I’m psyched that Will is taking a year out to focus on outdoor climbing as I’m far more excited by what he does on rock. On the other hand I also have a long-standing interest in the BMC and how it meets its obligations and expectations. Presumably the primary goal of GB Climbing is to have the national team perform well on the world stage and if their procedures, management or whatever have caused or contributed to the loss of the star player then it is not meeting its obligations/expectations. Trouble is there is a conspiracy of silence as it is not in athletes best interest to be publicly critical.
Quote from: shark on March 21, 2022, 09:37:27 pmI’m psyched that Will is taking a year out to focus on outdoor climbing as I’m far more excited by what he does on rock. On the other hand I also have a long-standing interest in the BMC and how it meets its obligations and expectations. Presumably the primary goal of GB Climbing is to have the national team perform well on the world stage and if their procedures, management or whatever have caused or contributed to the loss of the star player then it is not meeting its obligations/expectations. Trouble is there is a conspiracy of silence as it is not in athletes best interest to be publicly critical.Just to say. My posts above are based on experience/observations of the GB setup in general and not specifically Will.In summary the BMC are trying to do too much, for too many, with not enough resources.
Indeed the rates of pay i saw were less than that of a route setter. Like you say a lot of it will come down to the love if it.
What surprised me is that everything at rowing at a club level seems to be done on a volunteer basis including all the coaching and competitions. It has saved us an absolute fortune!
I climb with several former british junior champions. They all dropped out of competing as soon as they turned twenty, got cars, moved somewhere good for getting outdoors, and escaped the sphere of influence of parents/ team managers etc. Comp climbing will always have a retention problem because it is a sub-sport of something much bigger, older and more interesting. Nobody in the wider sport sees it as the real deal, and as climbers mature they will always feel the need to prove themselves outside. The more competitive inside becomes, the less easy it is to fit in cutting edge performance outside. So the only way you'll keep people competing is to throw money at them (which tbf seems to be what they've been doing), but people will always be looking to get out. But realistically the team approach also needs to allow or preferably incorporate serious outside time and achievement as a part of the yearly training cycle.
Comp climbing will always have a retention problem because it is a sub-sport of something much bigger, older and more interesting. Nobody in the wider sport sees it as the real deal, and as climbers mature they will always feel the need to prove themselves outside.
the acceptance of competition climbing as a ‘real deal’ has increased massively in the past decade
Do you think this holds true in other countries? A lot of international competitors seem to be happy to not do much outdoors.
Only up to a point. Who remembers old comp results? Only the occasional exceptional one. If you want your talent to leave a legacy it is first ascents on rock all the way.
I climb with several former british junior champions. They all dropped out of competing as soon as they turned twenty, got cars, moved somewhere good for getting outdoors, and escaped the sphere of influence of parents/ team managers etc…. people will always be looking to get out.
Quote from: Johnny Brown on March 22, 2022, 10:29:18 amOnly up to a point. Who remembers old comp results? Only the occasional exceptional one. If you want your talent to leave a legacy it is first ascents on rock all the way.This just speaks to your personal interests though right? You only have to look at other competitive sports, where there are stattos that can give you Merckx’s whole palmares, and those who only know the significant wins. Same can be applied to FAs, just because you have your name against a bit of rock somewhere, it’s not much of a legacy unless it’s a significant route.
This just speaks to your personal interests though right?
Same goes for all sports people compete in as kids. Once you get to your late teens/ early 20s the last thing you want to be doing is the parent-led grind you’ve done for the previous ten years or so, particularly if the only pleasure you got from it was winning.
I think that climbing in the Olympics changes this a lot. You might not remember who wins some competitions here and there but the Olympics medalists for sure.
If Janja keeps doing what she's doing, and stays away from rock as much as she has done in the past, you don't think she'd be remembered as one of the best? Nobody has won comps like she has - if she kept doing that and didn't put up any new hard rock routes, I don't think we'd forget about her. While we might not remember every result, it's still a hell of a legacy.
I'm under no illusions how popular walls are, but I don't see any danger of interest in indoor results surpassing outdoors.
Yeah she'd be up there with Francois Legrand. But I'll be very surprised if in ten years she hasn't built an even more impressive CV on rock.
Quote from: Dexter on March 22, 2022, 10:48:46 amI think that climbing in the Olympics changes this a lot. You might not remember who wins some competitions here and there but the Olympics medalists for sure.Remind me - who won the Men’s Olympic gold?