30: Tom Greenall, Team GB’s ex-head coach

Tom is team GB’s ex-head coach! He personally coached Shauna Coxsey into getting her Tokyo Olympic ticket and has worked with the rest of team GB up until he left the national team earlier this year in April. In this episode, we'll learn about why he’s banned from the USA, the strategy for getting Shauna to qualify for the Olympics, and the politics and public backlash he faced working in the circuit that led to his eventual resignation.

There is an EXTRA FULL-LENGTH EPISODE available with Tom on Patreon available to members only: Click here to check it out!


Show Notes

Guest links:

Instagram

Email

Reference links:

Wedge Climbing

Janja Unfiltered Period Talk


Timestamps

Timestamps of discussion topics

0:00 - Intro/Recovering from knee surgery

5:49 - Starting climbing + competing + coaching

10:20 - How he got BANNED from the USA

13:18 - How to get into coaching now

18:57 - Thoughts on Instagram coaching + current training philosophies

25:50 - Coaching Shauna Coxsey into the Olympics

34:15 - Why Team GB found such great form in 2024

37:12 - What makes Toby and Erin stand out from the rest

39:12 - Difference between coaching individually vs acting as head coach

40:56 - How GB training camps work

44:30 - Athlete consistency during comps + period cycles

53:45 - Why he quit as head coach of GB

1:01:32 - Dealing with a toxic climbing community

1:08:38 - The most difficult parts of coaching

1:10:56 - Favorite/least favorite travel moments on the circuit

1:14:59 - Recommendation to other coaches on stress management

1:17:25 - The future of comp climbing + athlete money

1:22:45 - "Coaching people to their own individual Olympics"

1:26:45 - Tom's future

1:28:22 - Discord Q: Does cohesion in a national team make a difference?

1:30:48 - Discord Q: Did individual coaching ever interfere with your work as national team coach?

1:32:54 - Final thoughts + where to find Tom

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    unbeknownst to me, I actually violated international immigration law at the time.

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    And I was like, wow, well, Jim is like an international level athlete with years of

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    conditioning and training behind him and you're just going to like pick up his training week from

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    a video and then do that and think that's the right thing for you. I was like, oh, this person's going

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    to be injured real quick. The scrutiny on myself and the other coaches was so much that it was

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    almost unbearable at times. I've had athletes been like coming into international events where

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    my coach says that I'm not to warm up with you because you don't know what you're doing and

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    things like that. Welcome to another episode of the That's Not Real Climbing podcast. I'm your

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    host Jinni and I'm excited to introduce my guest, Tom Greenall. Tom is Team GB's ex head coach who

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    personally coached Shana Koxy into getting her Tokyo Olympic ticket and of course has worked with

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    the rest of Team GB up until he left the national team earlier this year in April. In this episode,

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    we'll learn about why he's banned from the USA, the strategy for getting Shana to qualify for the

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    Olympics and the politics and public backlash he faced working in the circuit that led to his

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    eventual resignation. Tom was kind enough to re-record this interview for the second time

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    because we lost the footage from the first one. So please send him some love and I hope you enjoy

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    this episode. You've also been like quite busy the past few months. So what have you been up to?

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    I got back into kind of coaching again. I've been busy kind of like, you know,

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    working with some different athletes as well. And then I got a part-time role like coach education.

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    So working with like a branch of the federation, they're slightly separate looking on like

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    developing the coach training that we do in the UK. So then I was like prepping that, delivering that

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    and actually I just had a knee surgery as well actually. Oh yeah, yeah. Yeah, how did that go?

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    Yeah, it actually went really well. Yeah, so that's kind of like kept me busy but in like an

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    interesting way. Like I guess just prioritizing the rehab around working and then just trying

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    to make everything fit around that. It's just been a bit more tricky. And then actually me

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    and my girlfriend just got, we just got a new dog as well. Oh nice. Yeah, so it's just been busy.

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    Like a puppy or something, some dog from the shelter? Yeah, she's not yet. We got her from

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    a rescue. She's not a puppy but she's quite young. But yeah, she had like a difficult start in life.

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    So it's nice to be able to give her a good home. Yeah, I got that. I'm actually fostering kittens

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    right now. So I've got two kittens hanging around somewhere. I don't know, they're pretty

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    independent already I guess at this point. Was the knee issue something that you've been dealing with

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    and like putting off until your time or was it like a recent issue? So I guess I tore the cartilage

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    while I was climbing in Greece in the October of last year. And then I think it was Christmas

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    time where I was out running with my dad where like the thing just tore really badly.

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    And so I was in this two minds about whether or not I should go

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    private or obviously in the UK we have the National Health Service. And so I kind of wanted to see how

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    bad it felt after a few months and it sort of got better to a point and then it just stopped getting

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    better. So actually by which time I was in like the National Health Service system and they thought

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    because of my occupation, my age, they could get it done a bit quicker. But still from the point of

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    injury to having the surgery done that was still eight months. So I was kind of doing what I could

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    around that issue for that period of time. But with a cartilage tear of that nature only a surgeon

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    is going to sort it for you. So it was the only option really for me.

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    Yeah, I mean I've heard like a little bit about the NHS versus like private stuff. But yeah, I

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    don't know too much about that. It's different in the US.

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    Yeah, I guess you know on the positive it makes health care so much more accessible for the vast

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    majority of people and there's never an issue where, you know, for example, like my ex-wife

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    actually she had a heart attack when she was like 20, 25. Yeah, and so the experience that we had,

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    you know, I think with the NHS, I think when it's more kind of like orthopedic low level things,

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    it's not, it can appear really slow and clunky. But if you actually ever need anything major,

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    the service is incredible. And if we were in the States, like that would have been thousands and

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    thousands of pounds like the care and the procedure. And we just weren't set up at the time to,

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    you know, be able to fund that kind of thing. And so actually when you're in a position like that,

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    you just think how incredible the service it really is. But I think if you're like

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    waiting for an orthopedic surgery like I have with my knee, like, and you're like, oh my God,

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    I've got to wait six months to have this thing done. Yeah, or sometimes even longer, it seems quite

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    slow. But actually, I think if you really need the service, it's really good. I feel very lucky

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    to be resident of the UK with that. Yeah, I honestly don't really know how it works here.

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    I don't have a job right now. So I have like disaster coverage, I think. And hopefully no

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    disasters will happen. But yeah, I'm glad that that's all been working out for you. So I guess

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    just getting started so that we can get to know you a bit better. When did you start climbing?

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    And you also sort of like competed yourself a bit, right? Yeah, so I got into climbing,

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    really through my dad. So I grew up in part of the UK called North Wales, which is really famous for

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    its traditional climbing. And for those of you who've maybe seen it, it's where a British

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    male called Emma Twyford climbed the first 9a by a British woman. So like that area, if anyone's

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    familiar with that, that's North Wales. Yeah, and I grew up climbing there with my dad, all disciplines

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    really. And then we would travel to Fon as well, from like a really young age. So he, I guess in a

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    way, he really gave me like a really broad experience and appreciation for the sport.

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    And we'd travel a lot in the UK climbing. And so I spent quite a lot of time on the grit stone edges

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    of the Peak District as well, when I was younger. And then that then led me to university, where I

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    did my degree and I started getting into climbing a lot more seriously then. So I was probably like,

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    well, 18 at that point. And then from that, yes, like I fell in with a group of high level climbers,

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    did some competitions at like national level there, but nothing beyond that. And that's probably

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    between, yeah, that's like a long time ago, like 2005, six to like 2007. A long time ago.

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    Yeah, you didn't want to continue with like the competition process.

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    I think at that time for me, like the competition scene was fairly small, I would say, like in the

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    UK really. And I think to me, the interest was really like an outdoor climbing, because that's

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    where I've kind of come from at that time. The love for competitions really came through coaching

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    for me much later. And that's really where I found, I suppose the most gratifying element of it

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    for me was through the coaching side, whereas personal climbing, I always kind of preferred

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    outdoor rock and adventures outside.

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    Okay, so then getting into coaching, how did you start? How did you get your start there?

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    Yeah, it's actually maybe like at the time years ago, it was a less clear pathway, I would say,

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    than maybe it is today. So I came to Sheffield to do my undergraduate degree in sports coaching.

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    Actually, at the time, I kind of got a really good spectrum of coaching in other sports.

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    Because I guess even at that time, you know, like we're talking like early thousands, right,

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    that the scene was very much instructing, I suppose, and there wasn't much coaching going

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    on in terms of regular contact and helping people develop with training and developing skills.

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    So realistically, I kind of chose at that time to sort of focus more on other sports,

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    and I had other jobs before this. And then I'm guessing at some point, maybe about 2010,

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    maybe, I sort of started to appreciate from this experience that I had elsewhere that

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    there was these big gaps when it came to my home federations work around coaching.

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    And so I sort of started working at the local climbing gym, where I was teaching kids

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    classes and things like that. And then maybe just sort of through putting myself out there a bit

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    and having conversations about, you know, we could do better with this kind of stuff,

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    I got the opportunity to start working with the national team, like the junior national team at

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    that point. And then that kind of led me into international sort of, you know, coaching,

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    taking the youth team abroad. And then that kind of like rolled up and rolled up, I guess,

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    until I guess I probably became like a full time professional coach in climbing, I guess,

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    probably around about, I guess, like that 2015, 2016 mark. So then that's when I was, yeah,

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    a full time professional. And then I continue working with the GB team working privately with

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    a squad that I ran from Sheffield, which actually included quite a lot of GBA athletes,

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    at that point. And then I briefly moved over to your side of the Atlantic to coach in Houston,

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    of all places, really briefly, and then back to the UK from, you know, kind of 2019 onwards.

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    Yeah, why did you decide to do a brief stint in the US?

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    Yes, at the time, I actually, yeah, at the time, I kind of, I was kind of,

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    I felt like I'd kind of reached a bit of a point of not feeling the challenge or the stretch maybe

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    within the coaching that I was doing at home. And I kind of felt like I was one of the more

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    experienced coaches nationally, and I wanted to kind of broad my experience a little bit.

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    And so I got an opportunity to come to the US to work with a gym and kind of like start squad

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    and start to, I guess, get a bit of a different feel for it in a different country. And so I

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    wanted to take that opportunity. But, you know, tragic sad story is actually had major visa issues

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    because the attorney who's advising the immigration process didn't file some of the paperwork in time.

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    So true story, unbeknownst to me, I actually violated international immigration law at the time.

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    And actually, I'm now currently suspended from coming to the US at all, which is very, very

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    strange. Yeah, yeah. So I've never been to the Salt Lake City World Cup, for example, because I

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    could never travel there. Oh, my God, I had no idea about that. Oh, that's such a shame.

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    Well, when does it when does it like end? So it's supposed to be a lifetime ban. But the truth is,

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    I think after after 10 years, you can normally apply for a petition. But I will never be able

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    to travel on an ESTA. So I'll always have to come in on a different type of visa. Oh, my gosh.

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    So yeah, if anyone is thinking, listeners thinking like, I'd like to go to the US to do some coaching,

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    then make sure you check all the check all the boxes on the immigration. Oh, my gosh, that's crazy.

