Sport climbing debuts at the Olympics and it's impressive as hell
Sport climbing made its debut at the Olympics, and folks, it was extreme.
Athletes competing in bouldering, lead climbing, and speed climbing hit the walls at men's and women's qualification events on Tuesday and Wednesday for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Aomi Urban Sports Park.
Speed climbing, according to the official Olympic rules, sees two climbers scale identical routes up 15-metre-high wall angled at 95 degrees with safety ropes. Whoever is fastest wins.
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As athletes scaled the walls of the Olympic apparatuses, viewers who might not have ever watched competitive climbing were met with some seriously fast moves.
Here's France's Bassa Mawem, scaling a 15-metre wall in 5.45 seconds — just short of the world record of 5.20 — while competing in a heat against Austria's Jakob Schubert. You might only be able to watch this video in the UK through BBC Sports, unless you have a VPN (damn international broadcasting event, the Olympics is).
Mawem topped the men's speed climbing qualifier on Tuesday, beating Japan's Tomoa Narasaki in second, and his brother Mickaël Mawem in third.
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Here's Poland's Aleksandra Mirosław almost smashing the world record on Wednesday in the women's speed climbing qualifier, eventually beating France's Anouck Jaubert in second, and China's Song Yiling in third for the event.
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Then, there's bouldering. On a 4.5-metre wall, athletes climb through as many official routes as possible within four minutes, without safety ropes. The routes are different levels of difficulty, you can restart a route if you need to, and when you grasp the final hold (the bits on the walls) of a route with both hands, it is completed.
In both bouldering and lead climbing, the extreme problem solving tests that they are, athletes will not have seen these routes before, and have only a few minutes to study them when they enter the arena.
Here's Slovenia's Janja Garnbret ruling the women's bouldering qualifier (and she won the lead climbing one too). Folks outside Australia might not be able to watch these below videos from official broadcaster Channel 7 without a VPN.
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Here's France's Mickaël Mawem, who topped the men's bouldering event, making incredible moves on the holds.
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Here's South Korea's Jongwon Chon going over and above on the bouldering wall, though he didn't reach the top, it's such an impressive turn upside down.
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And then there's lead climbing. On a wall measuring over 15 metres, athletes climb as high as they can in six minutes, with safety ropes. If the competitors reach the top or the same height, the fastest time wins.
Here's Team USA's Colin Duffy almost hitting the top of the wall.
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And here's Spain's Alberto Ginés López making some huge dangling moves.
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There has been some pushback from athletes, including Czech Republic climber Adam Ondra, over the inclusion of speed climbing in Olympic sport climbing, as it involves a different type of sprinting skill to bouldering and lead climbing. All three disciplines count toward getting a medal.
The Olympic sport climbing finals are happening on Thursday and Friday, so expect plenty more gravity defying action this week.
UPDATE: Aug. 4, 2021, 12:09 p.m. BST Added (notably incredible) footage and details from the women's sport climbing qualifiers on Wednesday.
Topics Olympics
Shannon Connellan is Mashable's UK Editor based in London, formerly Mashable's Australia Editor, but emotionally, she lives in the Creel House. A Tomatometer-approved critic, Shannon writes about entertainment, tech, social good, science, culture, and Australian horror.