's why.

Published: 
Elias Holzknecht / ASP / Red Bull Content Pool  // P-20160914-00793 // Usage for editorial use only // Please go to www.redbullcontentpool.com for further information. //
(Photo: Elias Holzknecht/Red Bull Conten)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

The picture of how 听competitive climbing will work in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics is beginning to come into focus. The International Olympic Committee that the sport would be included in the next Games鈥攊n speed climbing, sport, and bouldering鈥攁nd this weekend an official assembly in Canada confirmed a combined format. It feels like a missed opportunity to bring climbing to the biggest stage in the world.

I am still ecstatic that climbing has made it to the Olympics. But I don鈥檛 support a format that requires climbers to compete in all three categories and weights each one of them equally. Here鈥檚 why: speed climbing has very little to do with more conventional rock climbing, beyond the fact that it involves a person vertically scaling a wall. It鈥檚 like mandating that marathon runners compete in the 100-meter dash to decide who is the best runner. It demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding about climbing from the IOC.

鈥淚t听feels like some cigar smoking goomba made up the format behind a desk somewhere in a high-rise building,鈥 says climber Joe Kinder. 鈥淚t's comical and unfortunate.鈥 I agree.

Other climbers say including speed climbing makes perfect sense. It鈥檚 exciting to watch, which could make it vital to attracting viewers who aren鈥檛 familiar with the intricacies and nuances of bouldering or sport climbing, says Sean McColl, president of the who consulted on the IOC鈥檚 decision. 鈥淚f only [sport] or bouldering was selected as the Olympic Event, our Speed World Cup discipline would ultimately die. Combined, the disciplines retain their value, and they show the world all the highlights of our sport.鈥

“I understand the need for an even playing field, but to me, what makes climbing such a beautiful, unique sport is that no climb is ever the same.”

As climbing grows, its different disciplines have diverged into their own subcultures. For instance, competition climbing is becoming much more akin to than a simulation of an outdoor climb on a real rock wall. This is for the better: climbing competitions should be exciting and captivating. Route setters construct four-points off dynos (climbing鈥檚 equivalent of a 鈥渟lam dunk鈥 in which climbers jump between climbing holds) and compose the climbs with three-dimensional volumes, foot-first sequences, and movements that you may otherwise never see outdoors. By comparison, if you were to sit and watch a climber scale, say, a granite slab in Yosemite, you鈥檇 probably get bored quickly鈥攊t can be slow, technical, and hard to see the听nuances that go into difficult climbing.

As with any young sport, we鈥檒l see climber-athletes progressing in ability and changes to the styles and rules of the sport as a result. When I started climbing at age six, I was one of very few kids my agecompeting. But now parents take their four-year-olds to the gym, and the number of competitors participating in has expanded exponentially, and has pushed the standards of excellence much higher. You can see the effect in the average age of the top competitors on the indoor circuits. Just a few weeks ago, at the USA Bouldering Championships and Sport Climbing Championship, the top-performing American men and the top-performing women were all age 20 or younger.

Another reason I鈥檓 dubious about bringing speed climbing to the Olympics is that every competition will take place on the same standardized wall鈥攖he same route, same holds, and same hold placement. I understand the need for an even playing field, but to me, what makes climbing such a beautiful, unique sport is that no climb is ever the same. There are always unique movements, sequences to piece together and solve, and a particular rhythm to a specific line.

By including all three disciplines and merging them under one umbrella 鈥渃limbing鈥 event, the Olympic format creates a new form of the sport that is different than what is, to me, the spirit of climbing. Surely to have a chance at making it to the world stage, climbers will have to practice speed climbing. But by creating a format that merges the three disciplines together, we have forced climbers who want to compete to make a choice: focus on perfecting three disciplines, which may include having to learn an entirely new sport, like speed climbing; or focus on outdoor climbing.

Of course, there will be anomalies. Adam Ondra, for instance, currently excels in both competition climbing (sport and bouldering) as well as cutting-edge rock climbing like on routes like the Dawn Wall. Though, , Ondra said, 鈥淚 think that speed climbing is an artificial discipline.鈥 He went on to say that 鈥渋f the Games include the combination, I will have to think a lot about participating or boycotting it.鈥

As competitions diverge from rock climbing, climbers face a choice: do you dedicate your time to climbing on plastic or on rock? Because training for one will not be easily compatible to the other. Outdoor climbing trips will not elevate competition performance. For that reason, I鈥檓 not sure whether I will compete in 2020 or not. Regardless, I will certainly strive to play an active role in Olympic climbing.

Lead Photo: Elias Holzknecht/Red Bull Conten

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online