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    Did you have to like, go to court or anything like that? No, no, didn't go to court. But I mean, I'd

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    sold all of my, you know, all my stuff, you know, shipped all my stuff over, signed the lease on the

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    apartment in Houston was actually like living there. And then returned to the UK over Christmas

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    to see family, and then went to the the embassy in London and actually had like the written

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    approval for the visa, but then failed to pass the last bit, which was the interview. So had the had

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    the visa rejected in London immediately, and was then told I could never travel to the US. And so

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    like, all my stuff was in Houston at this point. So I just called up some friends and was like,

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    Oh, my god, this has happened. And they let me stay with them for a bit. And that was like the

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    Christmas of 2018. Oh, my gosh. Okay. Wow, what an experience that is. Well, that's a shame that

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    you'll never get to visit here. I feel like we have some stuff to offer. But I guess you'll be

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    you'll be fine in the UK as well. So you mentioned that you felt like back at the time, there wasn't

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    a very straightforward way to get into coaching. Do you think it's a more straightforward process

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    now? Or like, if anyone's listening and are interested in getting into coaching, like what

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    should they do? I mean, I guess like at the time, it just wasn't really something that was maybe

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    taught about that much or accepted that was happening. And so I guess there was maybe less

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    of a demand for it. So I would say now, there's probably more, you know, squads, or the appetite

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    for coaching is more broadly accepted now. So I think you can set yourself up independently more

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    easily now and probably get business. I think you can also probably through a climbing gym,

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    as well be able to access, you know, coaching like grassroots coaching, and then you can

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    access, you know, coaching like grassroots level more easily. And now there is a lot more of a

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    developed like competition structure in the UK. It's not as developed as it is in the US. But I

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    think that that's like another example of how, you know, in the US, most climbing gyms will have a

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    team or big gyms will have a team. And I think so you can normally find your way in that way. So it

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    is more developed, I think, because it's more widely accepted. And, you know, I don't know about

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    the US, but in the UK, like we have a, like a coaching like award scheme, so you can start to

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    train and implement your skills, and you can progress that way. As well as obviously, just,

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    you know, through experience as well set yourself up. So I think there's more opportunity now. And,

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    you know, we're talking, well, you know, since I started my coaching, you know, coaching degree

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    almost 20 years later. So it's a lot's changed in that time. And there's this little thing called

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    Olympics that's happened. And that's really obviously changed quite a lot, because it's put

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    climbing on the radar of more people. And so, yeah, I think we can expect more growth for sure

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    in the next few years. So I mean, surely, you know, a lot of like the other national coaches,

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    do a lot of them have certain like degrees or certifications? Or is it just kind of,

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    they just, I don't know, got into coaching? I think there's probably a bit of a mix, really.

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    I certainly think there's, you know, quite a few

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    federations will employ like, like former athletes, as well, because when it comes to

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    arena based experience, very few can really appreciate what that's like. But an ex athlete

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    can do a really good job of that. So often, that's a really good way that you can sort of,

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    as you finish your athletic career, move into coaching. I mean, I can think about some of my

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    friends and colleagues as well in Austria, like Killian Fischhuber and Kassel Salvein, for example.

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    You know, they're the two main coaches, I suppose, for Austria, obviously, incredibly respected

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    and well decorated internationally in their own right as athletes. So that can be a route.

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    Or I suppose you could have coaches like, I guess, like myself, who are more kind of like

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    academically and came up through the youth system. So I think there's probably a few different ways

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    that it looks, but it might, it might depend on your own country's sort of processing system for

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    how it works. For them, you know, like the French national team have like a really big team with

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    lots of different coaches in, you have some previous athletes, obviously, in Nico Jamuel,

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    but also people like Cecile Abzu, but then you have other coaches as well who didn't compete.

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    So it's like a, it's like a good mix. And I think it's, it's a real sort of mystique that you don't

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    have to be or have been a fantastic competitor or pro climber to be a good coach. But there are

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    aspects that I think you can appreciate more if you have been in those things and you can learn

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    those skills too. Do you feel like there's anything that you got from your, I guess, like degree that

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    kind of sets you apart from other coaches in particular? I think it's, yeah, interesting. So

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    I have, I have my degree, then I went, I went back later to do my master's degree and I actually

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    found my master's degree more informative. And I can't tell whether that was because at the time,

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    my own personal experience of coaching was greater. So I could make sense of what they

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    were teaching us. But I think what it did do is it just opened my, my eyes to this idea of like

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    forming your coaching practice to call it that. So, you know, I think rather than kind of just

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    sort of haphazardly wandering through this, you know, finding out what works and doesn't work,

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    what it did is it gave me this idea of these are skills that you need to shape your own way of

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    doing things, like a craft, you know. So if you were like a painter, you could just go and paint,

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    you know, and just like trial and error it and this is, this is what I do. But then I suppose if

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    you went and spent time at some different schools and you met a lot of different artists who kind of

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    helped you learn a little bit about why their style was their style, you can take a little bit

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    of the experience from all of these people and then inform your practice. So expanding knowledge

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    through those things was definitely really helpful for me. And I really try and glean as much as I

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    can from most of the coaches I work with. I think often like almost like academically

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    having some of that stuff in the background helps you develop skills where you can be quite

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    critical. And I don't mean that in a negative way. I mean critical like in a, I suppose in like a

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    positive way that you can read a new piece of research that comes out and you can appraise it

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    to decide that the strengths or weaknesses of it, you know, you don't swallow every bit of information

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    that comes out from climbing and say, oh, this is the new thing. You know, I see a lot of coaches who,

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    you know, they're in the gym and they're doing activity and like I'm sure they've seen that on

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    Instagram. You know, I'm following trends or as I think as a coach, you've got a much more deeper

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    knowledge, understanding and you can critically look at something and think, all right, well,

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    I see that but I can see the strengths of it, the weaknesses of it. Where does it sit for me? Does

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    this sit with my practice? So I'd say that's like a big difference, I would say. So what's like an

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    Instagram trend you've seen in terms of coaching that you would never employ? I've never employed.

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    I think most things, if I'm going to be diplomatic, most things have their place. It's just where and

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    when. But I think what I've noticed recently is that I think there's a lot of information out there

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    that makes us believe that the science behind climbing training is really complicated but there

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    are coaches or companies that can make it really simple for you. I think the truth is that the

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    science behind climbing training is really quite simple but the application is actually quite

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    complicated. In terms of like doing it well, putting it into that person's life and getting

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    it right, that's hard to do well. But the science that underpins it is really basic, really.

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    Do you have an example of that?

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    I guess a good example is if we go back like, I don't know, 10 years or so, a lot of the research

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    that was really coming out around climbing training was around the number of moves you need to do in

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    the week. And it was very volume driven around you need to be working at this and to boost your

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    endurance, you're doing all these thousands of moves and this kind of thing. And I think it

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    really then led to the application of quite general sports science terminology. So like we

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    have this thing called, and correct me if I start to lose you as I chat loads of like

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    sciencey like, basically like energy systems over time. Yeah. And this is stuff that people learn

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    at like A level. A level is like college level, like PE in this country, you know, about like

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    you're in like your ATPPC system, that's anaerobic. And then you move through to your

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    glycolytic system, that's anaerobic too. And then you get to the aerobic system, which is obviously

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    oxygen fueled. And I think they've become this explosion of, I'd hear people down the gym

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    thinking like I'm working on like my anaerobic power or my aerobic power and all these terms.

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    And actually, you know, those principles had all been underpinned with research extrapolated from

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    sports where the types of muscle contractions or the movements were essentially not the same as

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    climbing. And so it was like a bit of a leap. And that's what happens in research. Like you

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    have to extrapolate, find a starting point. But in the more modern realm, when we know a bit more

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    about it, it's been clearly proven that those ways of operating just not as relevant. Nowadays,

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    what's the like, what's the thing to do to increase your aerobic capacity? Yeah, yeah. So I think

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    coming back to your question, you like Instagram trends, right? You're like, yeah, yeah. You're

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    like, what's what's the trend that you wouldn't follow? And it's mainly I think, people think

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    that they need to train, most recreational climbers, at least nowadays, need to think they

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    need to train like an elite athlete to get the goals that they want. And that's not true.

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    I think also to become an elite athlete.

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    I mean, yeah, I mean, I guess at some point, yeah, you've got to start doing that. But there is just

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    so much like, I think information out there now. And I mean, I was actually talking to somebody

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    the day in the wall, and they were like, I'm doing this training. And I was like, okay, like, where

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    did you get that training from? They're like, I watched this, there's an online YouTube channel

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    called Wedge. I'll plug Wedge because Sam Lawson is a friend. And they followed Jim for like,

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    Jim Pope for a week of his training. And they're like, I'm just gonna do what Jim does. And it's

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    like, wow, well, Jim is like an international level athlete with years of conditioning and

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    training behind him. And you're just gonna like, pick up his training week from a video and then

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    do that and think that's the right thing for you. It's like, oh, this person's gonna be injured.

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    Real quick. Yeah, I guess that happens. But I don't know what else are you to do as just a

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    random climber who's watching YouTube videos. Yeah, yeah. And I guess that's what you know,

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    we said before about being critical, you know, being able to sift through that stuff, because

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    there's almost so much information out there. Now it's hard, you know, someone like, you know,

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    yourself, you've got your goals. Like, how do you find your way through this, like, this world of

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    just stuff is like jumping out left, right and center about do this, this is the best thing,

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    this revolutionize your training, you know, it's hard to pick apart what's good and what's not

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    appropriate for you. And so that's when really, my dad summed it up really well, really. Someone

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    asked him, like, Oh, your son, your son's a coach, like, what does that really mean? And my dad said,

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    it means he spent his career doing all the reading so that you don't have to. And I was like, Oh,

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    it kind of makes that kind of makes sense. Okay, so the answer is, if you can afford it,

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    get a coach for yourself. I mean, I think so. But I mean, I obviously would say I really enjoy but

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    not everybody needs a coach, right? I think a lot of people can make great improvements, like,

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    a lot I know people who are very fascinated at reading and they're very critical themselves by

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    nature and enjoy that process of trialing it for themselves and they know themselves very well,

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    and that's great. Maybe those people don't need coaches. And I think also a lot of people don't

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    necessarily want to train per se, they just want to go and enjoy climbing. But I genuinely believe

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    if you want to get good, quicker, having somebody in your corner to support you with that journey

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    to be that, you know, kind of like critical person that kind of helps you organize and structure

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    it that person who can say back down, right? When you're like, I just one more try, and they're

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    like, okay, no, because we're going too far over that line. That's really good. But then also

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    having somebody to say, come on, get off your ass, Jenny, we need to go, we need to do this. If you

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    want that goal, you know, I hear that too often. That's also part of it. All right. Okay. So yeah,

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    that's kind of your background. Working with like the GB youth team, and then making it up the way

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    to head coach. So I just want to get a bit into, I guess, the people you've coached on the GB team,

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    I think there are a lot of stars out there that people are kind of interested in and would be

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    happy to know that you were part of their like climbing journey. So first up, we've got a lot of

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    Shauna fans, you coached her up to her Olympic qualifications. So I'm sure people would be really

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    interested in hearing what all went into that. Please excuse this brief intermission. But if

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    you're interested in an entire bonus episode with Tom that I had to scrap due to technical difficulties,

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    00:26:11,120 --> 00:26:17,200

    as well as deleted scenes, do consider helping support this podcast on Patreon. Some other perks

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    include a membership pin shipped to you after two months, prioritize guest questions or the ability

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    to submit video questions, and much more to come. The proceeds go back into the podcast, and then

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    00:26:28,640 --> 00:26:34,400

    podcast help me break even and they help improve the experience of the guests. If you'd like to

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    00:26:34,400 --> 00:26:40,560

    help out non monetarily, liking, commenting and sharing helps a great deal as well. Back to the

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    show. Yeah, well, I've known Shauna for a while, you know, she lived in Sheffield with me and we'd

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    see each other in the climbing wall. And at the time, I was working with a lot of other, you know,

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    GB athletes. And so I think she'd, she'd kind of like parted ways maybe with her previous coach.

