website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Sport Climbing IFSC World Championships 2018


Recommended Posts

  • 2 weeks later...

Totallympics TV

Looking for a livestream? You can find them all here.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-164666
Share on other sites

the Championships start Tomorrow...

 

here you can find the competition schedule:

https://www.innsbruck2018.com/en/sport/competition-schedule.html

 

meanwhile you can find a small but very useful recap of the main rules of the game...for all those who're not so "in touch" with Sport Climbing:

https://www.innsbruck2018.com/en/detail/artikel/a-laymans-introduction-to-ifsc-rules.html

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165100
Share on other sites

and here's (part of) a post about this tournament I wrote in the general thread a few days ago:

 

(...)

I'm really curious to see how the combined (olympic) event is going to develop...

for this year's champs I expect Ondra, Schubert, McColl and the Japanese guys (maybe also someone from France) to dominate the men's field, meanwhile I think the women's event is gonna be more open to some surprising winner (even though a battle between JPN and SLO is more likely than any other option)...

 

my 2 cents (more a preview than a prediction)...

 

Women's Lead:

the medallists will be among this girls: Garnbret (SLO), Pilz (AUT), Nonaka (JPN), Noguchi (JPN), Verhoeven (BEL)...anybody else would be a major upset

 

Men's Lead:

Ondra (CZE), Ghisolfi (ITA), Megos (GER), Schubert (AUT), Desgranges (FRA), the entire Slovenian team

 

Women's Boulder:

Nonaka (JPN), Noguchi (JPN), Gejo (SRB), Garnbret (SLO), Coxey (GBR), Gibert (FRA)...with the US girls as very dangerous outsiders

 

Men's Boulder:

it's gonna be a SLO vs JPN vs Ondra (CZE) question, but Hojer (GER) and Rubtsov (RUS) must not be underestimated

 

Women's Speed:

RUS vs POL vs INA (if they are not done after their home Asian Games) with Joubert (FRA) as the only other option

 

Men's Speed:

Boldyrev (UKR), Mawem (FRA), Alipourshenadzandifar (IRI), the Indonesians and the Russians (hoping for some Italian surprise, too...especially by Fossali)

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165101
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, phelps said:

Men's Speed:

Boldyrev (UKR), Mawem (FRA), Alipourshenadzandifar (IRI), the Indonesians and the Russians (hoping for some Italian surprise, too...especially by Fossali)

 

his name is just Alipour. obviously someone forgot to add a "space" between two parts of his surname. the 2nd part of surnames are often (99% cases) to be ignored for Iranian names. nobody in Iran knows him by anything but Reza Alipour. it happens a lot with Iranian names. that's why sometimes you see crazy long names. :d

 

the Asian Games was the first time I was watching a combined competition (maybe the first combined event ever in an official competition ?!) and surprisingly for me they multiply the scores (which I wasn't aware of) ! so there is a huge difference if you win one of those 3 events instead of finishing 2nd. for example if you win something and finish 10th in another one you will get 10 negative points. but if you finish 2nd and 9th you will have 18 neg points ! huge difference. and in the final round "speed event" was a kind of knockout system. not a "qualification system".

 

we had a 7th place finish in Jakarta in combined event and she lost the final by the narrowest possible margin ! I wonder if it means there is a chance (even slim) for Olympic qualification . how good are Asian climbers in this combined event ?!

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165109
Share on other sites

2 ore fa, MHSN ha scritto:

 

his name is just Alipour. obviously someone forgot to add a "space" between two parts of his surname. the 2nd part of surnames are often (99% cases) to be ignored for Iranian names. nobody in Iran knows him by anything but Reza Alipour. it happens a lot with Iranian names. that's why sometimes you see crazy long names. :d

 

the Asian Games was the first time I was watching a combined competition (maybe the first combined event ever in an official competition ?!) and surprisingly for me they multiply the scores (which I wasn't aware of) ! so there is a huge difference if you win one of those 3 events instead of finishing 2nd. for example if you win something and finish 10th in another one you will get 10 negative points. but if you finish 2nd and 9th you will have 18 neg points ! huge difference. and in the final round "speed event" was a kind of knockout system. not a "qualification system".

 

we had a 7th place finish in Jakarta in combined event and she lost the final by the narrowest possible margin ! I wonder if it means there is a chance (even slim) for Olympic qualification . how good are Asian climbers in this combined event ?!

 

thanks for the explaination about Reza's name...

