Bouldering at the 2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup
Bouldering at the 2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup | |
---|---|
Location | File:Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Meiringen, Switzerland File:Flag of the United States.svg Salt Lake City (2 times), United States |
Dates | 16 April – 26 June 2021 |
Champions | |
Men | Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata |
Women | United States Natalia Grossman |
The 2021 season of the IFSC Climbing World Cup was the 22nd season of the competition. Bouldering competitions will be held at six stops of the IFSC Climbing World Cup. The bouldering season began on April 16 at the World Cup in Meiringen, and concluded on 26 June with the World Cup in Innsbruck. The International Federation of Sport Climbing had initially scheduled six bouldering events concluding on 24 October, but COVID-19 travel restrictions resulted in the cancellation of events in Wujiang in China and Seoul in South Korea.[1][2] At each stop a qualifying was held on the first day of the competition, and the semi-final and final rounds were conducted on the second day of the competition. At the end of the season an overall ranking will be determined based upon points, which athletes were awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event.
Overview
Date | Location | Venue | Route-setters* | Men | Women |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
April, 16–18 | Switzerland Meiringen, Switzerland | Kletterhalle Haslital[3] | Czech Republic Adam Ondra | Slovenia Janja Garnbret | |
May, 21-22 | United States Salt Lake City, United States | Industry SLC[4] |
|
Czech Republic Adam Ondra | United States Natalia Grossman |
May, 28–30 | United States Salt Lake City, United States | Industry SLC[4] |
|
United States Sean Bailey | United States Natalia Grossman |
June, 23–26 | Austria Innsbruck, Austria | Kletterzentrum Innsbruck[5] |
|
Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata | Slovenia Janja Garnbret |
OVERALL WINNERS | Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata | United States Natalia Grossman | |||
NATIONAL TEAM | Japan Japan |
* Chief route-setters are in bold.
Overall ranking
The overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There are five competitions in the season, but only the best five attempts are counted. The national ranking is the sum of the points of that country's three best male and female athletes. Results displayed (in brackets) are not counted.
Men
The results of the twenty most successful athletes of the Bouldering World Cup 2021:[6]
Rank | Name | Points | Meiringen | Salt Lake City I | Salt Lake City II | Innsbruck |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata | 255 | 2. 80 | 16. 20 | 4. 55 | 1. 100 |
2 | Japan Kokoro Fujii | 255 | 4. 55 | 4. 55 | 2. 80 | 3. 65 |
3 | Czech Republic Adam Ondra | 200 | 1. 100 | 1. 100 | ( — ) | ( — ) |
4 | United States Sean Bailey | 166 | 13. 26 | 8. 40 | 1. 100 | 47. 0 |
5 | France Mejdi Schalck | 157 | 12. 28 | 2. 80 | 9. 37 | 20. 12 |
6 | Japan Tomoa Narasaki | 145 | ( — ) | ( — ) | 3. 65 | 2. 80 |
7 | United States Nathaniel Coleman | 142 | 5. 51 | 21. 10 | 10. 34 | 6. 47 |
8 | Austria Nicolai Užnik | 132 | 14. 24 | 11. 31 | 15. 22 | 4. 55 |
9 | Germany Alexander Megos | 129 | 8. 40 | 9. 37 | 14. 24 | 12. 28 |