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    But she still had this, you know, this dream of going to the Olympic Games. And so she was

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    already working with Leah Crane as well at the time, who was kind of supporting her with like

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    technical training. But I think there was kind of like a need, I think, to kind of unpick the

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    Olympic, like the goal a little bit. And so I remember going to her house for dinner and for a

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    potty and she was just like, I'd like you to, you know, come and help me try and do this. And so

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    realistically, the first job that I had within that team was to think, right, what's it going to

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    take to qualify for the Olympic Games? And like, how do we actually break that down into something

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    that's manageable? And then how do we kind of try and fit the training around trying to achieve

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    that? And so realistically, that was my job back in the autumn of 2018, all the way through until

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    her qualification. So it was really about, I suppose, with those two of us coaching, me and

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    Leah. So Leah would handle a lot of the kind of like technical stuff, like in the wall, like

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    focusing on movement and the way that those two had a relationship around movement discussion,

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    which is phenomenal. And my job was really to support them both by having this big plan of this

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    Olympics. This is the targets. This is what we're going to try and prioritise. We're going to try

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    and make a dent here and we're not going to worry too much about this. Yeah. So that was really

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    cool experience because at the time it was like, I'd worked with other GB internationals, but

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    obviously Shawna is an incredibly highly decorated former two-time World Cup winner,

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    overall World Cup winner. So that was like a real kind of like, wow, let's go and step it up a bit.

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    And I'm really grateful to her and the people I worked with there for the time that I spent

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    with them. It was great fun. So I guess your role was more of like,

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    rather than like physical training coaching, it was more like big picture kind of coaching.

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    I suppose like a bit of a link between the two. So I suppose like I would write the training and

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    I would be in the gym with Leah and me and Leah would jointly implement it. So I guess some of

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    the stuff around, if we were trying to like chase improvements physically, I would do more of that.

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    If we were trying to chase improvements technically, Leah would do more of that. So it was kind of like

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    a bit of a balance between the two of us. And yeah, but my job was to create the plan,

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    to answer this question, like how do we get to the Olympics? And credit to Shawna as well,

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    like she's such a phenomenal athlete. She has one of the most incredible elite mindsets out there.

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    And, you know, she was able to like, I think exceed even our projections of where she could be

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    to qualify in the Hatchioji World Champs. Yeah. And I mean, that was definitely like a weird

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    Olympics to try and qualify for because of the combined, the super, super combined format.

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    So what was the strategy for that? Yeah, I mean, the strategy was, you know,

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    quite a simple one, was obviously with the three disciplines, you can't really look to be at a super

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    high level across all three because there's such different physiological and technical demands.

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    And we saw during that period of time, lots of athletes having injury problems because trying

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    to train all three, the volume attached to that is just enormous. And particularly when you're

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    trying to straddle such different, you know, earlier we talked about energy systems, but,

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    you know, outputs, it's really complicated. So what we realized really quickly, Leah and I,

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    is that Shona's capacity in more strength or power-based disciplines is her super strength.

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    And so it really emerged that speed was going to be the key speed embolder. And looking at that

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    system, when it was a multiplication of ranking, we actually had a model where we would check in

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    a little bit about where do we need to roughly be in terms of ranking in each of these different

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    things. And we had an objective, which was kind of like the nine second mark, because as a combined

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    Shona's capacity for getting a reasonably competitive speed time, not against the speed

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    specialists, but against the other lead embolder athletes was really quite good. And so she'd run,

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    I think she was running like between 15 and 12 seconds in training. Remember, we have this

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    discussion, like we want to get this down to like nine seconds or as close to nine seconds as

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    possible, and then she will be competitive. So we're like, we have to do that. And we need to

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    maintain boulder because boulder is the other thing that can deliver like a one or two ranking.

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    So that was the emphasis. And we just did enough of lead to kind of tick that over. We didn't really,

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    really prioritize that in a big way, because it was difficult to, you know, handle the volume of

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    all of that. And then it was, you know, we got to Hachioji, there's a lot of pressure on the

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    Japanese athletes and, you know, Shona produced two PBs back to back of nine two, I think, and

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    nine one to beat Miho Nanaka and Futaba to get an incredibly high ranking in speed. And then she

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    absolutely killed it in the boulder. And so, and in fact, in the qualifiers for that, but you know,

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    she did incredibly well on the lead. But when it came to actually the final, I remember sitting

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    there thinking, Shona only needs to mathematically climb halfway up this lead wall. She's already in

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    that position to qualify now because of speed and because of boulder. So the strategy really

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    paid off really. But hey, I'm not taking credit for that. She did the hard work. She deserves all

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    the credit. It was phenomenal performance. Sure. Yeah. I mean, in terms of, so like in terms of

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    speed coaching, I feel like that's quite a different, I don't know, I feel like it's pretty

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    different from like lead and boulder coaching, maybe. And going from like 15 seconds to nine

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    seconds is kind of difficult when you're like, trying to shave off those like, like, once you

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    get faster and faster, it gets harder to make improvements there. So did you do any speed

    341

    00:33:05,840 --> 00:33:14,720

    coaching or did you like find another speed coach? So actually, Leah did a lot of it, which was

    342

    00:33:14,720 --> 00:33:22,240

    really super cool. And I guess it just came, it became, you know, we went to a wall in the UK that

    343

    00:33:22,240 --> 00:33:26,000

    has a speed wall and they were really good. And they just, we went there, we drove from Sheffield

    344

    00:33:26,000 --> 00:33:32,400

    like two and a half hours every week to go and train there a lot. And actually we did go abroad

    345

    00:33:32,400 --> 00:33:39,520

    for a speed training camp and we met with a speed specialist coach who gave us a lot of information

    346

    00:33:39,520 --> 00:33:44,320

    about that. So actually, you know, the Ukrainian athlete, Daniel Baldura. So we spent some time

    347

    00:33:44,320 --> 00:33:48,640

    with Daniel and he gave us a lot of insights around doing stuff for training, but also things like

    348

    00:33:48,640 --> 00:33:54,240

    actually on the wall. But, you know, we went to work so much and Leah really and Shauna, they

    349

    00:33:54,240 --> 00:33:58,800

    created like a, like a sequence that worked for Shauna and we could get the, you know, the

    350

    00:33:58,800 --> 00:34:06,080

    repetitions in. And she started to consistently get, you know, get quicker. But really the magic

    351

    00:34:06,080 --> 00:34:10,240

    of what happened at Hatchoogy is, is Shauna's competitive mindset. She just made that decision

    352

    00:34:10,240 --> 00:34:15,760

    of I'm going to, I'm going to do this now. And, you know, it was a phenomenal performance from her.

    353

    00:34:15,760 --> 00:34:21,920

    Yeah. So I guess going into present day, I mean, you're no longer the head coach, but you're still

    354

    00:34:21,920 --> 00:34:28,720

    obviously pretty involved and had brought up the team a bunch. Definitely this year, it seemed

    355

    00:34:28,720 --> 00:34:34,720

    like Team GB had found some kind of like special form, maybe all of the hard work that you had put

    356

    00:34:34,720 --> 00:34:40,000

    in the years before it was paying off. But do you feel like there was anything in particular that

    357

    00:34:41,360 --> 00:34:46,400

    like in terms of training you guys changed or specifically worked on in training or coaching

    358

    00:34:46,400 --> 00:34:52,960

    that you feel like made this like special difference this year? I don't think so. And as well,

    359

    00:34:52,960 --> 00:34:58,880

    you know, we have a very interesting set up in the UK as well. And most of the time the athletes

    360

    00:34:58,880 --> 00:35:04,000

    are like in their home environments, like they have often different coaches at home. And then

    361

    00:35:04,000 --> 00:35:10,480

    they kind of come into the GB setup where, you know, we're working together. I think the UK is

    362

    00:35:10,480 --> 00:35:16,560

    really interesting because we're very stubborn as a nation. And I think that one of the biggest

    363

    00:35:16,560 --> 00:35:23,360

    strengths really is that a lot of our athletes are very hungry and they really want to kind of

    364

    00:35:23,360 --> 00:35:29,440

    go out there and show what they can do. And so I think that realistically, and I'm sure that even

    365

    00:35:29,440 --> 00:35:35,040

    there must be a good stat for this, like in terms of how much power of investment like GB does

    366

    00:35:35,040 --> 00:35:42,800

    incredibly well. And I think that that success really comes from having a very determined and

    367

    00:35:42,800 --> 00:35:49,600

    very, how to describe it, like hungry group of athletes who are really, you know, pushing to get

    368

    00:35:49,600 --> 00:35:54,560

    those opportunities. And it's pretty competitive as well, you know. So I'm sure the same is true

    369

    00:35:54,560 --> 00:35:59,680

    as well, you know, with like Japan, for example, if you look at them as a nation, it's how do they

    370

    00:35:59,680 --> 00:36:04,800

    continually bring through generation upon generation of top climbers. And it's like, well,

    371

    00:36:04,800 --> 00:36:10,400

    there's a lot of people climbing, it's very competitive to get into that Japanese team and

    372

    00:36:10,400 --> 00:36:16,400

    you've got to fight really hard to do it. So I think that is a real key aspect of what makes

    373

    00:36:16,400 --> 00:36:21,040

    Great Britain a good nation. I think we've got some good home coaches who are doing good stuff in

    374

    00:36:21,040 --> 00:36:27,520

    the walls. But I think as well, we have a very like experienced team of coaches that do go out for

    375

    00:36:27,520 --> 00:36:32,320

    the international stuff who are able to take care of all the logistics and all the arena support

    376

    00:36:32,320 --> 00:36:39,040

    to give those athletes the best chance, you know, to, you know, to deliver and where athletes

    377

    00:36:39,040 --> 00:36:45,360

    want to as well, we obviously support directly with coaching. So in particular, you know, Liam

    378

    00:36:45,360 --> 00:36:50,800

    Britton coaching directly with Toby or Rachel Carr coaching directly with Erin McNeese, you know,

    379

    00:36:50,800 --> 00:36:55,600

    those coaches are almost like embedded within that athletes team as well. So they bring their

    380

    00:36:55,600 --> 00:37:00,960

    knowledge to that as well. I think that, you know, is a really cool thing, because then the person

    381

    00:37:00,960 --> 00:37:04,960

    that you're working with in the week is also that person who's there with you at the international.

    382

    00:37:04,960 --> 00:37:11,040

    So I think that was really significant in supporting both Erin and Toby to great performances

    383

    00:37:11,040 --> 00:37:13,040

    at the games.

    384

    00:37:13,040 --> 00:37:19,040

    I guess when you were head coach before, before they had like really had their like huge breakout

    385

    00:37:19,040 --> 00:37:25,040

    seasons, did you feel like you saw something different within them that made them stand out?

    386

    00:37:25,040 --> 00:37:33,920

    I think that they have all got an incredible mindset. And I think that they have all got an

    387

    00:37:33,920 --> 00:37:39,280

    incredible mindset. And I think that they're very different, those two athletes as well, they bring

    388

    00:37:39,280 --> 00:37:46,960

    very different strengths to the table. You know, Toby has an enormous capacity to absorb training.

