2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup explained

2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup
Organiser:IFSC
Edition:33rd
Dates:16 April – 4 September 2021
Men B: Yoshiyuki Ogata
Women B: Natalia Grossman
Team B:Japan
Men L: Stefano Ghisolfi
Women L: Janja Garnbret
Team L: Slovenia
Men S: Veddriq Leonardo
Women S: Emma Hunt
Team S: Indonesia
Prev:2020
Next:2022

The 2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup was the 33rd edition of the international sport climbing competition series, held in seven locations. There are 11 events: four bouldering, five lead, and two speed events. The season began on 16 April in Meiringen, Switzerland with the first bouldering competition in the season, and concluded on 4 September in Kranj, Slovenia. The International Federation of Sport Climbing had initially scheduled 18 events concluding on 31 October, but COVID-19 travel restrictions resulted in the cancellation of events in Xiamen and Wujiang in China, Jakarta in Indonesia and Seoul in South Korea.

This season was the first completed IFSC Climbing World Cup series since the 2019 edition, as the 2020 IFSC Climbing World Cup was limited to just one event, the Briançon Lead World Cup in August 2020, due to the pandemic. The opening event in Meiringen was the first Boulder World Cup since the 2019 season. The Boulder World Cup and the Boulder and Speed World Cup scheduled for 21–22 May and 28–30 May, respectively, in Salt Lake City, United States, were the first-ever consecutive IFSC World Cups held in the same city.[1]

The top 3 in each competition receive medals, and the overall winners are awarded trophies. At the end of the season an overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event.

Season winners

First! colspan="2"
SecondThird
Men's Lead Stefano Ghisolfi319 points Sean Bailey277 points Masahiro Higuchi263 points
Women's Lead Janja Garnbret300 points Natalia Grossman296 points Laura Rogora278 points
Men's Bouldering Yoshiyuki Ogata255 points Kokoro Fujii255 points Adam Ondra200 points
Women's Bouldering Natalia Grossman345 points Janja Garnbret280 points Oriane Bertone235 points
Men's Speed Veddriq Leonardo200 points Kiromal Katibin145 points Marcin Dzieński96 points
Women's Speed Emma Hunt131 points Patrycja Chudziak120 points Aleksandra Mirosław
Ekaterina Barashchuk
100 points

Scheduling

In December 2020, the IFSC moved the 21–22 May Boulder World Cup from Munich, Germany to Salt Lake City, United States, and rescheduled the already existing Boulder & Speed World Cup in Salt Lake City from 11 to 13 June to 28–30 May, in order to minimize travel for athletes and staff.[2] In March, the federation also moved the Seoul, South Korea and Wujiang, China World Cups from April and May to October because of ongoing COVID-19 related restrictions in the respective countries.[3] In July, the Lead World Cup in Ljubljana, Slovenia was moved to Kranj, Slovenia, and rescheduled from 4–5 to 3–4 September.[4]

In August, the federation cancelled the World Cups in China: the 15–17 October Lead & Speed World Cup in Xiamen and the 22–24 October Boulder & Speed World Cup in Wujiang.[5] [6] In September, the federation also cancelled the 30–31 October Speed World Cup in Jakarta, Indonesia, which had already been postponed from 23 to 24 October.[7] [8] The following week, the IFSC also cancelled the Boulder and Speed World Cup in Seoul, originally scheduled for May and pushed back to October, due to rising COVID-19 cases in South Korea. The cancellation of the Jakarta and Seoul World Cups mean the bouldering and speed seasons concluded in June in Innsbruck and Villars in July, respectively.[9]

Competition highlights

Because of the cancellations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the opening World Cup event of 2021 Meiringen held 16–17 April 2021, was the first Boulder World Cup in 22 months, since Vail, Colorado in September 2019.,[10] and the first Climbing World Cup of any discipline since August 2020 in Briançon. Adam Ondra won the men's gold, his 20th career World Cup medal, with 3 tops in the final.[11] On the women's side, Slovenia's Janja Garnbret continued her winning run from her unbeaten 2019 bouldering campaign, winning the competition by topping all boulders with just four falls while 16-year-old French climber Oriane Bertone made her senior competition debut with a second-place finish behind Garnbret.[10]