10 | Belgium Simon Lorenzi | 123.5 | 29. 1.5 | 7. 43 | 12. 28 | 5. 51 |
11 | Japan Sohta Amagasa | 119 | 6. 47 | 14. 24 | 13. 26 | 15. 22 |
12 | Russia Alexey Rubtsov | 114 | 17. 18 | 15. 22 | 11. 31 | 7. 43 |
13 | Slovenia Gregor Vezonik | 98.5 | 9. 37 | 6. 47 | 24. 7 | 23. 7.5 |
13 | Slovenia Anže Peharc | 98.5 | 21. 9.5 | 5. 51 | 16. 20 | 17. 18 |
15 | Austria Jakob Schubert | 96.5 | 23. 7.5 | 3. 65 | ( — ) | 14. 24 |
16 | Japan Tomoaki Takata | 94.9 | 3. 65 | 22. 9 | 32. 0.9 | 16. 20 |
17 | Japan Rei Sugimoto | 77.5 | 21. 9.5 | 17. 18 | 18. 16 | 10. 34 |
18 | France Manuel Cornu | 75.4 | 11. 31 | 35. 0.8 | 7. 43 | 37. 0.6 |
19 | United States Colin Duffy | 64.5 | 31. 0.9 | 13. 26 | 38. 0.6 | 9. 37 |
20 | Germany Yannick Flohé | 63 | 19. 13 | 24. 7 | 20. 12 | 11. 31 |
Women
The results of the twenty most successful athletes of the Bouldering World Cup 2021:[7]
Rank | Name | Points | Meiringen | Salt Lake City I | Salt Lake City II | Innsbruck |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States Natalia Grossman | 345 | 3. 65 | 1. 100 | 1. 100 | 2. 80 |
2 | Slovenia Janja Garnbret | 280 | 1. 100 | ( — ) | 2. 80 | 1. 100 |
3 | France Oriane Bertone | 235 | 2. 80 | 2. 80 | 4. 55 | 16. 20 |
4 | United States Brooke Raboutou | 207 | 9. 37 | 3. 65 | 3. 65 | 8. 40 |
5 | Japan Miho Nonaka | 192 | 7. 43 | 4. 55 | 6. 47 | 6. 47 |
6 | Serbia Staša Gejo | 173 | 13. 26 | 11. 31 | 5. 51 | 3. 65 |
7 | Slovenia Katja Debevec | 158 | 6. 47 | 8. 40 | 7. 43 | 12. 28 |
8 | Japan Futaba Ito | 135 | ( — ) | 7. 43 | 9. 37 | 4. 55 |
9 | Japan Akiyo Noguchi | 122 | 4. 55 | ( — ) | 18. 16 | 5. 51 |
10 | Japan Mao Nakamura | 92 | ( — ) | 10. 34 | 14. 24 | 10. 34 |
11 | Austria Johanna Färber | 91.7 | 31. 0.9 | 6. 47 | 34. 0.8 | 7. 43 |
12 | Austria Jessica Pilz | 79 | 12. 28 | 5. 51 | ( — ) | ( — ) |
13 | Austria Franziska Sterrer | 78.5 | 11. 31 | 21. 95 | 20. 12 | 13. 26 |
14 | Slovenia Vita Lukan | 77 | 5. 51 | 23. 8 | 17. 18 | ( — ) |
15 | Switzerland Petra Klingler | 74.5 | 21. 9.5 | 25. 6 | 12. 28 | 11. 31 |
16 | France Fanny Gibert | 72.5 | 35. 0.7 | 9. 37 | 10. 34 | 33. 0.8 |
17 | Switzerland Andrea Kümin | 69 | 8. 40 | 26. 5 | ( — ) | 14. 24 |
18 | United States Kylie Cullen | 67.5 | 25. 5.5 | 14. 24 | 16. 20 | 17. 18 |
19 | United States Kyra Condie | 60 | 21. 9.5 | 30. 1 | 8. 40 | 21. 9.5 |
20 | Belgium Chloe Caulier | 58.5 | 25. 5.5 | 13. 26 | 26. 5 | 15. 22 |
* = Joint place with another athlete
National teams
The results of the ten most successful countries of the Bouldering World Cup 2021:[8] Country names as used by the IFSC
Rank | Name | Points | Meiringen | Salt Lake City I | Salt Lake City II | Innsbruck |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Japan Japan | 1235.0 | 2. 298.0 | 3. 231.0 | 2. 308.0 | 1. 398.0 |
2 | United States United States | 1088.0 | 3. 209.0 | 1. 265.0 | 1. 390.0 | 2. 224.0 |
3 | Slovenia Slovenia | 798.0 | 1. 312.0 | 5. 148.0 | 4. 168.0 | 3. 170.0 |
4 | France France | 635.85 | 4. 156.6 | 2. 238.75 | 3. 177.0 | 8. 63.5 |
5 | Austria Austria | 498.25 | 7. 91.95 | 4. 204.0 | 10. 34.8 | 4. 167.5 |
6 | Germany Germany | 403.1 | 6. 93.5 | 6. 119.0 | 5. 108.0 | 5. 82.6 |
7 | Belgium Belgium | 215.55 | 12. 22.0 | 8. 69.55 | 7. 51.0 | 6. 73.0 |
8 | Czech Republic Czech Republic | 200.0 | 5. 100.0 | 7. 100.0 | ( — ) | ( — ) |