    389

    00:37:48,960 --> 00:37:54,960

    And he's incredibly, you know, motivated and focused. And I think then the work he does with

    390

    00:37:54,960 --> 00:38:00,800

    his dad as well, you know, they're very detail orientated, they almost like take no, take no

    391

    00:38:00,800 --> 00:38:05,600

    but are very open as well to new ideas and principles. And I think all of that is kind of

    392

    00:38:05,600 --> 00:38:10,080

    part of the, you know, part of it as well, you know, take on board all the information that you

    393

    00:38:10,080 --> 00:38:14,480

    can learn, listen to others, but be really clear about what you want to do, be very focused.

    394

    00:38:14,480 --> 00:38:21,200

    That's really clear. And I'd say that also is true, Erin as well. You know, being very focused and

    395

    00:38:21,200 --> 00:38:25,600

    very dedicated. I mean, it was really obvious. And I remember us sitting down to have a meeting

    396

    00:38:25,600 --> 00:38:31,360

    before Erin's preseason, really talking about, you know, we really need to train hard this year,

    397

    00:38:31,360 --> 00:38:38,080

    we really need to level up. And, and sort of, you know, me kind of encouraging the coaches being

    398

    00:38:38,080 --> 00:38:44,320

    like, push, push her, you know, she wants to be pushed, let's, let's, let's, you know, up the ante

    399

    00:38:44,320 --> 00:38:50,240

    a little bit. And then Erin also has the capacity to go and do that. So that's, you know, been

    400

    00:38:50,240 --> 00:38:54,480

    wonderful to see. But also, you know, other athletes as well, like obviously Molly and

    401

    00:38:54,480 --> 00:38:59,280

    Hamish McArthur as well, you know, getting the games opportunity. Like I think GB was what, like

    402

    00:38:59,280 --> 00:39:03,840

    one of maybe two or three nations to have full quota at the Olympic Games. Like that's a

    403

    00:39:03,840 --> 00:39:09,760

    phenomenal stat. I'd actually think overall, two men in the final and one woman in the final. Like

    404

    00:39:09,760 --> 00:39:13,920

    I'm sure if there was a medal for team, I think GB won that. So that's, that's a phenomenal

    405

    00:39:13,920 --> 00:39:17,840

    achievement and credit to them. Yeah. It was like a crazy Olympics for team GB.

    406

    00:39:19,840 --> 00:39:23,440

    Do you, what are some of the differences that you've seen between coaching

    407

    00:39:23,440 --> 00:39:28,800

    individuals versus working as the head coach for like the entire GB team?

    408

    00:39:28,800 --> 00:39:32,800

    Yeah, it's definitely, it's definitely different. And I'm sure that the other head coaches out

    409

    00:39:32,800 --> 00:39:38,800

    there will appreciate this too, is there's a bit more of kind of almost like strategically managing

    410

    00:39:38,800 --> 00:39:45,200

    the thing. So, you know, kind of setting up the season plan, how you might work that strategically,

    411

    00:39:45,760 --> 00:39:51,360

    how that sits with budgets, like where do you send the team, where and when, that kind of thing.

    412

    00:39:51,360 --> 00:39:56,160

    That's definitely more a part of it. But I think to me, at least in my experience, while I was

    413

    00:39:56,160 --> 00:40:01,840

    head coaching at GB, one of the biggest differences was learning for me to let go a little bit of the

    414

    00:40:01,840 --> 00:40:09,440

    direct input with the athletes and mentoring a coaching team to do that, which freed me up to

    415

    00:40:09,440 --> 00:40:15,120

    almost have more of like a, like a quarterback style role where I was sat a bit further back

    416

    00:40:15,120 --> 00:40:22,480

    from the action kind of coordinating them. And that was really rewarding, actually. Not to say

    417

    00:40:22,480 --> 00:40:26,320

    that I didn't still have the opportunity to do plenty of frontline coaching, which I did.

    418

    00:40:27,520 --> 00:40:32,640

    But that main difference was this idea of like building a team of coaches, of mentoring them,

    419

    00:40:32,640 --> 00:40:40,160

    of finding what their strengths were, and kind of fielding them in complementary roles together and

    420

    00:40:40,160 --> 00:40:45,120

    yeah, supporting them as individuals and making that a cohesive unit. That was like a big thing.

    421

    00:40:45,120 --> 00:40:50,240

    So I would say in the short term, it was leadership. That's the main difference, I think.

    422

    00:40:50,240 --> 00:40:54,880

    I think being a coach is one thing when you're kind of doing the technical stuff, but being a head

    423

    00:40:54,880 --> 00:40:58,160

    coach is about leadership. And that's definitely a different thing.

    424

    00:40:58,160 --> 00:41:04,480

    Okay. So can we go into a bit like what the nitty gritty training process is kind of like,

    425

    00:41:04,480 --> 00:41:10,720

    especially when the whole team is together, like during team trainings or like whenever it's like,

    426

    00:41:12,160 --> 00:41:13,360

    what's it called? Like,

    427

    00:41:13,840 --> 00:41:15,360

    we have like a camp or something.

    428

    00:41:15,840 --> 00:41:20,000

    Yeah, like a training camp or something like that. Like what kind of what goes on there?

    429

    00:41:20,000 --> 00:41:23,600

    Yeah, I suppose so. It kind of looked a bit different over different points in time,

    430

    00:41:23,600 --> 00:41:28,880

    different years. But I suppose the main thing in the UK that we really emphasized was

    431

    00:41:28,880 --> 00:41:34,400

    what I'd call like time on task training. So, you know, a lot of the climbers can go and they can do

    432

    00:41:34,400 --> 00:41:38,240

    their circuits and they can do their weight sessions, stuff like that, like independently.

    433

    00:41:38,800 --> 00:41:43,600

    But having, you know, because we don't have a national training center now in the UK.

    434

    00:41:44,240 --> 00:41:49,360

    We did have one for a period of time, but it was really difficult to kind of get the holds and

    435

    00:41:49,360 --> 00:41:55,280

    stuff in there that we needed. So what we'd really do is we would work very closely with our national

    436

    00:41:55,280 --> 00:42:01,600

    headsetter and we would look for, we do a lot of analysis around like trends and styles of boulders

    437

    00:42:01,600 --> 00:42:05,360

    and difficulties of boulders and that kind of thing. And so normally when we'd come together as

    438

    00:42:05,360 --> 00:42:10,960

    a team, the biggest area that we could add value was by having a specific setting done

    439

    00:42:12,160 --> 00:42:18,640

    that would match the requirements of the team. So we would go, at every international, we would

    440

    00:42:18,640 --> 00:42:23,280

    catalog all of the boulders, for example. You know, and what we would do is we would look at

    441

    00:42:23,280 --> 00:42:28,560

    different stylistic themes and then we'd be able to kind of track them in terms of finding out

    442

    00:42:28,560 --> 00:42:33,360

    like which are the styles of boulders that we as a team find difficult male team, female team,

    443

    00:42:33,360 --> 00:42:39,280

    individuals. And so when we came together as a team, we could really then enhance the experience

    444

    00:42:39,280 --> 00:42:45,760

    of learning on them. So during pre-season in particular, it wouldn't always be comp simulation,

    445

    00:42:45,760 --> 00:42:49,680

    like sometimes it would just be sessioning on the boulders together as a team, learning from your

    446

    00:42:49,680 --> 00:42:54,960

    teammates. Really kind of like finding where the gaps are, you know what I mean? So my idea was

    447

    00:42:54,960 --> 00:43:00,000

    always a team, an athlete would come into a team training, they would climb on the boulders, they

    448

    00:43:00,000 --> 00:43:03,200

    would get feedback from others as coaches, and then they could go back to their home environment

    449

    00:43:03,200 --> 00:43:06,960

    more informed about maybe the work-ons that they needed to do at that particular point in time.

    450

    00:43:07,680 --> 00:43:11,840

    And then when they'd come back from another to another training, they would be able to come back

    451

    00:43:11,840 --> 00:43:16,480

    in and say, okay, I've been working on this. Like, let's see if it's making a difference.

    452

    00:43:16,480 --> 00:43:21,600

    And then as we'd get close towards the season, we would start to simulate maybe aspects of the

    453

    00:43:22,320 --> 00:43:28,720

    performance environment, because in all honesty, there is no way you can replicate competition.

    454

    00:43:28,720 --> 00:43:32,960

    Competition is competition, the consequence and everything else that you can't really truly

    455

    00:43:32,960 --> 00:43:38,880

    replicate it, but you can mimic some of the demands of it to have a session dressed up

    456

    00:43:39,600 --> 00:43:43,440

    like a competition so people can see how they're doing in terms of their processes and their

    457

    00:43:43,440 --> 00:43:47,440

    practices and keeping them sharp. Because you really have to hit the ground running now, you

    458

    00:43:47,440 --> 00:43:53,440

    know, at World Cups, you can't take four or five to get into it. And in particular, as we were

    459

    00:43:53,440 --> 00:43:58,080

    running in towards the Paris Games, obviously the athletes who are going to go and do OQS and

    460

    00:43:58,080 --> 00:44:01,280

    things, there are a totally different timetable to the other athletes that are going to do the

    461

    00:44:01,280 --> 00:44:07,600

    World Cup series. So it was really how do we get them as sharp as possible to go to, I think it

    462

    00:44:07,600 --> 00:44:11,600

    was the China World Cups were the first ones, and then on to the OQS. And then we had the

    463

    00:44:11,600 --> 00:44:17,440

    first ones and then on to the OQS. So yeah, so I guess in summary, a lot of time on task training

    464

    00:44:17,440 --> 00:44:24,880

    around movement specific stuff, and then leading into simulation and replicating the demands of an

    465

    00:44:24,880 --> 00:44:25,920

    arena situation.

    466

    00:44:26,240 --> 00:44:34,160

    Yeah, so you mentioned there's a big difference between simulation and the actual thing. Do you

    467

    00:44:34,880 --> 00:44:40,640

    ever see athletes who are able to perform well in simulation and then somehow they just like

    468

    00:44:40,640 --> 00:44:47,520

    crumble given like the, I guess like the pressure of the real situation and like the crowd and

    469

    00:44:47,520 --> 00:44:48,160

    everything like that?

    470

    00:44:48,560 --> 00:44:54,640

    Undoubtedly, there's a trait of the really top athletes where they, and actually we talked

    471

    00:44:54,640 --> 00:45:02,080

    earlier, you know, Shauna is one of those. Shauna's capacity to go up a gear in competition

    472

    00:45:02,080 --> 00:45:10,560

    versus training is one of the key hallmarks of her as an athlete. And I think actually

    473

    00:45:10,560 --> 00:45:15,600

    Toby is another, but the difference is that Toby's standard in training is so high.

    474

    00:45:16,720 --> 00:45:22,080

    Like for Toby, a competition is reasonably easy in terms of the complexity of the boulders and

    475

    00:45:22,080 --> 00:45:26,880

    the routes that he gets. You know, so that's a very different way of looking at it. But for sure,

    476

    00:45:26,880 --> 00:45:33,120

    I've seen it over my career definitely when in the pre-season running up, we've done multiple

    477

    00:45:33,120 --> 00:45:37,920

    simulations and there's an athlete or two who were winning those, you know, they're winning

    478

    00:45:37,920 --> 00:45:42,160

    training and then we've gone to internationals and they've not been the ones top of the roster for

    479

    00:45:42,160 --> 00:45:46,400

    GB at that time. So it is definitely a thing.