 

at the World Champs, the combined event final (with the 6 best athletes according to the summary of the 3 individual events qualifications) will have speed as the 1st event, then Boulder and finally Lead...so, I think there won't be a knockout system in the Speed phase, but I'm not sure about anything, since this is the 1st time it will be contested at the World Champs)...

however, this is not a premiere overall, since last year we had the European Champs in this same combined event (held separately from any other competition) and we also had the Junior Worlds a couple of weeks ago...

 

in lead, boulder and probably combined event Asian climbers are very good, I'd say dominant if we look at the Japanese men and women...

then there's also the Korean Kim Ja In among the girls...

meanwhile Chinese and Indonesians (+ Alipour) are pure speed specialists, so, as I wrote in the general thread, I don't think they have a real chance to make it to the Olympics (especially because we're going to have only 20 starters in both men and women's Olympic competitions -with max 2 climbers per Nation- which is a very small number if you think that lead and boulder events in world cup stages normally have more than 100 starters -even if the powerhouses generally start up to 10 athletes each), since the format heavily favors the lead & boulder specialists...

the only hope could be the fact that this event, being totally new to every climber, can develop in the most unexpected way in a very short time...

as I wrote above, I'm really curious to see how this thing's going to work out in Innsbruck (and in the next couple of years)...

Edited by phelps
Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165139
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, phelps said:

 

thanks for the explaination about Reza's name...

 

at the World Champs, the combined event final (with the 6 best athletes according to the summary of the 3 individual events qualifications) will have speed as the 1st event, then Boulder and finally Lead...so, I think there won't be a knockout system in the Speed phase, but I'm not sure about anything, since this is the 1st time it will be contested at the World Champs)...

however, this is not a premiere overall, since last year we had the European Champs in this same combined event (held separately from any other competition) and we also had the Junior Worlds a couple of weeks ago...

 

in lead, boulder and probably combined event Asian climbers are very good, I'd say dominant if we look at the Japanese men and women...

then there's also the Korean Kim Ja In among the girls...

meanwhile Chinese and Indonesians (+ Alipour) are pure speed specialists, so, as I wrote in the general thread, I don't think they have a real chance to make it to the Olympics (especially because we're going to have only 20 starters in both men and women's Olympic competitions -with max 2 climbers per Nation- which is a very small number if you think that lead and boulder events in world cup stages normally have more than 100 starters -even if the powerhouses generally start up to 10 athletes each), since the format heavily favors the lead & boulder specialists...

the only hope could be the fact that this event, being totally new to every climber, can develop in the most unexpected way in a very short time...

as I wrote above, I'm really curious to see how this thing's going to work out in Innsbruck (and in the next couple of years)...

 

in AG for the finals they had 3 direct knockout matches between 6 finalists, winners + the the best loser made it to the semifinal and go on

while in the qualification, it was just best of two runs and they sorted athletes based on that.

 

of course I know there is no chance for Alipour, he won't even try the combined event. actually I'm thinking if Japan and Korea complete their quotas before the Asian qualifiers, (that's my question if they are capable of that or not) there will be a slim (but realistic) chance for our climbers , for example in AG, if we exclude Japanese/Korean climbers, Rekabi was 1st in boulder and 2nd in lead , but her very poor result in Speed was costly and she lost the final on tiebreaker to one of Japanese girls.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165149
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, MHSN said:

 

his name is just Alipour. obviously someone forgot to add a "space" between two parts of his surname. the 2nd part of surnames are often (99% cases) to be ignored for Iranian names. nobody in Iran knows him by anything but Reza Alipour. it happens a lot with Iranian names. that's why sometimes you see crazy long names. :d

 

But why this happens so many times with some many competitors? It's an error by the organizers or the iranians who submit the names? :mumble:

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165155
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, vinipereira said:

 

But why this happens so many times with some many competitors? It's an error by the organizers or the iranians who submit the names? :mumble:

 

 

yes it happens so many times, well I think they just copy/paste names from the passports, the problem is the organization who makes these passports. :thumbdown: I know the process . they give you a form to write your name in English and whatever nonsense you write that will go to your passport ! they never care to fix possible mistakes.