9 | Italy Italy | 190.6 | 11. 22.95 | 9. 66.0 | 9. 45.7 | 10. 55.95 |
10 | Serbia Serbia | 173.0 | 10. 26.0 | 11. 31.0 | 7. 51.0 | 7. 65.0 |
Meiringen, Switzerland (16–17 April)
Men
101 athletes attended the World Cup in Meiringen.[9]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | Czech Republic Adam Ondra | 3T3z 10 7 |
2 | Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata | 2T4z 7 9 |
3 | Japan Tomoaki Takata | 1T4z 4 12 |
4 | Japan Kokoro Fujii | 1T3z 1 4 |
5 | United States Nathaniel Coleman | 1T3z 2 5 |
6 | Japan Sohta Amagasa | 0T3z 0 4 |
Women
70 athletes attended the World Cup in Meiringen.[10]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | Slovenia Janja Garnbret | 4T4z 7 6 |
2 | France Oriane Bertone | 2T4z 8 10 |
3 | United States Natalia Grossman | 2T4z 10 10 |
4 | Japan Akiyo Noguchi | 0T3z 0 7 |
5 | Slovenia Vita Lukan | 0T2z 0 3 |
6 | Slovenia Katja Debevec | 0T2z 0 6 |
Salt Lake City I, United States (21–22 May)
Men
55 athletes attended the first World Cup in Salt Lake City.[11]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | Czech Republic Adam Ondra | 4T4z 8 7 |
2 | France Mejdi Schalck | 3T4z 4 5 |
3 | Austria Jakob Schubert | 3T3z 4 4 |
4 | Japan Kokoro Fujii | 3T3z 12 7 |
5 | Slovenia Anže Peharc | 1T3z 2 8 |
6 | Slovenia Gregor Vezonik | 1T2z 2 2 |
Women
50 athletes attended the first World Cup in Salt Lake City.[12]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | United States Natalia Grossman | 4T4z 15 14 |
2 | France Oriane Bertone | 3T4z 7 7 |
3 | United States Brooke Raboutou | 3T3z 4 3 |
4 | Japan Miho Nonaka | 3T3z 7 6 |
5 | Austria Jessica Pilz | 1T3z 3 6 |
6 | Austria Johanna Färber | 1T2z 1 8 |
Salt Lake City II, United States (28–30 May)
Men
55 athletes attended the second World Cup in Salt Lake City.[13]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | United States Sean Bailey | 2T4z 9 11 |
2 | Japan Kokoro Fujii | 1T4z 9 12 |
3 | Japan Tomoa Narasaki | 1T3z 1 3 |
4 | Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata | 0T2z 0 4 |
5 | United States Zach Galla | 0T1z 0 1 |
6 | United Kingdom Maximillian Milne | 0T1z 0 2 |
Women
51 athletes attended the second World Cup in Salt Lake City.[14] Natalia Grossman won the competition, becoming the first athlete to best Janja Garnbret in a bouldering World Cup since Meiringen in April 2018, thus ending Garnbret's streak at nine consecutive wins.[15]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | United States Natalia Grossman | 4T4z 4 4 |
2 | Slovenia Janja Garnbret | 4T4z 6 6 |
3 | United States Brooke Raboutou | 3T4z 5 8 |
4 | France Oriane Bertone | 3T3z 9 5 |
5 | Serbia Staša Gejo | 3T3z 11 10 |
6 | Japan Miho Nonaka | 2T4z 5 9 |
Innsbruck, Austria (23–26 June)
Men
110 athletes attended the World Cup in Innsbruck.[16] Because of rain delays and restrictions surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic in Austria, the final round was cut short and only three of the four boulders were used.[17]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | Japan Yoshiyuki Ogata | 2T2z 7 7 |
2 | Japan Tomoa Narasaki | 1T3z 2 11 |
3 | Japan Kokoro Fujii | 1T1z 2 2 |
4 | Austria Nicolai Uznik | 1T1z 2 2 |
5 | Belgium Simon Lorenzi | 1T1z 10 10 |
6 | United States Nathaniel Coleman | 0T1z 0 2 |
Women