    480

    00:45:46,400 --> 00:45:50,880

    Okay. And so you would say Shauna was kind of the opposite where maybe like the competition

    481

    00:45:50,880 --> 00:45:51,760

    pressure was helpful.

    482

    00:45:51,760 --> 00:45:57,040

    Yeah, I think Shauna, how to phrase it, Shauna knows how to win. She knows how to win.

    483

    00:45:58,800 --> 00:46:04,800

    And she can, she can action that, which is great. And I think that you can see it now that Toby is

    484

    00:46:04,800 --> 00:46:09,920

    learning how to do that because his, you know, it's a really interesting thing, isn't it? Like

    485

    00:46:09,920 --> 00:46:15,920

    some people describe luck and I don't really believe in luck per se. And I think a really

    486

    00:46:15,920 --> 00:46:21,920

    good example of this was for those who, you know, your listeners, you should go and watch the

    487

    00:46:23,440 --> 00:46:26,320

    Yanya unfiltered, like little mini documentary series.

    488

    00:46:27,520 --> 00:46:32,000

    Because she talks often, doesn't she? Particularly around her cycle. And she said something like 70%

    489

    00:46:32,000 --> 00:46:38,560

    of the medals that she won, she won while on her period. And so when there's lots of factors

    490

    00:46:38,560 --> 00:46:42,240

    influencing whether or not that person can give their best on a particular moment, whether

    491

    00:46:42,240 --> 00:46:48,960

    Ashley is capable of winning that frequently, they're not lucky every week. They have found a

    492

    00:46:48,960 --> 00:46:54,000

    way to levy their skills and abilities and irrespective of the environment, whether you're

    493

    00:46:54,000 --> 00:47:01,120

    in Korea or China or the US or Europe, they can apply that process to deliver the performance

    494

    00:47:01,120 --> 00:47:07,360

    consistently. That's not luck, that's you've figured out how to win. And I think that's a

    495

    00:47:07,360 --> 00:47:13,520

    really interesting aspect of performance at the very end, which, you know, I guess like,

    496

    00:47:14,640 --> 00:47:18,400

    you know, if you climb outside and so I was like, oh, do you really climb 13B? And it's like,

    497

    00:47:18,400 --> 00:47:23,360

    yeah, because I can climb 13B on any rock type in multiple different conditions almost any time.

    498

    00:47:23,360 --> 00:47:29,040

    Like that is somebody who truly can climb at the level. I think the same roughly motion is

    499

    00:47:29,040 --> 00:47:35,280

    applicable to, you know, to World Cups. I suppose some of those exceptions are you have people like

    500

    00:47:36,880 --> 00:47:41,760

    people like Jakob Schubert, who are like Mr. Championships, who can actually perform

    501

    00:47:41,760 --> 00:47:45,280

    consistently, but it's a bit up and down World Cups. But you put Jakob in a World

    502

    00:47:45,280 --> 00:47:49,520

    Championships or Olympic final and you're going to see the best Jakob you have all season.

    503

    00:47:49,520 --> 00:47:54,960

    Yeah, he's a very interesting example. It was really cool to see him get a medal, for sure.

    504

    00:47:54,960 --> 00:48:02,880

    Yeah, the Janja example is interesting. When I heard that I was like, yeah, but also she's just

    505

    00:48:02,880 --> 00:48:08,960

    like so much stronger physically, I feel like, than everyone else that maybe that kind of

    506

    00:48:08,960 --> 00:48:16,320

    overcompensates a bit or compensates for the cycle happening. Because I know for me,

    507

    00:48:16,320 --> 00:48:24,560

    it feels like I'm like a good bit weaker, like the few days leading up to it. And so I've always

    508

    00:48:24,560 --> 00:48:31,360

    just thought like, if this ever happens in like an important moment, or like, if I have a competition

    509

    00:48:31,360 --> 00:48:35,440

    coming up, even like casually, it's just, it's just not gonna happen.

    510

    00:48:36,160 --> 00:48:39,680

    Yeah, it's a real challenge, isn't it? And it's, it's something which I think,

    511

    00:48:39,680 --> 00:48:45,600

    you know, we should all talk more openly about. I know I've made a conscious effort with the female

    512

    00:48:45,600 --> 00:48:50,560

    athletes I've worked with over the years to make that kind of conversation just normal.

    513

    00:48:51,600 --> 00:48:55,840

    Because it will have a big impact. And so actually, even being able to talk about it openly,

    514

    00:48:55,840 --> 00:49:01,280

    it can be, in a way, a really good beginning of accepting that that can happen. And then you can

    515

    00:49:01,280 --> 00:49:06,320

    get so right. So how do we manage that? You know, you know, how do we kind of deal with it? If it

    516

    00:49:06,320 --> 00:49:10,720

    does happen, because if you've got the comps are on the set, you know, there's a cadence to the

    517

    00:49:10,720 --> 00:49:15,840

    competitions that matches something similar, it can be really difficult. But coming back to your

    518

    00:49:15,840 --> 00:49:21,840

    earlier point, I think it's worth noting that, like you said, like that, I guess, at least my

    519

    00:49:21,840 --> 00:49:27,840

    coaching philosophy has been around this, that you can compete at the standard, if you can train at

    520

    00:49:27,840 --> 00:49:34,240

    the standard, and you can deal with the logistical elements of going to do that abroad, and you can

    521

    00:49:34,240 --> 00:49:38,960

    mentally deal with the fact that you're going to do it in a different space. But athletes typically

    522

    00:49:38,960 --> 00:49:46,960

    don't train at 8A plus sport routes, and then go to comps and can onsite 8C magically, it doesn't

    523

    00:49:46,960 --> 00:49:53,120

    jump that much. And so whether you're a Yanier or a Toby, or historically, like a Shawna, all of

    524

    00:49:53,120 --> 00:49:57,920

    these athletes, when you would see them in training, operating at or above world level, and,

    525

    00:49:57,920 --> 00:50:03,840

    you know, I mean, I think, you know, Tobes is a good example of what he does in training exceeds

    526

    00:50:04,720 --> 00:50:09,680

    what sort of competition and like an anecdote from this is really good is that I remember doing the

    527

    00:50:09,680 --> 00:50:17,840

    my first competition back after a period of leave was the Villa World Cup in Switzerland, and Toby

    528

    00:50:17,840 --> 00:50:23,520

    made the final there. So he climbed on four routes over two days of competition. And we went

    529

    00:50:23,520 --> 00:50:28,480

    training before flying home on the Monday, and some of the athletes did like a couple routes,

    530

    00:50:28,480 --> 00:50:32,000

    and they were like, well, we've got a competition next weekend, like we're going to save ourselves,

    531

    00:50:32,000 --> 00:50:39,040

    don't want to do too much. And I think Toby did either like 12 or 16 routes of 8B or up that day.

    532

    00:50:39,680 --> 00:50:45,920

    And he was like, well, I only pulled on four times over the weekend. Like, that's barely

    533

    00:50:45,920 --> 00:50:53,840

    anything for me. So it's interesting when you think about it in those in those contexts is for the

    534

    00:50:53,840 --> 00:51:01,440

    top athletes, the level of declining is not that difficult. But it's mentally draining to be in the

    535

    00:51:01,440 --> 00:51:05,600

    competitive arena and all that kind of stuff. And that's what I mean about your training standard

    536

    00:51:05,600 --> 00:51:09,040

    has to be there already.

    537

    00:51:09,040 --> 00:51:16,960

    Right. So like, World Cup climbs should not feel so difficult, basically.

    538

    00:51:18,000 --> 00:51:24,480

    Yeah, or at least, let's put it another way, if your training level is here, and you drop a little

    539

    00:51:24,480 --> 00:51:29,120

    bit, because of the situation, you could handle anything that you're going to face in a World Cup.

    540

    00:51:30,320 --> 00:51:35,120

    But I think that's where the, you know, and anyone who's been to B-Pump and stuff like that will know

    541

    00:51:35,120 --> 00:51:40,720

    this. Like those some of those boulders are ludicrously hard. I mean, the men in the World

    542

    00:51:40,720 --> 00:51:46,880

    Cups, you know, all climb like V14, V15, V16, like they're climbing those upper numbers, but they're

    543

    00:51:46,880 --> 00:51:51,840

    trying to solve these things in like five minutes. Right. You know, so it's a totally different

    544

    00:51:51,840 --> 00:51:56,000

    thing. And often people, I mean, I've had this in the UK, people have said, like, you know, how good

    545

    00:51:56,000 --> 00:51:59,600

    are these comp climbers really, you know, on rock? Like, what would they do on rock, really? I was

    546

    00:51:59,600 --> 00:52:03,680

    like, well, you see when they have the offseason, they go into the World Cup, and they're like,

    547

    00:52:03,680 --> 00:52:08,560

    you see when they have the offseason, they go and do everything, because it's not difficult compared

    548

    00:52:08,560 --> 00:52:13,920

    to what they do. And their standard is so high. And the same is true of the women as well. Like,

    549

    00:52:13,920 --> 00:52:20,400

    can you imagine what Yan Yu's project boulders look like in training? Like, really hard.

    550

    00:52:20,400 --> 00:52:25,600

    Yeah, I think sometimes we kind of forget that this is the first time they've seen the boulder,

    551

    00:52:25,600 --> 00:52:29,200

    and they only have five minutes. I feel like because a lot of times people are watching and

    552

    00:52:29,200 --> 00:52:33,840

    they're like, oh, I could maybe do that, either just because it like looks easy, or maybe they

    553

    00:52:33,840 --> 00:52:40,080

    really do think that they could do it if they like project it. But you kind of forget this is

    554

    00:52:40,080 --> 00:52:45,040

    their flash go. Yeah, yeah, totally. And I think now World Cups, the standards going up and up,

    555

    00:52:45,040 --> 00:52:49,760

    and it's difficult to put a boulder numerical grade on World Cup boulders because they're

    556

    00:52:49,760 --> 00:52:58,000

    stylistically so different. You know, but in a World Cup qualifier, you know, I mean, I wouldn't

    557

    00:52:58,000 --> 00:53:03,680

    want to upset the route setters by putting numbers on it. But, you know, they're pretty hard. But

    558

    00:53:03,680 --> 00:53:08,320

    then the semi-finals and finals levels, you know, they're really hard blocks. They're really hard

    559

    00:53:08,320 --> 00:53:14,800

    blocks. I doubt if you're getting on stuff that's less at the top end, maybe like Olympic level,

    560

    00:53:14,800 --> 00:53:19,120

    like underneath like V9, V10. I think that's probably like the minimum level. And you're

    561

    00:53:19,120 --> 00:53:23,040

    probably getting up to like V14. And these climbers are doing these in five minutes.

    562

    00:53:23,040 --> 00:53:28,640

    So, you know, and I guess that's where, you know, ever go and watch that video of Yanya climbing

    563

    00:53:28,640 --> 00:53:33,760

    Buegelheisen sit, that's AC. She looks like she's warming up, right? Or, you know,

    564

    00:53:33,760 --> 00:53:39,040

    Brooke Rabbit's did box therapy get downgraded? Is it V15 now or V16?

    565

    00:53:39,040 --> 00:53:40,560

    I don't remember.