 

the 2nd part is usually very long and never be used in Iran unless for official documents, I mean if you check the Persian media. you can't find Reza Alipour-Shenazandifar even once. not at all.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1230-sport-climbing-ifsc-world-championships-2018/#findComment-165157
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • With the previous version, I was able to copy/paste it into Excel, then filter the data by day...but this version isn't as easily copy/pastable.  Perhaps feeding it through AI to convert it to Excel might do the trick, then can filter it.
    • Is there a website with a day-by-day schedule out anywhere? Hard to follow using the PDF. 
    • Most up-to-date version, having gone through the V3.0 Schedule from the other day.   Enjoy!   I'm enjoying getting to visualize the flow of each sport, using the Composite tab, and of course, each day's tab will be beneficial as we plan how to watch (or visit!) each day.   Does anyone know of an extant list of the chronological order of medals that will be awarded?     la28scheddetailed.xlsx
    • 2026 BWF World Tour January Tournaments   * Not BWF World Tour tournaments during January 2026.   2026 YONEX Estonian International - Tallinn   Results (January 8-11, 2026)   International Series US$10.000   Men's Singles: 1. Minoru Koga   2. Mads Christophersen   3. William Bogebjerg   3. Jakob Houe   Women's Singles: 1. Rujula Ramu 2. Frederikke Ostergaard 3. Yuan Chi Liao 3. Rosy Oktavia Pancasari   Men's Doubles: Christian Faust Kjaer & Rasmus Kjaer  d. Baptiste Labarthe & Quentin Ronget     Women's Doubles: Zi Yu Low & Noraqilah Maisarah  d. Audrey Chang & Jasmine Yeung   Mixed Doubles: Jonathan Dresp & Selin Hubsch  d. Simon Krax & Amelie Lehmann   2026 VICTOR Swedish Open - Uppsala   Results (January 15-18, 2026)   International Series US$10.000   Men's Singles: 1. Minoru Koga   2. Mads Christophersen   3. Ditlev Jaeger Holm   3. Jakob Houe   Women's Singles: 1. Rujula Ramu 2. Yuan Chi Liao 3. Audrey Chang   3. Ella Lin     Men's Doubles: Oliver Butler & Samuel Jones  d. Bao Xin Da Gu La Wai & Yu Hsiang Chou     Women's Doubles: Simonaa Pilgaard & Signe Schulz   d. Audrey Chang & Jasmine Yeung   Mixed Doubles: Loo Bing Kun & Noraqilah Maisarah  d. Timothy Lock & Chloe Hoang   2026 Iceland International - Reykjavik   Results (January 22-25, 2026)   Future Series   Men's Singles: 1. Mikkel Langemark 2. Mathias Solgaard 3. Lee Jan Jireh 3. Kian-Yu Oei     Women's Singles: 1. Huang Sheng-chun 2. Azkya Aliefa Ruhanda 3. Dounia Pelupessy 3. Novi Wieland     Men's Doubles: Baptiste Labarthe & Quentin Ronget  d. Danielius Berzanskis & Domas Paksys   Women's Doubles: Anastasiia Boiarun & Daria Kharlampovich  d. Sarah Frederikke Vishart & Anna Louise Winther     Mixed Doubles: Yann Orteu & Caroline Racloz  d. Nicholas Franconville & Julie Franconville     Complete Results