Garnbret did not participate in the first of two World Cups in Salt Lake City held 21–22 May, bringing her streak of seven Boulder World Cup wins to an end. In her absence, Grossman won the gold, followed by Bertone, who again finished second, while Ondra repeated as the men's Boulder winner.[12] Grossman repeated as the winner in the second Salt Lake City event, held 28–30 May, this time becoming the first woman to defeat Garnbret, who finished second, since April 2018.[13] In the men's speed competition, Kiromal Katibin of Indonesia set a world record time of 5.258 seconds in qualifying, a record that was broken the same day by fellow Indonesian, Veddriq Leonardo, who hit the buzzer at 5.20 in the final run against Katibin.[13]

Garnbret won all three Lead World Cups she entered in 2021, winning a record 31st World Cup gold medal in Kranj in September and taking the overall season title.[14] On the men's side, Stefano Ghisolfi took the Lead season title, having won the event in Briançon in addition to two second places at the World Cups in Innsbruck and Chamonix, while Sean Bailey's two wins in Villars and Chamonix earned him second place in the overall Lead season ranking.

Broadcast incident

Austrian broadcaster Osterreichischer Rundfunk (ORF) issued an apology during the Innsbruck World Cup, after showing slow-motion, close-up footage that zoomed on the chalk handprints on Johanna Färber's bottom on the event's live feed on YouTube. IFSC removed the video from its YouTube channel and replaced it a version without the footage. Färber later posted a message on her Instagram, calling the incident "disrespectful and upsetting"[15]

Overview

No.LocationGoldSilverBronze
1 Meiringen, Switzerland
April, 16–18
BM Adam Ondra3T3z 10 7 Yoshiyuki Ogata2T4z 7 9 Tomoaki Takata1T4z 4 12
W Janja Garnbret4T4z 7 6 Oriane Bertone2T4z 8 10 Natalia Grossman2T4z 10 10
2 Salt Lake City, United States
May, 21-22
BM Adam Ondra4T4z 8 7 Mejdi Schalck3T4z 4 5 Jakob Schubert3T3z 4 4
W Natalia Grossman4T4z 15 14 Oriane Bertone3T4z 7 7 Brooke Raboutou3T3z 4 3
3 Salt Lake City, United States
May, 28–30
BM Sean Bailey2T4z 9 11 Kokoro Fujii1T4z 9 12 Tomoa Narasaki1T3z 1 3
W Natalia Grossman4T4z 4 4 Janja Garnbret4T4z 6 6 Brooke Raboutou3T4z 5 8
SM Veddriq Leonardo5.208 Kiromal Katibinfall Marcin Dzieński5.842
W Aleksandra Mirosław7.382 Emma Hunt7.539 Miho Nonaka8.958
4 Innsbruck, Austria
June, 23–26
BM Yoshiyuki Ogata2T2z 7 7 Tomoa Narasaki1T3z 2 11 Kokoro Fujii1T1z 2 2
W Janja Garnbret3T3z 3 3 Natalia Grossman3T3z 9 9 Staša Gejo1T3z 2 6
LM Jakob Schubert47+ Stefano Ghisolfi47 Sascha Lehman38+
W Janja GarnbretTOP Brooke Raboutou40 Akiyo Noguchi38
5 Villars, Switzerland
July, 1–3
LM Sean Bailey38 Alexander Megos35+ Colin Duffy31+
W Janja GarnbretTOP Laura RogoraTOP Natalia Grossman42+
SM Veddriq Leonardo5.329 Dmitrii Timofeev7.35 Kiromal Katibin5.306
W Ekaterina Barashchuk7.306 Iuliia Kaplina8.397 Patrycja Chudziak7.736
6 Chamonix, France
July, 12–13
LM Sean Bailey34+ Stefano Ghisolfi32 Martin Stráník32
W Laura RogoraTOP Natalia Grossman41+ Aleksandra Totkova38+
7 Briançon, France
July, 17–18
LM Stefano Ghisolfi42+ Dmitrii Fakirianov39+ Martin Stráník37+
W Eliška Adamovská36 Natalia Grossman35+ Vita Lukan29
8 Kranj, Slovenia
September, 3–4
LM Masahiro Higuchi37 Luka Potočar31+ Sebastian Halenke31+
W Janja Garnbret49+ Chaehyun Seo46 Natalia Grossman41+
[16]

Bouldering

See main article: Bouldering at the 2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup.

The overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There were four competitions in the season. 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 ten most successful athletes of the Bouldering World Cup 2021:[17]

RankNamePointsMeiringenSalt Lake City ISalt Lake City IIInnsbruck
1 Yoshiyuki Ogata2552. 8016. 204. 551. 100
2 Kokoro Fujii2554. 554. 552. 803. 65
3 Adam Ondra2001. 1001. 100(—)(—)
4 Sean Bailey16613. 268. 401. 10047. 0
5 Mejdi Schalck15712. 282. 809. 3720. 12
6 Tomoa Narasaki145(—)(—)3. 652. 80
7 Nathaniel Coleman1425. 5121. 1010. 346. 47
8 Nicolai Užnik13214. 2411. 3115. 224. 55
9 Alexander Megos1298. 409. 3714. 2412. 28
10 Simon Lorenzi123.529. 1.57. 4312. 285. 51

Women

The results of the ten most successful athletes of the Bouldering World Cup 2021:[18]

RankNamePointsMeiringenSalt Lake City ISalt Lake City IIInnsbruck
1 Natalia Grossman3453. 651. 1001. 1002. 80
2 Janja Garnbret2801. 100(—)2. 801. 100
3 Oriane Bertone2352. 802. 804. 5516. 20
4 Brooke Raboutou2079. 373. 653. 658. 40
5 Miho Nonaka1927. 434. 556. 476. 47
6 Staša Gejo17313. 2611. 315. 513. 65
7 Katja Debevec1586. 478. 407. 4312. 28
8 Futaba Ito135(—)7. 439. 374. 55
9 Akiyo Noguchi1224. 55(—)18. 165. 51
10 Mao Nakamura92(—)10. 3414. 2410. 34

National Teams

The results of the ten most successful countries of the Bouldering World Cup 2021:[19]

Country names as used by the IFSC

RankNamePointsMeiringenSalt Lake City ISalt Lake City IIInnsbruck
1 Japan1235.02. 298.03. 231.02. 308.01. 398.0
21088.03. 209.01. 265.01. 390.02. 224.0
3 Slovenia798.01. 312.05. 148.04. 168.03. 170.0
4635.854. 156.62. 238.753. 177.08. 63.5
5 Austria498.257. 91.954. 204.010. 34.84. 167.5
6 Germany403.16. 93.56. 119.05. 108.05. 82.6
7 Belgium215.5512. 22.08. 69.557. 51.06. 73.0
8 Czech Republic200.05. 100.07. 100.0(—)(—)
9 Italy190.611. 22.959. 66.09. 45.710. 55.95
10 Serbia173.010. 26.011. 31.07. 51.07. 65.0

* = Joint place with another athlete

Lead

The overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There were five competitions in the season. The national ranking is the sum of the points of that country's three best male and female athletes. Results displayed in parentheses are not counted.

Men

The results of the ten most successful athletes of the Lead World Cup 2021:[20]

RankNAMEPointsInnsbruckVillarsChamonixBriançonKranj
1 Stefano Ghisolfi3192. 8011. 312. 801. 10012. 28
2 Sean Bailey277(—)1. 1001. 1004. 5515. 22
3 Masahiro Higuchi2634. 557. 439. 3712. 281. 100
4 Luka Potočar2127. 4325. 67. 438. 402. 80
5 Sascha Lehmann2043. 6512. 284. 555. 5126. 5
6 Martin Stráník192.8712. 2832. 0.873. 653. 6510. 34
7 Alberto Ginés López1695. 515. 5114. 247. 43(—)
8 Sebastian Halenke160.057. 04. 5515. 2217. 183. 65
9 Domen Škofic13517. 1815. 2225. 610. 344. 55
10 Alexander Megos1276. 472. 80(—)(—)(—)