    566

    00:53:40,560 --> 00:53:45,440

    Either way, do you mean like these people climbing incredibly hard that it's on another

    567

    00:53:45,440 --> 00:53:47,280

    level, they're such incredible athletes.

    568

    00:53:47,280 --> 00:53:54,560

    Yeah, absolutely. Okay, so you eventually made the decision to leave as head coach.

    569

    00:53:54,560 --> 00:53:58,560

    How and why did you just make that decision?

    570

    00:53:58,560 --> 00:54:06,560

    I mean, it was a really tough decision, but GB climbing had this really ambitious set of goals

    571

    00:54:06,560 --> 00:54:10,800

    post the pandemic period, you know, that we talked about, like coming out of lockdown,

    572

    00:54:10,800 --> 00:54:16,320

    I would say possibly too ambitious with the resources that were available at the time.

    573

    00:54:16,320 --> 00:54:22,400

    And so the team and the management of the team, which I was obviously part of that, but ended up

    574

    00:54:22,400 --> 00:54:28,720

    kind of like spreading this resource like really thin. And it didn't feel like any one particular

    575

    00:54:28,720 --> 00:54:33,920

    aspect was enough of a focus that we could really improve things or take things forward in that area.

    576

    00:54:35,920 --> 00:54:42,800

    And I think that realistically that led to, I guess, real limitations.

    577

    00:54:42,800 --> 00:54:48,960

    And then that then led to us not being able to deliver in the way that we'd promised.

    578

    00:54:49,520 --> 00:54:53,520

    So I guess, you know, you have these big goals, you talk about you're going to go and come in and

    579

    00:54:53,520 --> 00:54:59,040

    make these changes, you know, big systematic change, big improvement for the athletes.

    580

    00:55:00,000 --> 00:55:04,400

    And then going down that line, the resources are not necessarily as much as you thought.

    581

    00:55:04,400 --> 00:55:08,000

    You're trying to spread things really thinly to cover all these different bases and invest

    582

    00:55:08,000 --> 00:55:12,240

    in lots of different projects. And that dilutes the quality of you really making a

    583

    00:55:12,240 --> 00:55:20,560

    difference to the athlete team. And I think that that really compromised for me a lot of relationships

    584

    00:55:20,560 --> 00:55:26,480

    that were really important to me in my role. And I think that that meant that the team itself was

    585

    00:55:26,480 --> 00:55:33,520

    losing a lot of credibility with the athletes. And that then led to relationships being strained.

    586

    00:55:34,880 --> 00:55:40,960

    You know, like for me personally, I was subject to quite a lot of poor behavior from the community

    587

    00:55:40,960 --> 00:55:45,440

    in the UK, if I was personally climbing in the gym, things like that, you know, people coming up to

    588

    00:55:45,440 --> 00:55:51,200

    me and wanting to have conversation, you know, no boundaries, like this person's, you know, in on

    589

    00:55:51,200 --> 00:55:55,200

    their personal time, but I want to come and give them my opinion on what do you be climbing, should

    590

    00:55:55,200 --> 00:56:02,240

    or shouldn't be doing or, you know, kind of like internet forums with really negative, you know,

    591

    00:56:02,240 --> 00:56:08,000

    quite toxic behavior. And I think that the strain on the relationships meant that I was feeling

    592

    00:56:08,000 --> 00:56:12,720

    quite dissatisfied with, you know, with the work and with what we were trying to achieve. And

    593

    00:56:13,520 --> 00:56:18,400

    I'm somebody who works through a certain set of principles and I've got pretty high standards

    594

    00:56:18,400 --> 00:56:26,000

    when it comes to the work that I want to do. And I just felt that through no anyone individuals, but

    595

    00:56:26,880 --> 00:56:32,880

    that had become, you know, unsustainable for me, the challenges of being in that space for that

    596

    00:56:32,880 --> 00:56:36,960

    amount of time, given that I wasn't satisfied with the level we were operating at, with that

    597

    00:56:36,960 --> 00:56:42,160

    it wasn't aligning with my principles or values professionally. And I think that there was just

    598

    00:56:42,160 --> 00:56:47,760

    this mounting pressure from the community, like ramping up like all of the time to the point where

    599

    00:56:48,400 --> 00:56:53,680

    the scrutiny on myself and the other coaches was so much that it was almost unbearable at times.

    600

    00:56:54,880 --> 00:56:58,400

    You know, that was really difficult. And I think, you know, it's important that I'm honest with you

    601

    00:56:58,400 --> 00:57:02,720

    about it, you know, talk to it, because I think when you're a national team coach, you really are

    602

    00:57:02,720 --> 00:57:08,000

    in the firing line, you are held to a standard that not a lot of other coaches are, you know,

    603

    00:57:08,000 --> 00:57:12,880

    in the UK. There was all sorts of like practice from other coaches that you'd consider not

    604

    00:57:12,880 --> 00:57:17,600

    necessarily super professional and poor. But if you're wearing that, you know, the GB jersey,

    605

    00:57:17,600 --> 00:57:22,400

    like everyone is coming for you if you put a foot wrong. And that would include in the professional

    606

    00:57:22,400 --> 00:57:27,600

    capacity, but then also even your personal life, like it was becoming a huge challenge.

    607

    00:57:27,600 --> 00:57:32,240

    So I think for me, I got to a point where I made the difficult decision to step down,

    608

    00:57:32,960 --> 00:57:35,840

    not for any other reason other than for me personally, it wasn't

    609

    00:57:38,080 --> 00:57:46,000

    great for my health, my physical and mental health. You know, and also as well, like I always

    610

    00:57:46,000 --> 00:57:51,440

    viewed myself as just being a custodian of that role for a period of time, you know, like I knew

    611

    00:57:51,440 --> 00:57:55,200

    I was never going to be the head coach forever. And I just wanted to do the best job that I could

    612

    00:57:55,200 --> 00:57:59,040

    with the period of time that I was fortunate enough to have it. And I didn't feel like I was

    613

    00:57:59,040 --> 00:58:05,760

    doing my best job because of the constraints of everything around that coupled with like, you

    614

    00:58:05,760 --> 00:58:11,200

    know, a huge amount of declining health and stress related to it. I just was like, actually, this is

    615

    00:58:11,200 --> 00:58:18,800

    this is the right time for me to leave. It was a really difficult decision, but I think it was I

    616

    00:58:18,800 --> 00:58:25,440

    think it was for the best for myself. Yeah. When you say like the community pressures that like,

    617

    00:58:25,440 --> 00:58:34,400

    fans or like parents or athletes, just everything. I think a bit of a mix really. And I think that

    618

    00:58:35,040 --> 00:58:40,560

    what happens quite a lot of the time is people are not really in possession of the full set of the

    619

    00:58:40,560 --> 00:58:46,400

    facts. They're in possession of their perspective. And I guess a bit like politics, right? Like,

    620

    00:58:46,400 --> 00:58:52,880

    when a perspective is ingrained and communicated routinely like that, people believe that that is

    621

    00:58:52,880 --> 00:58:57,440

    the truth, but actually it's not the truth. It's just a perspective. And when you don't have the

    622

    00:58:57,440 --> 00:59:05,040

    opportunity from maybe your seat as GB head coach to really communicate exactly this is the situation

    623

    00:59:05,040 --> 00:59:10,480

    or do it in the same way, you just find that the narrative just becomes totally negative,

    624

    00:59:10,480 --> 00:59:17,360

    and totally misrepresentative of the situation. And that was happening in particular through the

    625

    00:59:17,360 --> 00:59:24,400

    community of personal coaches, of parents, of athletes as well. And so all these people are

    626

    00:59:24,400 --> 00:59:30,320

    kind of primed to sort of like think of it negatively. So, they're coming into training

    627

    00:59:30,320 --> 00:59:34,640

    sessions and people are carrying all of this in with them, their frustrations, their upset,

    628

    00:59:34,640 --> 00:59:39,440

    their kind of baggage from outside. And so it meant it was really difficult to have really

    629

    00:59:39,440 --> 00:59:46,640

    quality relationships and coaching is a relational role. So that was really, really difficult. And I

    630

    00:59:46,640 --> 00:59:54,160

    do think that some of the behaviour individuals in the community is really not cool, is not helping

    631

    00:59:54,160 --> 00:59:58,480

    as GB move forward. And in many ways, it's fantastic the athletes do as well as they do,

    632

    00:59:58,480 --> 01:00:07,840

    given that context. But yeah, it's really tricky. And yeah, I've definitely had interactions with

    633

    01:00:07,840 --> 01:00:12,400

    people from the community in Great Britain, where those people have just totally overstepped the

    634

    01:00:12,400 --> 01:00:19,120

    boundary. And I realised actually, to be honest, that you're basically being criticised by people

    635

    01:00:19,120 --> 01:00:26,080

    with less experience than you, as if they know better. And that's how you're going to be able

    636

    01:00:26,080 --> 01:00:33,360

    to be better. And that's hard. And to no means am I saying I was right. I'm very open to that,

    637

    01:00:33,360 --> 01:00:38,480

    that I may have been wrong on certain things. But I think when you're interested with that

    638

    01:00:38,480 --> 01:00:44,000

    responsibility, you've applied to that role, you know, you've been better and you've taken that

    639

    01:00:44,000 --> 01:00:49,280

    and you're really trying your best, but everybody else just wants to kind of tear it down. It's not

    640

    01:00:49,280 --> 01:00:54,560

    the easiest situation to be in. And you know, that's the that's kind of like the complex

    641

    01:00:54,560 --> 01:01:00,160

    landscape, I think. And to be honest, I think that's also true of elite sport generally,

    642

    01:01:00,160 --> 01:01:08,160

    but definitely in the UK. And I think that like Gareth Southgate, who was the former England

    643

    01:01:08,160 --> 01:01:13,360

    manager, summed it up really well for me when he said, you know, I'm involved in a sport that I

    644

    01:01:13,360 --> 01:01:19,520

    love, but in an industry I hate. I wouldn't say I hate the climbing community, but I'm involved

    645

    01:01:19,520 --> 01:01:24,640

    with sport that I love, but in a community that's extremely difficult, extremely difficult. And I

    646

    01:01:24,640 --> 01:01:30,240

    think that makes it hard to do your good work. I mean, not to like, dig up past trauma or anything.

    647

    01:01:31,040 --> 01:01:36,240

    So like, if, if it's a if it's too much, just let me know. But is there anything you remember

    648

    01:01:36,960 --> 01:01:42,000

    hearing someone say, either like online or some something that someone said to you in person that

    649

    01:01:42,000 --> 01:01:49,760

    you remember was like, oh, this was like a really personal attack or like something that was really

    650

    01:01:49,760 --> 01:01:54,960

    hard to hear? I mean, I mean, the thing is, is I'm always open for professional criticism

    651

    01:01:54,960 --> 01:01:59,040

    in the right context, because sometimes you have to acknowledge that you might not have all the

    652

    01:01:59,040 --> 01:02:04,000

    answers and you need to be open to it. I think when that's like, you know, imagine like,

    653

    01:02:05,520 --> 01:02:09,760

    you know, like, like your cup, like your capacity to like absorb that feedback is like this big,

    654

    01:02:09,760 --> 01:02:13,120

    it felt like every day people were coming in like pouring like a bucket into this, and it was just

    655

    01:02:13,120 --> 01:02:20,240

    flowing over the top. So your capacity to really absorb that starts to dwindle. And so I think that

    656

    01:02:20,240 --> 01:02:24,640

    in terms of people saying things, I never had an interaction with a parent where they said, you

    657

    01:02:24,640 --> 01:02:28,800

    know, this is something that could be better at GB climbing. And I thought, I totally disagree with

    658

    01:02:28,800 --> 01:02:32,960

    you. I was like, I actually agree with what you're saying. I totally agree with that the premise of

    659

    01:02:32,960 --> 01:02:39,200

    that. The way that you're going about it, I don't agree with. And so yeah, there's like a lot of

    660

    01:02:39,200 --> 01:02:45,120

    like stuff on the internet and you know, people sort of saying like, like, Tom Greenwell is a

    661

    01:02:45,120 --> 01:02:50,560

    useless, you know, head coach and easy competent and you know, all that kind of stuff. But that

    662

    01:02:50,560 --> 01:02:54,560

    didn't really bother me. But there was definitely one instance when I was actually climbing with

    663

    01:02:54,560 --> 01:03:00,000

    two of the other coaches in a climbing gym, and I was on the kilts board, right. And I went to do

    664

    01:03:00,000 --> 01:03:04,880

    a move and all the lights changed on the board at the time. And I was like, oh, that's odd.