    • 2026 WSL Tour January and February Events   * The Qualifying Series are events that gives points to qualify for the 2026 Challenger Series, which gives places for the 2027 WSL Championship Tour.    ** 2026 WSL Championship Tour surfers can also compete in this events.   2026 SLO CAL Open Pismo Beach - California   Results (January 19-25, 2026)   Qualifying Series 2.000   Men's: 1. Taj Lindblad 2. Lucca Mesinas 3. Jabe Swierkocki 3. Sam Reidy     Women's: 1. Eden Walla 2. Reid van Wagoner 3. Ella McCaffray 3. Alana Lopez     2026 Gold Coast Open - Queensland   Results (February 18-22, 2026)   Qualifying Series 4.000   Men's: 1. Dane Henry 2. Bronson Meydi   3. Jackson Baker 4. Shohei Kato 5. Joel Vaughan   5. Liam O'Brien   5. Lennix Smith   5. Ocean Lancaster     Women's: 1. Isla Huppatz 2. Milla Coco Brown 3. Ruby Berry 4. Minami Nonaka 5. Willow Hardy   5. Sara Wakita   5. Shino Matsuda   5. Nanaho Tsuzuki     2026 BTMI Barbados Surf Pro - Bathsheba   Results (February 23 - March 1, 2026)   Qualifying Series 6.000   Men's: 1. Taj Lindblad 2. Alan Cleland 3. Josh Burke   3. Lucas Owston 5. Michael Dunphy   5. Lucca Mesinas   5. Luke Guinaldo   5. Makai Bray   9. Bruce Mackie   9. Kanoa Igarashi   9. Blayr Barton   9. Charly Martin   9. Cole McCaffray   9. Tyler Gunter   9. Jacob Burke   9. Cannon Carr     Women's: 1. Eden Walla 2. Havanna Cabrero 3. Talia Swindal   3. Ella McCaffray   5. Chelsea Tuach   5. Bailey Turner   5. Lilie Kulber   5. Zoe Chait 9. Leilani McGonagle   9. Auburn Hilley   9. Mia McLeish   9. Daya McCart   9. Reid van Wagoner   9. Victoria Duprat   9. Vela Mattive   9. Amari Moore     2026 Señoritas Open Pro - Punta Hermosa   Results (February 25-28, 2026)   Qualifying Series 2.000   Men's: 1. Ryan Kainalo 2. Rickson Falcao 3. Heitor Mueller 4. Gabriel Arturo Vargas     Women's: 1. Arena Rodriguez 2. Sol Aguirre 3. Daniella Rosas 4. Sofia Artieda     2026 Phillip Island Pro - Phillip Island   Results (February 26 - March 4, 2026)   Qualifying Series 4.000   Men's: 1. Alister Reginato 2. Tully Wylie 3. Harley Walters 3. Marlon Harrison 5. Xavier Huxtable   5. Thomas Carvalho   5. Jarvis Earle  5. Dane Henry    Women's: 1. Lucy Darragh  2. Anon Matsuoka  3. Sara Wakita  3. Mirai Ikeda  5. Sophie Fletcher  5. Charli Hately  5. Ziggy Aloha Mackenzie  5. Ruby Trew    Complete Results
    • 2026 ATP, Challenger and ITF Tour Week 9   Results (March 2-8, 2026)   Challenger 100 in Thionville : 1. Sebastian Ofner 2. Nicolai Budkov Kjaer 3. Hugo Gaston 3. Otto Virtanen     Challenger 75 in Brasilia : 1. Henrique Rocha 2. Daniel Vallejo 3. Eduardo Ribeiro 3. Thiago Monteiro     Challenger 75 in Kigali : 1. Joel Schwarzler 2. Stefano Napolitano 3. Marco Cecchinato 3. Arthur Gea     Challenger 50 in Hersonissos : 1. Toby Samuel 2. Harry Wendelken 3. Dimitar Kuzmanov 3. Stefanos Sakellaridis     M25 in Launceston  : Hsu Yu-hsiou  d. Hiroki Moriya M25 in Faro  : Justin Boulais  d. Joao Domingues   M25 in Trimbach  : Dominic Stricker  d. Daniel Masur M25 in Yerba Buena  : Diego Dedura  d. Luciano Ambrogi M15 in Maanshan  : Koki Matsuda  d. Andre Ilagan M15 in Torello  : John Echeverria  d. Emile Hudd M15 in Poitiers  : Anton Matusevich  d. Leonardo Rossi M15 in Heraklion  : Lorenzo Angelini  d. Tomasz Berkieta M15 in Sharm El Sheikh  : Fares Zakaria  d. Semen Pankin  (Russia) M15 in Monastir  : Milos Karol  d. Leo Raquillet M15 in Sherbrooke  : Daniel de Jonge  d. Gavin Young  
