Payne, Dory Win UBC Pro Tour’s The North Face Open At The 2011 Nor’easter – Updated

Payne, Dory Win UBC Pro Tour’s The North Face Open At The 2011 Nor’easter – Updated

The comp is in the books!  Here is who came out on top:

Men

  1. Ian Dory
  2. Rob D’Anastasio
  3. Ty Landman
  4. Vasya Vorotnikov
  5. Ethan Pringle
  6. Paul Robinson

Full Results

Women

  1. Angie Payne
  2. Lizzy Asher
  3. Alex Johnson
  4. Isabelle Faus
  5. Kati Peters
  6. Nadya Vorotnikova

Full Results

Check out the Finals live blog to read how some of the action unfolded.  More to come!

Update:  So, now that I’ve had some time to process things lets take a little closer look at how finals unfolded.

First, the fact that rain cancelled semi-finals changed the entire comp.  After a series of deliberations between the routesetting crew and event organizers it was decided to basically cancel finals, which would have been the top 6 climbers after semi-finals climbing a set of 3 problems, and run semi-finals later in the day as “finals” to decide the winners.  This meant 20 climbers moving through 3 problems, the same problems they would have climbed had semi-finals actually happened.  This raised a some questions with the most important being could these problems do the job of separating all the competitors who had topped out all the qualifier problems on Friday.

For the women, I think most people thought it would come down to Angie Payne, Lizzy Asher and Alex Johnson and that’s exactly what happened.  Of the three, Payne came out first after qualifying in 5th position.  She stormed her way up all three problems on her first try in impressive fashion setting the bar high for the remaining competitors.  As soon as Asher and Johnson fell on problems 3 and 2 respectively (at the same time even) the comp was clearly won by Payne marking her 2nd straight UBC Pro Tour win.

For the men things were decidedly less clear.  After seeing the strength of the men on Friday it seemed conceivable that several of them could flash all 3 problems, but that turned out not to be the case.  Problem 1 turned out to be the easiest with 5 guys topping it out, but here is where Vasya Vorotnikov let the comp slip away for him when he fell trying to stick the finish hold multiple times.

Men’s Problem 2, which climbed out the horizontal roof on the far left side of the comp venue, would turn out to be the toughest problem of the day.  Early competitors struggled to figure out a good sequence on the bottom section and even those climbers who managed to make it past the lip struggled to figure out the crimpy moves on the top section.  Only Ian Dory was able to top this problem out, lunging to the finish hold and skipping the intended sequence.

Men’s Problem 3 looked to be a more straightforward power climb up a series of two finger pockets leading to crimps and a pinch high on the wall.  Here again though several of the competitors struggled to figure out the middle sequence which required the climbers to reach under to a two finger pocket then do a 1 arm, twisting 180 out to some crimps with the right hand.  Those that figured it out were rewarded as D’Anastasio, Landman and Vorotnikov all topped out the problem.

After seeing all the men falling in different places it turned into a guessing game trying to figure out what the final standings were going to be.  In the end it was Dory followed by D’Anastasio followed by Landman, but really any of a number of minor differences in where people got on a problem could have changed who won:

  • If Paul Robinson would have stuck the finish hold of M2 when he lunged for it, he could  have won
  • If Vasya Vorotnikov doesn’t slip out of the finish hold of M1 multiple times, he could have won
  • If Ian Dory figures out M3 better, he wins even more convincingly.  Conversely, if his lunge to the finish of M2 weren’t successful he would have dropped at least a couple of spots.
  • If Ethan Pringle could have closed out the last moves on M3 he could have won
  • If Ty Landman or Rob D’Anastasio do even marginally better on M2 they could have won

So, the routesetters did a pretty good job separating everyone since there were no ties, but how cool would it have been to see these top 6 guys come back and climb another set of 3 problems?  I know I would have enjoyed seeing that.

Speaking of seeing things, here are two different highlight reels from the event.  The first is the official highlight reel put together by the guys at LT11.  It has the high quality footage from the live feed which is good because it’s high quality but not as good since the live feed cameras only caught small glimpses of some of the climbers1  The LT11 clip also features an amazing photo from the exact moment Payne stuck the finish hold on W3 which was a really cool moment.  The other highlight reel is of a lower quality but shows more complete attempts.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GR0X9fH_2o0&sns=em]

  1.  The biggest complaint many people had at home was that the live feed cut away at inopportune times and this is something that was recognized by the people at the event afterwards.  Hopefully they can take some steps to rectify this for future events.

Posted In: Bouldering, News, Unified Bouldering Championships Pro Tour
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8 Responses to Payne, Dory Win UBC Pro Tour’s The North Face Open At The 2011 Nor’easter – Updated

  1. Dan d September 26, 2011 at 3:53 am #

    Paul Robinsons result shows how just how different rock and plastic are as sports.

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    • Narc September 26, 2011 at 7:06 am #

      That’s one way to interpret them but they don’t tell the whole story. He definitely struggled figuring out M3, but he was able to do it first try after the comp was over. Just not much margin for error during the comp.

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  2. Dave September 26, 2011 at 12:16 pm #

    LOL.  Great fanboy comment.  Clearly Paul Robinson is a much better climber than the 5 dudes who finished ahead of him.  He should have told the judges about Lucid Dreaming and made them watch the Schengen files before the comp and they would have awarded him 1st.

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    • Narc September 26, 2011 at 1:49 pm #

      I guess that’s one way to interpret my comment, but I was just trying to provide some additional context as to what happened with Paul specifically since that was who was mentioned in the comment.  Really, any number of the guys could have won the comp.  Rob and Ty had a hard time figuring out M2, but if either had done even slightly better on that they would have been the ones to win since Ian struggled on M3.  Or if Vasya hadn’t slipped out of the finish hold of M1 twice he would have won instead of finishing 4th.  Same for Ethan on M3.  So many different permutations for the results based on such small changes in who got where on each of the problems.

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  3. MarkA28 September 26, 2011 at 6:43 pm #

    Dave, clearly he is not, at least in this competition. Sitting under a v-whatever outside for days or weeks and sending it is impressive but it is totally different than, turn around, send it in 5 minutes on plastic with 1,000 people watching you in competition. I doubt the finals problems were any harder than v10-v11, and every guy in finals has sent that hard outside. I agree with the narc, a number of guys could have won and were capable of winning, there just is not a clear favorite, outside of D Woods, in the male category in the USA any more.

    Competing makes you better at competing which is why the athletes that compete a lot have an advantage. It is just really hard to enter a competition and win when you haven’t competed in a while.

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  4. Dave September 26, 2011 at 9:35 pm #

    Sorry, my comment was directed at the first comment, not the Narc.  All these guys are at the top end of the game and there isn’t much separating them as seen by the variance in competition results.  My conclusion… is that plastic competitions are silly, but that’s my own strong personal bias.  They are a nice marketing tool and enjoyable for competitors and people who would rather watch climbing on plastic than actually climb themselves.

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  5. Shutterbug1086 September 27, 2011 at 12:34 am #

    I just want to know who the girl with the mammut sticker ( maybe a sponsor patch can’t tell) is. Cause well…. I have no clue.

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    • Narc September 27, 2011 at 5:25 am #

      Alex Johnson?

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