2020 IFSC Climbing European Championships

The 2020 IFSC Climbing European Championships, the 13th edition, were held in Moscow, Russia from 20 to 28 November 2020. The championships consisted of lead, speed, bouldering, and combined events. The winners of the last event will automatically qualify for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, where climbing will make its debut.

2020 IFSC Climbing European Championships
Luzhniki Gymnastics Palace was held the competition
VenueIrina Viner-Usmanova Gymnastics Palace
LocationRussia Moscow, Russia
Date20 – 28 November 2020
Competitors95 athletes from 16 nations
Website[1]
← 2018

Medals

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  *   Host nation (Russia)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Russia (RUS)*53412
2  Switzerland (SUI)1102
3  Slovenia (SLO)1001
  Ukraine (UKR)1001
5  Belgium (BEL)0202
6  Czech Republic (CZE)0112
  Serbia (SRB)0112
8  Great Britain (GBR)0011
  Poland (POL)0011
Totals (9 entries)88824

Schedule

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A competition stage, the speed climbing wall

A total of 16 Medal events were held across four disciplines.[1]

Other competitions Finals M Men's matches W Women's matches
November 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Total
Speed 2 2
Boulder 2 2
Lead 2 2
Combined 2 2

Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics

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The best climber of the combined event automatically qualifies for the 2020 Summer Olympics, where sport climbing will make its debut.

The qualifiers for the 2020 Summer Olympics from the 2020 Championships Combined events are:

2020 Summer Olympic qualification
Men Women

  Alexey Rubtsov (RUS)

  Viktoria Meshkova (RUS)

Bouldering

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Women

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Rank Name Score[2]
1   Viktoria Meshkova 4T4z 6 5
2   Chloé Caulier 4T4z 6 6
3   Staša Gejo 2T4z 4 4
4   Lucia Dörffel 2T3z 3 3
5   Alma Bestvater 1T4z 2 9
6   Afra Hönig 1T3z 4 4
Rank Name Score[3]
1   Jernej Kruder 2T3z 2 3
2   Sergey Luzhetsky 1T4z 3 8
3   Nikolay Yerilovets 1T3z 2 7
4   Ram Levin 1T3z 2 7
5   Nicolas Collin 1T3z 3 8
6   Sergey Skorodumov 0T3z 0 4

Lead

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Women

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Rank Name Score[4]
1   Viktoria Meshkova 36+ (3:53)
2   Eliška Adamovská 36+ (4:35)
3   Molly Thompson-Smith 31
4   Hannah Meul 30+
5   Olesya Prosekova 30
6   Daria Mezentseva 28+
7   Nika Potapova 18+
8   Markéta Janošová 11
Rank Name Score[5]
1   Sascha Lehmann 41+
2   Nicolas Collin 38+
3   Dmitry Fakiryanov 37+
4   Nimrod Marcus 32+
5   Hannes Puman 34+
6   Martin Stráník 33+
7   Anže Peharc 32+
8   Vladislav Shevchenko 32+

Speed

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Women

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Score[6] Included are climbers who reached at least the quarterfinals. Yulia Kaplina set a new World Record in women's speed climbing (6.964).[7]

Rank Name Last Score[8]
1   Ekaterina Barashchuk 7.37
2   Elizaveta Ivanova 7.44
3   Yulia Kaplina 7.05
4   Aleksandra Kałucka 8.30
5   Natalia Kałucka 7.82
6   Patrycja Chudziak 7.87
7   Petra Klingler 8.59
8   Aleksandra Mirosław FALL

Score[9] Included are climbers who reached at least the quarterfinals.

Rank Name Last Score[10]
1   Danyil Boldyrev 5.69
2   Lev Rudatskiy 5.74
3   Marcin Dzieński 5.59
4   Vladislav Deulin 5.73
5   Yaroslav Tkach 5.84
6   Sergey Luzhetsky 6.33
7   Dmitry Timofeev FALL
8   Aleksandr Shikov FS
WC - Wildcard
FS – False start

Combined

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In combined competition, scoring is based on a multiplication formula, with points awarded by calculating the product of the three finishing ranks achieved in each discipline within the combined event. A competitor finishing with a first, a second and a sixth would thus be awarded 1 x 2 x 6 = 12 points, with the lowest scoring competitor winning.[11]

Women

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Rank Name Points Speed Bouldering Lead
Rank Time Rank Score Rank Holds
1   Viktoria Meshkova 12 2 fall 6 1t2z 1 5 1 top (4:00)
2   Staša Gejo 15 3 9.42 1 2t3z 3 5 5 25+
3   Eliška Adamovská 64 8 13.83 4 2t3z 5 8 2 top (5:03)
4   Patrycja Chudziak 64 1 8.12 8 0t0z 0 0 8 13+
5   Chloé Caulier 70 5 10.45 2 2t3z 4 5 7 21+
6   Elena Krasovskaia 72 4 10.30 3 2t3z 5 6 6 23+
7   Hannah Meul 120 6 fall 5 2t2z 3 3 4 28+
8   Molly Thompson-Smith 147 7 12.79 7 1t1z 1 1 3 36+
Rank Name Points Speed Bouldering Lead
Rank Time Rank Score Rank Holds
1   Alexey Rubtsov 20 5 7.37 1 3T3Z 4 35+
2   Sascha Lehmann 24 4 7.36 3 2T3Z 2 Top (2:31)
3   Sergey Luzhetsky 30 2 8.30 5 2T3Z 3 Top (2:51)
4   Nikolay Yerilovets 36 3 6.69 2 2T3Z 6 33+
5   Yuval Shemla 48 8 8.45 6 1T3Z 1 Top (2:20)
6   Marcin Dzieński 64 1 5.85 8 0T0Z 8 8
7   Alex Khazanov 196 7 8.15 4 2T3Z 7 26
8   William Bosi 210 6 7.91 7 0T3Z 5 35+

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Infosheet". Archived from the original on 2021-01-02. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  2. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  3. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  4. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  5. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  6. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  7. ^ "Iuliia Kaplina Sets New Speed Climbing Record". 21 November 2020.
  8. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  9. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  10. ^ "IFSC Europe - Continental Championships (B,S,L,C) - Moscow (RUS) 2020" (PDF). IFSC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  11. ^ "IFSC RULES 2019 VERSION No 1.9.2" (PDF). IFSC. Archived from the original (PDF) on Aug 21, 2019.
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