2016, Shauna Coxsey reached the final of the bouldering competition
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- “It was totally crazy to win,” she says
2016, Shauna Coxsey reached the final of the bouldering competition at the International Federation of Sport Climbing (IFSC) Climbing World Cup in Munich’s Olympiastadion. The British climber had competed at the venue previously, coming third in 2012 and second in 2014 and 2015. This time, beneath an undulating glass canopy inspired by the Alps, she faced four climbs up four different walls. Dotted with sharp, geometric resin outcrops, they looked more like the frozen screen of an early video game than a real-life mountain. The rules of bouldering competi- tions are simple. The athlete is kept in isolation, unable to see the wall or their competitors. They step out, a buzzer goes, and the countdown starts. They have four minutes to complete a 3D puzzle, designed by some of the best climbers in the world to be so mentally and physically taxing that it’s just about possible to solve – but not by every competitor, and not on the first try. Coxsey examined the first route carefully for as long as she dared – a near-90-degree outcrop followed by a knife-edge grey hold – then hurled herself up the wall with nothing but bare hands, rubber shoes and a bag of chalk. She used fingertips, hips, toes, elbows, knees. Climbers are allowed to fall off the wall and start again, as long as they hit the top within 240 seconds, but she made the summit with barely a pause. On her second climb, she faced a wall with ten sharp, angular outcrops. She pushed off with her feet, leaping “It was totally crazy to win,” she says, shaking her head. “All I was thinking about was getting stronger. But I did it.” Her next challenge is her biggest yet, and something the climbing community has never seen before: in 2021, climbing will debut at the Tokyo Olympics, and Coxsey is the only British athlete selected to compete. It comes at a time when climbing has never been so popular – the IFSC estimates 45 million people now participate in indoor sport climbing globally, just below the figures for golf and baseball – and marks a new milestone in its development as a competitive sport. A wave of pain tore through her. “Leah,” she said quietly. “I can’t get un- dressed.” Then she burst into tears. Typically, says Dr Stephen Fealy, an orthopaedic surgeon at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, athletes take up to a year to recover from a labral tear and, if lucky, regain up to 80 per cent of their pre-injury performance. Fealy, however, deals with American football players, baseball pitchers and weight- lifters – not climbers. In 2017, 12 months after her injury, Coxsey returned to the World Cup, and won it again. almost her full body length up and over an overhang, dangling from a tiny hold with her right arm while chalking up her left. She bounded again, reached out for a murky black shape, and felt something tear in her shoulder. Although she didn’t realise at the time, she’d torn her labrum, the cup-shaped rim of cartilage that lines the ball-and-socket joint of the shoulder. Tears to the labrum make the shoulder hang loose and risk dislocation. Ignoring the injury, her adrenaline carried her to the top and then on through her third climb, a challenging route involving several leaps and plenty of upper body strength, which she aced at the first attempt. At the fourth climb, her shoulder finally gave way. The wall looked like a half-finished game of Tetris, with L-shaped green holds set at right angles. Her first move needed to be a hard dynamic leap to grab a sheer surface. No other competitor had made it, and for a second it looked like she might, but her time ticked away and she walked back to her changing room – disappointed, perhaps, but not defeated. Across the World Cup bouldering season, which consists of seven compe- titions on three continents, Coxsey had already finished first four times – enough to secure her first World Cup win. On the podium she couldn’t raise her arm to celebrate. She headed back to her hotel room with her training partner and best friend Leah Crane (the two look like sisters, same height, build and blonde hair), where she tried to take her jumper off. Download 17.8 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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