    • 2026 ATP, Challenger and ITF Tour Week 8   Results (February 23 - March 1, 2026)   ATP 500 in Dubai : 1. Daniil Medvedev  (Russia) 2. Tallon Griekspoor 3. Felix Auger-Aliassime 3. Andrey Rublev  (Russia) 5. Jiri Lehecka   5. Jenson Brooksby   5. Arthur Rinderknech   5. Jakub Mensik     Doubles: Harri Heliovaara  & Henry Patten  d. Marcelo Arevalo  & Mate Pavic   ATP 500 in Acapulco : 1. Flavio Cobolli 2. Frances Tiafoe 3. Miomir Kecmanovic 3. Brandon Nakashima 5. Terence Atmane   5. Wu Yibing   5. Mattia Bellucci   5. Valentin Vacherot     Doubles: Marcelo Melo  & Alexander Zverev  d. Alexander Erler  & Robert Galloway     ATP 250 in Santiago : 1. Luciano Darderi 2. Yannick Hanfmann 3. Francisco Cerundolo 3. Sebastian Baez 5. Emilio Nava   5. Vilius Gaubas   5. Alejandro Tabilo   5. Andrea Pellegrino     Doubles: Orlando Luz & Rafael Matos  d. Ariel Behar  & Matthew Romios     Challenger 100 in Saint-Brieuc : 1. Sebastian Ofner 2. Pierre-Hugues Herbert 3. Clement Chidekh 3. Hugo Gaston   Challenger 75 in Lugano : 1. Zsombor Piros 2. Joel Schwarzler 3. Matej Dodig 3. Mika Brunold     Challenger 75 in Pune : 1. Federico Cina 2. Felix Gill 3. Duje Ajdukovic 3. Edas Butvilas   Challenger 50 in Tigre II : 1. Facundo Diaz Acosta 2. Miguel Damas 3. Diego Dedura 3. Alvaro Guillen Meza     M25 in Burnie  : Enzo Aguiard  d. Li Tu M25 in Vale do Lobo  : Toby Samuel  d. Gilles Hussey M25 in Pszczyna  : Sebastian Sorger  d. Mae Malige M15 in Villena  : Sander Jong  d. Alejo Sanchez Quilez   M15 in Antalya  : Andrey Chepelev  (Russia) d. Max Alcala Gurri M15 in Sharm El Sheikh  : Ognjen Milic  d. Fares Zakaria M15 in Monastir  : Nikolai Barsukov  d. Andrea de Marchi M15 in Naples  : JJ Wolf  d. Miguel Tobon M15 in San Jose  : Blaise Bicknell  d. Nick Hardt
    • 2026 ATP, Challenger and ITF Tour Week 7   Results (February 16-22, 2026)   ATP 500 in Doha : 1. Carlos Alcaraz 2. Arthur Fils 3. Andrey Rublev  (Russia) 3. Jakub Mensik 5. Karen Khachanov  (Russia) 5. Stefanos Tsitsipas   5. Jiri Lehecka   5. Jannik Sinner     Doubles: Harri Heliovaara  & Henry Patten  d. Julian Cash & Lloyd Glasspool   ATP 500 in Rio de Janeiro : 1. Tomas Etcheverry 2. Alejandro Tabilo 3. Ignacio Buse   3. Vit Kopriva   5. Thiago Tirante   5. Matteo Berrettini   5. Jaime Faria   5. Juan Manuel Cerundolo     Doubles: Joao Fonseca & Marcelo Melo  d. Constantin Frantzen & Robin Haase     ATP 250 in Delray Beach : 1. Sebastian Korda 2. Tommy Paul 3. Learner Tien 3. Flavio Cobolli 5. Taylor Fritz   5. Frances Tiafoe   5. Coleman Wong   5. Casper Ruud     Doubles: Austin Krajicek  & Nikola Mektic  d. Benjamin Kittay & Ryan Seggerman   Challenger 125 in Lille : 1. Luca van Assche 2. Alexander Blockx 3. Jerome Kym 3. Moise Kouame     Challenger 75 in Metepec : 1. Borna Gojo 2. Alexis Galarneau 3. Andres Andrade 3. Rodrigo Pacheco Mendez     Challenger 75 in New Delhi : 1. Stefanos Sakellaridis 2. Oliver Crawford 3. Felix Gill 3. Rei Sakamoto     Challenger 50 in Tigre : 1. Guido Ivan Justo 2. Lautaro Midon 3. Carlos Sanchez Jover 3. Gonzalo Bueno     M25 in Vila Real de Santo Antonio  : Gauthier Onclin  d. Lui Maxted M25 in Trento  : Andrea Guerrieri  d. Jacopo Vasami M25 in San Jose  : Gavin Young  d. Daniel Milavsky M15 in Villena  : Peter Makk  d. Alejo Sanchez Quilez M15 in Lannion  : Robin Catry  d. Tibo Colson M15 in The Hague  : Anton Matusevich  d. Mika Petkovic M15 in Antalya  : Cezar Cretu  d. Iliyan Radulov M15 in Sharm El Sheikh  : Oskar Brostrom Poulsen  d. Semen Pankin  (Russia) M15 in Monastir  : Cesar Bouchelaghem  d. Jack Loge M15 in Naples  : Tommaso Comapgnucci  d. Hunter Heck  
×
×
  • Create New...