The competition climbing, GB Climbing lowdown, and event information for the IFSC Climbing & Paraclimbing World Championships 2023 in Bern, Switzerland, 1-12 August.
The IFSC World Championships is being held next week in Bern, Switzerland, and will last from 1 August to 12 August.
The schedule includes an array of events, including the Paraclimbing World Championships, and is the first official event where athletes will be eligible to qualify to compete at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
For those of us that cannot watch the World Championships in person, the live coverage of the action will be available via Discovery and Eurosport. Highlights, results and feature interviews will also be posted on the IFSC YouTube channel, Olympics.com TV Channel, and social media.
For competition climbers, the IFSC World Championships 2023 in Bern is the first step on the road to qualifying for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. There are 10 Olympic quota spots for Paris 2024 up for grabs which all the athletes competing will be looking to secure to realise their Olympic dreams.
All of the GB Climbing athletes competing will be daring to hope of winning one of these highly coveted quota spots, and eyes will be on one of these athletes in particular. With a rapidly growing collection of medals – including two World Cup gold medals – our very own Toby Roberts will be in with a huge shot at making the Olympics in this first qualifying event for Paris 2024; particularly as Speed will not be included in the combined event.
READ: Gold for Roberts in Chamonix
A horde of athletes around 800 strong from 60 different nations will gather in Bern to test their fingers, biceps, stamina as they will often compete in two events a day for nearly two weeks. There will be a total of 8 medal events with 10 Olympic quotas to be awarded, across the boulder and lead combined format, and the separate discipline of speed.
There will be three disciplines: speed, boulder, and lead. Once the single disciplines have been concluded, the top 20 athletes from each gender will step back onto the mat to compete in the new Olympic format consisting of boulder and lead. 
While at Tokyo 2020 there was only one medal awarded per gender, the Paris 2024 Olympic Games will see two medals awarded per gender. Speed has been separated out into its own event, while the combined event now consists of only Boulder and Lead. This means that a total of four gold medals will be awarded to climbing athletes at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
SPEED
Speed climbing entails climbing a globally standardised route secured from above as quickly as possible. Qualification comprises two rounds for each athlete. The aim is to achieve the fastest possible time. The fastest 16 climbers from the qualifying rounds will advance to the final rounds. From the round of sixteen onwards, athletes compete against each other in a knockout system.
BOULDER
Bouldering involves climbing without a rope up to a height of 4.5 metres. Four to five “bouldering problems” with complex individual moves and difficult movement sequences must be mastered in a given time. The aim is to hold the top hold, i.e. the uppermost hold, with both hands.
LEAD
Athletes climb in lead along a previously unfamiliar route. The aim is to get as far as possible – ideally to the top hold. Competitors have 6 minutes to complete their attempt. The route has a minimum length of 15 metres.
COMBINED / BOULDER & LEAD
Ahead of the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, a new event will be introduced with combined scoring from the Boulder and Lead disciplines. There is a fixed order of events: the competition starts with Boulder, followed by Lead.
PARACLIMBING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
The most successful paraclimbers compete in the discipline Lead. Athletes are placed in different categories depending on the type and degree of their disability in order the guarantee the fairest possible competition.  Despite their impairment, some athletes climb very challenging routes up to grade 8 on the French scale.
CLIMBING WITH A HANDICAP
Limb deficiency
Reduced muscle tone
Impaired movement coordination (ataxia)
Involuntary movement (athetosis)
Impaired vision
Reduced muscle strength, e.g. due to a spinal cord injury
Impaired range of joint movement
Leg length difference (at least 20%)
Short stature (<140 cm)
Paraclimbers have at least one of the following disabilities, which also meet the so-called “minimum criteria”. More information: Paraclimbing IFSC.
MEN
Combined
Jim Pope
Jack MacDougall
Max Milne
Toby Roberts
Hamish McArthur
Speed
Rafe Stokes
Matthew Fall
WOMEN
Combined
Molly Thompson-Smith
Erin McNeice
Boulder
Holly Toothill


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Exceptional performances and many a bright future for GB climbers after a phenomenal 12 days of action at the IFSC World Championships, where a huge squad of GB Climbing and GB Paraclimbing athletes competed.
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The British Lead, Speed and Paraclimbing Championships makes a welcome return to EICA Ratho in Scotland. The 2023 edition of the event takes place between 8 – 10 September 2023.
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Once again Toby Roberts makes history as he claims his first Lead World Cup gold medal in Chamonix, France and becomes the first British athlete to win a gold medal in both the Lead and Boulder disciplines.
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Exceptional performances and many a bright future for GB climbers after a phenomenal 12 days of action at the IFSC World Championships, where a huge squad of GB Climbing and GB Paraclimbing athletes competed.
Read more »
The British Lead, Speed and Paraclimbing Championships makes a welcome return to EICA Ratho in Scotland. The 2023 edition of the event takes place between 8 – 10 September 2023.
Read more »
Once again Toby Roberts makes history as he claims his first Lead World Cup gold medal in Chamonix, France and becomes the first British athlete to win a gold medal in both the Lead and Boulder disciplines.
Read more »
The British Mountaineering Council (BMC) is the representative body that exists to protect the freedoms and promote the interests of climbers, hill walkers and mountaineers, including ski-mountaineers. The BMC recognises that climbing, hill walking and mountaineering are activities with a danger of personal injury or death. Participants in these activities should be aware of and accept these risks and be responsible for their own actions.

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