Women

The results of the ten most successful athletes of the Lead World Cup 2021:[21]

RankNAMEPointsInnsbruckVillarsChamonixBriançonKranj
1 Janja Garnbret3001. 1001. 100(—)(—)1. 100
2 Natalia Grossman29625. 63. 652. 802. 803. 65
3 Laura Rogora2787. 432. 801. 100(—)4. 55
4 Vita Lukan2696. 475. 514. 553. 655. 51
5 Lucka Rakovec1858. 407. 4323. 86. 476. 47
6 Aleksandra Totkova16818. 166. 473. 658. 40(—)
7 Eliška Adamovská16212. 28(—)10. 341. 100(—)
8 Momoko Abe14613. 264. 5511. 3125. 612. 28
9 Natsuki Tanii128(—)(—)5. 519. 378. 40
9 Lana Skusek12816. 2011. 3143. 07. 4310. 34

National Teams

The results of the ten most successful countries of the Lead World Cup 2021:[22]

Country names as used by the IFSC

RankNationPointsInnsbruckVillarsChamonixBriançonKranj
1 Slovenia1244.02. 274.02. 229.05. 135.01. 230.01. 376.0
2 Japan1041.01. 279.03. 193.04. 158.05. 134.02. 277.0
3905.955. 110.551. 269.02. 237.02. 200.55. 88.9
4 Italy796.83. 149.756. 132.851. 244.54. 164.04. 105.7
5593.958. 80.755. 147.23. 192.07. 87.06. 87.0
6 Germany547.210. 57.24. 159.07. 91.356. 95.853. 143.8
7 Czech Republic396.557. 96.019. 0.96. 99.853. 165.813. 34.0
8 Austria364.254. 117.657. 71.7513. 35.59. 77.758. 61.6
9 Switzerland340.156. 96.39. 50.48. 86.810. 70.9512. 35.7
10 Russia262.559. 57.7511. 41.812. 40.08. 80.011. 43.0

Speed

See main article: Speed climbing at the 2021 IFSC Climbing World Cup.

The overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There were two competitions in the season. 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 ten most successful athletes of the Speed World Cup 2021:[23]

RankNamePointsSalt Lake CityVillars
1 Veddriq Leonardo2001. 1001. 100
2 Kiromal Katibin1452. 803. 65
3 Marcin Dzieński963. 6511. 31
4 John Brosler814. 5513. 26
5 Dmitrii Timofeev802. 80
6 Pierre Rebreyend597. 4318. 16
7 Vladislav Deulin554. 55
8 Merritt Ernsberger515. 51
8 Mehdi Alipour515. 51
10 Yaroslav Tkach508. 4021. 10

Women

The results of the ten most successful athletes of the Speed World Cup 2021:[24]

RankNamePointsSalt Lake CityVillars
1 Emma Hunt1312. 805. 51
2 Patrycja Chudziak1204. 553. 65
3 Aleksandra Mirosław100*1. 100
3 Ekaterina Barashchuk100*1. 100
5 Anouck Jaubert94*5. 517. 43
5 Natalia Kalucka94*6. 476. 47
7 Iuliia Kaplina852. 80
8 Capucine Viglione748. 4010. 34
9 Miho Nonaka653. 65
10 Desak Made Rita Kusuma Dewi554. 55

National Teams

The results of the ten most successful countries of the Speed World Cup 2021:[25]

Country names as used by the IFSC

RankNationPointsSalt Lake CityVillars
1 Indonesia5034. 180.02. 323.0
2 Poland4472. 267.03. 180.0
3396.81. 276.05. 120.8
4 Russia3841. 384.0
53403. 207.04. 133.0
6140.555. 139.5515. 1.0
7 Italy132.57. 75.07. 57.5
8 Ukraine1306. 95.010. 35.0
9 Austria101.88. 63.99. 37.9
1085.859. 63.012. 22.85