89 athletes attended the second World Cup in Innsbruck.[18] Because of rain delays, the finals were cut short and only the first three of the four boulders in that round were counted towards the results.[17] Miho Nonaka was forced to withdraw from the final after a knee injury she picked up on W4 in the semi-final round.[19][20] Coverage of the Austrian climber Johanna Färber received criticism from viewers and she described it as "disrespectful and upsetting". The host broadcaster, ORF, issued an apology after the event.[20][17][21]
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | Slovenia Janja Garnbret | 3T3z 3 3 |
2 | United States Natalia Grossman | 3T3z 9 9 |
3 | Serbia Staša Gejo | 1T3z 2 6 |
4 | Japan Futaba Ito | 1T2z 3 8 |
5 | Japan Akiyo Noguchi | 1T1z 1 1 |
6 | Japan Miho Nonaka | DNS |
References
- ↑ "Sport climbing World Cup events in China cancelled because of COVID-19". www.insidethegames.biz. 20 August 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-08-20. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
- ↑ Burke, Patrick (20 September 2021). "IFSC World Cup in Seoul cancelled less than two weeks before event". inside the games. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ↑ "2021 Meiringen info sheet". Archived from the original on 2021-09-07.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "2021 SLC info sheet". Archived from the original on 2021-09-07.
- ↑ "2021 Innsbruck info sheet". Archived from the original on 2021-09-05.
- ↑ "IFSC Bouldering World Cup 2021 Men OVERALL Ranking".
- ↑ "IFSC Bouldering World Cup 2021 Women OVERALL Ranking".
- ↑ "IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP 2021: BOULDERING NATIONAL TEAM RANKING". www.ifsc-climbing.org. Archived from the original on 2021-09-25. Retrieved 2021-09-25.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Meiringen (SUI) 2021 - General result M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Meiringen (SUI) 2021 - General result W O M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Salt Lake City I (USA) 2021 - General result M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Salt Lake City I (USA) 2021 - General result W O M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Salt Lake City II (USA) 2021 - General result M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Salt Lake City II (USA) 2021 - General result W O M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
- ↑ Berry, Natalie (May 31, 2021). "IFSC Boulder and Speed World Cup Salt Lake City 2021 (Round 2): Report". UKC. Retrieved June 1, 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Innsbruck (AUT) 2021 - General result M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 ""Inappropriate" coverage row and rainstorms mar IFSC World Cup at Innsbruck". www.insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
- ↑ "IFSC Climbing Worldcup (B) - Innsbruck (AUT) 2021 - General result W O M E N bouldering". International Federation of Sport Climbing. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- ↑ "NEWS: IFSC Lead and Boulder World Cup Innsbruck 2021 - Report". www.ukclimbing.com. Retrieved 2021-09-07.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 "Grossman and Garnbret Battle, Broadcaster Apologizes for Sexualizing Coverage". Climbing. 27 June 2021. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
- ↑ IFSC. "IFSC Twitter page". Twitter. Retrieved 19 July 2021.