    665

    01:03:04,880 --> 01:03:09,440

    And then like, I got on again, tried another boulder problem and the lights changed again.

    666

    01:03:10,160 --> 01:03:14,720

    And this happened like routinely and what was happening is a member of the community was stood

    667

    01:03:14,720 --> 01:03:18,640

    there with their phone and they'd like changed the boulder problem when I was on it.

    668

    01:03:18,640 --> 01:03:20,720

    So crazy. Oh my god.

    669

    01:03:21,920 --> 01:03:25,760

    And they were thinking this was kind of like cool and like we're sticking it to GB and all this

    670

    01:03:25,760 --> 01:03:30,000

    kind of thing. And I actually saw this person in the climbing wall later and they thought it was

    671

    01:03:30,000 --> 01:03:36,960

    funny. They're like, how funny was my joke? I was like, this is not, you know, this is not funny.

    672

    01:03:37,520 --> 01:03:42,160

    And so I guess there's that and I think there's a lot of people out there looking to like

    673

    01:03:42,160 --> 01:03:45,840

    discredit you professionally. I've heard other personal coaches saying like, oh, he doesn't know

    674

    01:03:45,840 --> 01:03:51,440

    what he's doing and all that kind of thing. And I guess it's really tricky. And you know, imagine

    675

    01:03:51,920 --> 01:03:57,760

    most people being in a position when people come into your workplace to criticize what you're doing

    676

    01:03:57,760 --> 01:04:05,680

    directly. It's a pretty tough gig. But that being said, there is a lot of positive stuff out there

    677

    01:04:05,680 --> 01:04:09,520

    as well. And there's a lot of very positive parents and athletes who are super supportive

    678

    01:04:09,520 --> 01:04:16,160

    that I had great relationships with. And what was really lovely is I remember coaching the junior

    679

    01:04:16,160 --> 01:04:25,600

    team and Nathan Phillips won the first gold medal in junior bouldering in Laval. I think that was

    680

    01:04:25,600 --> 01:04:31,520

    like 2015 or something. And what was really beautiful is the last comp I did was when Toby

    681

    01:04:31,520 --> 01:04:39,280

    qualified for the Olympics in the same city in Laval 10 years later. So it kind of felt like this

    682

    01:04:39,280 --> 01:04:47,120

    like perfect like loop of time. And I'm genuinely really grateful for all the positive stuff that

    683

    01:04:47,120 --> 01:04:52,720

    I've experienced. I've experienced a lot of negativity within that role, but I've also

    684

    01:04:52,720 --> 01:04:57,360

    experienced a lot of great moments in particular with athletes, and in particular with parents

    685

    01:04:58,080 --> 01:05:02,800

    who've been very supportive of me. And actually, I wouldn't I wouldn't change that for the world. So

    686

    01:05:03,920 --> 01:05:09,680

    I guess like, good, some really big highs and some pretty deep lows. But I think that's part of

    687

    01:05:10,080 --> 01:05:14,960

    part of the the challenge. I think if you're a national team coach, especially the head coach.

    688

    01:05:14,960 --> 01:05:21,360

    Yeah, geez, I mean, I'm sorry to hear about that. That's like, kind of wild. But yeah, I guess that

    689

    01:05:21,360 --> 01:05:28,000

    kind of comes with anything competition climbing related. There's a lot of there's always a lot of

    690

    01:05:28,000 --> 01:05:36,640

    talk online and negativity. And it's like kind of a weird experience to public be like publicly

    691

    01:05:36,640 --> 01:05:43,760

    doing your job like that and have everyone comment on how you're doing your job. So yeah, definitely

    692

    01:05:43,760 --> 01:05:48,800

    or I guess at least measure measuring you by an outcome which you're not fully in control of,

    693

    01:05:48,800 --> 01:05:53,440

    you know, I think is maybe the worst thing. But it's really interesting point you say that because

    694

    01:05:53,440 --> 01:05:58,720

    I think that over the last few years, there has been a very positive movement towards more awareness

    695

    01:05:58,720 --> 01:06:04,560

    around mental health in particular for athletes. You know, and athletes may be not being treated

    696

    01:06:04,560 --> 01:06:09,680

    like these robotic beings that just come out and perform and that's it, you know, they're people with

    697

    01:06:10,560 --> 01:06:16,560

    real lives and emotions and feelings and other priorities as well. But I really feel that, you

    698

    01:06:16,560 --> 01:06:24,640

    know, when we talk about coaching as a subgroup of high performance sports, well, we very rarely talk

    699

    01:06:24,640 --> 01:06:30,160

    about the pressure that the coaches under and the scrutiny that they're put under to deliver as well

    700

    01:06:30,160 --> 01:06:37,600

    because it is just, you know, just as frequent and just as big. And, you know, I think also when we

    701

    01:06:37,600 --> 01:06:42,960

    think about coaching, especially elite level, the blueprint we have of a coach is, you know,

    702

    01:06:42,960 --> 01:06:47,760

    someone who never shows vulnerability, who's relentless and tireless in their commitment,

    703

    01:06:47,760 --> 01:06:52,720

    who sacrifices everything for the, you know, success of the athletes that they work with.

    704

    01:06:53,440 --> 01:06:59,120

    And actually, I'm not entirely sure that that blueprint is the most healthy blueprint to have.

    705

    01:06:59,120 --> 01:07:04,000

    I mean, there's a really good example of I think it was in the 2016 Rio Olympics,

    706

    01:07:04,000 --> 01:07:12,560

    GB England, GB, yes, a Great Britain hockey women's coach, Danny Carey suffered a heart attack

    707

    01:07:12,560 --> 01:07:18,800

    for a while at the games and then got out of bed to go back to coach like this, like last game.

    708

    01:07:18,800 --> 01:07:25,120

    And this was, this was herald as this like heroic act of incredible coaching. Whereas actually you

    709

    01:07:25,120 --> 01:07:30,560

    look at that objectively and think, like, realistically, is that what we expect people to do?

    710

    01:07:30,560 --> 01:07:38,080

    And from my experience, coaching is not a nine to five, but it can become, you know, all encompassing

    711

    01:07:38,080 --> 01:07:44,720

    at the end of the spectrum. And I think that when you look at divorce rates, burnout, mental health

    712

    01:07:44,720 --> 01:07:50,080

    challenges, those things are all really prevalent in coaching. And I think we could all do a lot

    713

    01:07:50,080 --> 01:07:56,960

    better as a community to, I guess, at the minimum offer a degree of empathy, so that people who are

    714

    01:07:56,960 --> 01:08:02,480

    giving so much energy to try and help others achieve, but also understand that those individuals

    715

    01:08:02,480 --> 01:08:09,360

    can't be on 24 seven on coaching, like they need time off, they need to have downtime, they need to,

    716

    01:08:10,080 --> 01:08:16,480

    you know, avoid burnout. And that's definitely something that I unfortunately had to learn the

    717

    01:08:16,480 --> 01:08:23,760

    hard way through this job. But I really want to be an advocate moving forward for coaches to,

    718

    01:08:23,760 --> 01:08:28,000

    you know, talk more openly about the challenges that you experience professionally,

    719

    01:08:28,880 --> 01:08:33,440

    and how that impacts you personally, and that we should be prioritizing, not only athlete

    720

    01:08:33,440 --> 01:08:39,360

    well-being, but coach well-being as well within the arena of high performance sport.

    721

    01:08:39,360 --> 01:08:45,840

    What were the hardest parts of coaching for you? Other than, I guess, like the dealing with the

    722

    01:08:45,840 --> 01:08:47,200

    community issues?

    723

    01:08:47,200 --> 01:08:51,680

    I mean, I think that definitely as an international coach, you know, the season's pretty long, but

    724

    01:08:51,680 --> 01:08:57,840

    from kind of like April time through to October time, you know, you're on the road a lot. And so

    725

    01:08:57,840 --> 01:09:03,840

    that has a huge impact on your, you know, your social connections, on your family life. You know,

    726

    01:09:03,840 --> 01:09:10,720

    you miss birthdays, you miss weddings, you miss family vacations, you know, and it's a very

    727

    01:09:10,720 --> 01:09:17,280

    relentless schedule. And so I think that two things, one, what it does is it takes away a lot of

    728

    01:09:17,280 --> 01:09:23,200

    opportunity for you to identify with yourself outside of your coaching role, which therefore

    729

    01:09:23,200 --> 01:09:29,280

    puts a lot of pressure almost internally on your sense of self as a coach, in terms of the results,

    730

    01:09:29,280 --> 01:09:35,760

    the team, how they perform. I think you can be judged quite transactionally, you know, in terms

    731

    01:09:35,760 --> 01:09:41,040

    of your effectiveness in your role, but also your effectiveness as an individual, you know, when

    732

    01:09:41,040 --> 01:09:45,440

    you're that tired and you've taken that many flights and you're exhausted, you know, you're

    733

    01:09:45,440 --> 01:09:51,680

    taking that many flights and you're exhausted. It's a very hard place to keep giving your energy to,

    734

    01:09:51,680 --> 01:09:58,320

    you know, to somebody else, you know, and actually, whereas like, you know, some athletes are like,

    735

    01:09:58,320 --> 01:10:02,640

    oh, it's really tiring going to a comp. That's like, yeah, but you're one person and you do one

    736

    01:10:02,640 --> 01:10:09,120

    comp, whereas as a coach, you do the comp for every single athlete. So you're switched on,

    737

    01:10:09,120 --> 01:10:16,000

    focused to exponentially longer. And then you're expected to be like, right, go to bed, back up

    738

    01:10:16,000 --> 01:10:21,920

    next day. And I'm just as focused as I was yesterday. So the, in terms of answering your point,

    739

    01:10:21,920 --> 01:10:27,840

    I think the hardest parts are, or at least in my experience, was not having much downtime to recharge,

    740

    01:10:28,640 --> 01:10:33,840

    but constantly being a position where you're giving your energy. And that doesn't leave much

    741

    01:10:33,840 --> 01:10:39,760

    leftover. And if you're not connecting socially with something that's outside of that, it's a very

    742

    01:10:39,760 --> 01:10:44,640

    high pressured space to be, I would say. Yeah, I actually didn't really think about how you kind

    743

    01:10:44,640 --> 01:10:50,640

    of have to be there for every athlete at every comp that they go to. That is actually a lot,