* = Joint place with another athlete

See also

Notes and References

  1. BOTH IFSC WORLD CUP STAGES IN SALT LAKE CITY CONFIRMED. IFSC. March 26, 2021.
  2. News: https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1102482/salt-lake-city-ifsc-world-cup . Salt Lake City to host two IFSC World Cups in 2021 . 29 December 2020 . insidethegames.biz. Michael . Houston.
  3. News: https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1102482/salt-lake-city-ifsc-world-cup . IFSC World Cups in China and South Korea postponed to October . 5 March 2021 . insidethegames.biz. Michael . Houston.
  4. Web site: IFSC WORLD CUP SERIES SET TO RETURN TO KRANJ, SLOVENIA. 2021-09-12. www.ifsc-climbing.org.
  5. Web site: 20 August 2021. Sport climbing World Cup events in China cancelled because of COVID-19. live. 2021-09-05. www.insidethegames.biz. https://web.archive.org/web/20210820174752/https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1111882/ifsc-world-cups-cancelled-china . 2021-08-20 .
  6. Web site: IFSC WORLD CUPS IN CHINA CANCELLED. 2021-09-05. www.ifsc-climbing.org.
  7. Web site: IFSC SPEED WORLD CUP IN JAKARTA CANCELLED. 2021-09-12. www.ifsc-climbing.org.
  8. Web site: 11 September 2021. IFSC Speed World Cup in Jakarta cancelled due to COVID-19. live. 2021-09-12. www.insidethegames.biz. https://web.archive.org/web/20210911141914/https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1112869/ifsc-speed-world-cup-jakarta-cancelled . 2021-09-11 .
  9. News: Burke . Patrick . IFSC World Cup in Seoul cancelled less than two weeks before event . 20 September 2021 . inside the games . 20 September 2021.
  10. News: IFSC Boulder World Cup Meiringen 2021: Report. 19 April 2021. Natalie. Berry. UKC.
  11. News: Janja Garnbret, Adam Ondra win Bouldering World Cup opener in Meiringen. 19 April 2021. Planet Mountain.
  12. News: Berry . Natalie . IFSC Boulder World Cup Salt Lake City 2021: Report . 26 May 2021 . UKC . 24 May 2021.
  13. News: Berry . Natalie . IFSC Boulder and Speed World Cup Salt Lake City 2021 (Round 2): Report. 1 June 2021 . UKC . 31 May 2021.
  14. News: Walker . Noah . Garnbret Becomes the Greatest Of All Time . 23 September 2021 . Gripped . 6 September 2021.
  15. News: Rowbottom . Mike . "Inappropriate" coverage row and rainstorms mar IFSC World Cup at Innsbruck . 23 September 2021 . InsideTheGames . 26 June 2021.
  16. News: The IFSC Presents Its 2021 Competition Calendar. 3 September 2020. GymClimber.
  17. Web site: IFSC Bouldering World Cup 2021 Men OVERALL Ranking .
  18. Web site: IFSC Bouldering World Cup 2021 Women OVERALL Ranking .
  19. Web site: IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP 2021: BOULDERING NATIONAL TEAM RANKING. live. 2021-09-25. www.ifsc-climbing.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20210925081406/https://www.ifsc-climbing.org/index.php/world-competition/calendar?task=ranking-complete&cup=66&category=2&year=2021&ntr=true . 2021-09-25 .
  20. Web site: IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP 2021: LEAD MEN. live. 2021-09-05. www.ifsc-climbing.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20210709183032/https://www.ifsc-climbing.org/index.php/world-competition/calendar?task=ranking-complete&cup=66&category=1&year=2021 . 2021-07-09 .
  21. Web site: IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP 2021: LEAD WOMEN. live. 2021-09-05. www.ifsc-climbing.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20210905100942/https://www.ifsc-climbing.org/index.php/world-competition/calendar?task=ranking-complete&cup=66&category=5&year=2021 . 2021-09-05 .
  22. Web site: IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP 2021: LEAD NATIONAL TEAM RANKING. 2021-09-05. www.ifsc-climbing.org.
  23. Web site: IFSC Speed World Cup 2021 Men OVERALL Ranking .
  24. Web site: IFSC Speed World Cup 2021 Women OVERALL Ranking .
  25. Web site: IFSC SPEED WORLD CUP 2021: NATIONAL TEAM RANKING. www.ifsc-climbing.org. 2021-07-04.