    744

    01:10:51,200 --> 01:10:57,840

    a lot to deal with. And like, just in terms of traveling, I know we talked a little bit before

    745

    01:10:57,840 --> 01:11:05,120

    we started this interview about my exhaustion with traveling, just for fun, even I was just traveling

    746

    01:11:05,760 --> 01:11:13,200

    by my own accord for fun. But it was a lot. So what were some of your like favorite and least

    747

    01:11:13,200 --> 01:11:21,280

    favorite moments traveling around on the circuit? Favorite and least. That's good. So I guess I always

    748

    01:11:21,280 --> 01:11:27,280

    was really, really fond of the summer period of lead World Cups in Europe, where you'd fly to

    749

    01:11:27,280 --> 01:11:32,240

    Switzerland to do Vilar, and then you do Chamonix and Branson like back to back, like being in like

    750

    01:11:32,240 --> 01:11:36,080

    the French Alps around that, you know, period of time or in Switzerland, you know, that's like a

    751

    01:11:36,080 --> 01:11:39,840

    beautiful period of time. And I often found the team were very close during that, we'd spend a lot

    752

    01:11:39,840 --> 01:11:44,480

    of time together. And, you know, we'd enjoy those spaces, you know, Chamonix is beautiful, like

    753

    01:11:44,480 --> 01:11:49,840

    you're competing underneath, you know, Mont Blanc, it's stunning. So I always have really fond

    754

    01:11:49,840 --> 01:11:58,320

    memories of that comp. I think what I have a lot of fond memories of are the little bits in between,

    755

    01:11:58,320 --> 01:12:03,760

    to be honest, you know, like a lot of times, people think of the arena and like that's where

    756

    01:12:04,800 --> 01:12:11,760

    I guess those memories come from. And undoubtedly, you know, Toby's performance in the VAL is one of

    757

    01:12:11,760 --> 01:12:16,480

    the greatest climbing performances I've ever seen in my 10 years doing this. It was phenomenal. And

    758

    01:12:16,480 --> 01:12:22,320

    I loved that experience. But as well as being there celebrating with Liam and Trist when he won that

    759

    01:12:22,320 --> 01:12:29,920

    comp, I also really loved seeing Toby have his first beer after that. You know, it seems so mad

    760

    01:12:29,920 --> 01:12:34,080

    that like you're there and there's this incredible world class performance from this young man. And

    761

    01:12:34,080 --> 01:12:38,880

    then three hours later, post-doping control, you know, you're having you within having his first

    762

    01:12:38,880 --> 01:12:45,600

    beer in a small pub, you know, Laval while you're having a pizza. And I think that's where there's

    763

    01:12:45,600 --> 01:12:50,960

    like such a human element to it when you're closer to it, like the back of house, like these ethics

    764

    01:12:50,960 --> 01:12:56,080

    are people. And some of those, you know, moments are really lovely. And, you know, I reflect back

    765

    01:12:56,080 --> 01:13:03,120

    on a pandemic, like we had a birthday party for Molly in training. And that was a wonderful,

    766

    01:13:03,120 --> 01:13:11,680

    you know, wonderful thing. And then I think about, I guess, again, like the team made me a birthday

    767

    01:13:11,680 --> 01:13:16,240

    cake when I was away, because my birthday is in July. So I was always away internationals.

    768

    01:13:16,880 --> 01:13:22,720

    You know, things like that were just wonderful, wonderful experiences. Some of the least,

    769

    01:13:22,720 --> 01:13:26,960

    least fun is when you miss a flight and you then like, Oh my God, I'm going to have to like now

    770

    01:13:26,960 --> 01:13:31,680

    wait in an airport for a really long time. I remember actually, I went to the Jakarta World Cup

    771

    01:13:31,680 --> 01:13:39,280

    on my own and I missed on my way back, I missed my connection flight and had like a 10 hour layover.

    772

    01:13:39,280 --> 01:13:47,360

    I always fly back from Indonesia like, Oh, just horrendous. I can also remember when Hamish won

    773

    01:13:47,920 --> 01:13:55,600

    his medal at the Moscow World Champs, the entire team had way too many drinks after that. I remember

    774

    01:13:55,600 --> 01:14:01,840

    the journey back home from that being particularly savage. That was definitely a real low point.

    775

    01:14:03,760 --> 01:14:08,080

    But yeah, when we're away traveling with the team, it's vast majority of it is really,

    776

    01:14:08,080 --> 01:14:12,880

    really positive memories. There's a lot of very cool folks out there doing that with those jobs.

    777

    01:14:12,880 --> 01:14:17,360

    And it's been a privilege to spend time with them. When is your birthday, by the way? My birthday is

    778

    01:14:17,360 --> 01:14:24,880

    also in July. Oh, is it? Oh, mine's the sixth. Oh, shoot. So close. The second. The second. Oh,

    779

    01:14:24,880 --> 01:14:30,400

    nice. I was kind of hopeful. Maybe we would share a birthday. That would be cool. That would be cool.

    780

    01:14:30,400 --> 01:14:34,240

    I mean, we'd have to celebrate from like other ends of the Atlantic. See, I can't come there.

    781

    01:14:34,240 --> 01:14:38,960

    You can come to the UK. I could. I can come to the UK. I was actually considering, but I'm

    782

    01:14:39,680 --> 01:14:45,680

    I'm not sure. Still considering. I'll let you know if I do. Yeah. Yeah. Well, coming for your

    783

    01:14:45,680 --> 01:14:49,440

    birthday would be a good time because it'll be the summer and it'll be much nicer weather.

    784

    01:14:49,440 --> 01:14:56,560

    I know. Yeah. Yeah. It's hard to leave the weather here. But yeah, honestly, like having a summer

    785

    01:14:56,560 --> 01:15:03,040

    birthday in July, like traveling around that time, doing comps, working. I can see how that would be

    786

    01:15:03,040 --> 01:15:10,240

    a tough time. How would you suggest to other coach to like help manage all that stress? Is there like

    787

    01:15:10,800 --> 01:15:14,480

    anything that you've learned in your time that really helped you manage the stress of

    788

    01:15:15,280 --> 01:15:22,000

    always being on the job? I mean, one thing I think is really maybe not maybe considered is that you're

    789

    01:15:22,000 --> 01:15:29,520

    performing as well as a coach. You know, so over the time, I got really good at developing like my

    790

    01:15:29,520 --> 01:15:35,840

    own routines. You know, I'd know I'm going to go in tomorrow. We've got a 12 hour day. It's going

    791

    01:15:35,840 --> 01:15:40,640

    to be baking hot, you know, so I need to be well rested, well hydrated and all that kind of stuff.

    792

    01:15:40,640 --> 01:15:45,200

    So in many ways, like a lot like an athlete would as well, like I would take care of my nutrition,

    793

    01:15:45,200 --> 01:15:50,320

    I try and get an early, you know, early sleep. I would stretch. I found a lot of that put me in a

    794

    01:15:50,320 --> 01:15:56,880

    very good mindset to actually undertake the job. And also some of that would then happen on the

    795

    01:15:56,880 --> 01:16:01,760

    other side as well. I would find ways to relax, whether it be like my own personal space and my

    796

    01:16:01,760 --> 01:16:08,160

    own time. So I think one of the big things is creating boundaries and being really clear with

    797

    01:16:08,160 --> 01:16:12,400

    your communication with them, with the athletes that you work with, you know, make them aware that

    798

    01:16:13,680 --> 01:16:20,400

    at this certain point, you're switching off. And unless it's a total emergency, you can't contact

    799

    01:16:20,400 --> 01:16:26,640

    me until this time. Protect the time for yourself. I think that's a really important thing. I think

    800

    01:16:26,640 --> 01:16:32,240

    also as well, if you're an international coach and you travel around a lot, make time for you to enjoy

    801

    01:16:32,240 --> 01:16:39,280

    some of that experience for yourself. You know, connect with some of the coaches if you want to,

    802

    01:16:40,480 --> 01:16:44,560

    have friends who maybe you can meet, go and do something different. Because I think when it all

    803

    01:16:44,560 --> 01:16:52,240

    becomes about the arena, I think you can maybe lose some perspective or you're always switched

    804

    01:16:52,240 --> 01:16:56,000

    on mentally, like the comps already begun in your mind, like a couple of days out or after when

    805

    01:16:56,000 --> 01:17:02,000

    actually it's good to find the switch off. But I think what's been really helpful for me is that I

    806

    01:17:02,000 --> 01:17:08,480

    have like drawn up over the last few years, like a really trusted group of people who helped me

    807

    01:17:08,480 --> 01:17:14,160

    problem solve professionally. And so they're always there if I need them as peers and as mentors,

    808

    01:17:14,160 --> 01:17:20,320

    and I can really go to them with challenges that I'm facing if I need to play catch with a problem.

    809

    01:17:20,320 --> 01:17:28,400

    So I've found that really, really helpful to just feel supported in the endeavor as well.

    810

    01:17:28,400 --> 01:17:30,640

    And sometimes also put some perspective on the thing.

    811

    01:17:30,640 --> 01:17:36,880

    So then looking forward into the future of the sport, you are still pretty involved.

    812

    01:17:36,880 --> 01:17:39,280

    Where do you kind of see the sport headed?

    813

    01:17:39,280 --> 01:17:44,880

    I mean, you know, it's really interesting. So I have a new part time role in the UK where

    814

    01:17:44,880 --> 01:17:50,160

    working with the coach development side of things. And we're currently going through this process

    815

    01:17:50,160 --> 01:17:55,120

    looking at these coaching awards where we train and thinking about in 10 years time from now,

    816

    01:17:55,760 --> 01:18:00,160

    we need to create something that will still be servicing the coaches of 10 years in the future

    817

    01:18:00,160 --> 01:18:03,920

    with the right information and right knowledge. And then it was like, all right, so what does

    818

    01:18:03,920 --> 01:18:06,720

    climbing, yeah, same question. What does climbing look like in 10 years from now?

    819

    01:18:07,840 --> 01:18:14,640

    And I think if we look back at where it's come from to where it is at now, that can give us

    820

    01:18:14,640 --> 01:18:20,720

    some idea of where it's going to go. And so firstly, if we look at competition climbing,

    821

    01:18:21,280 --> 01:18:26,320

    often it was like, I would say that the people were still athletes 10, 15 years ago, but,

    822

    01:18:27,280 --> 01:18:32,240

    you know, probably climbed outside a bunch as well. Training was less formal, less structured.

    823

    01:18:34,160 --> 01:18:38,720

    You know, often like going to the World Cups would include like loads of other things alongside it.

    824

    01:18:38,720 --> 01:18:46,240

    Whereas now we have this group of athletes who are very dedicated professionals. And I think that

    825

    01:18:46,240 --> 01:18:51,760

    when we look at maybe even things like the location of IFSC competitions, where they've moved to,

    826

    01:18:53,280 --> 01:18:57,760

    just how successful things like Paris were in terms of the global positioning of the sport,

    827

    01:18:58,560 --> 01:19:03,360

    that's all happened in a very short space of time. And the money investment that's coming in is

    828

    01:19:03,360 --> 01:19:09,280

    really, you know, increasing that. So I think that if we move forward 10 years from now,

    829

    01:19:09,280 --> 01:19:15,680

    I can imagine us being even more professional than we are now having, you know, like, yes,

    830

    01:19:15,680 --> 01:19:21,760

    the World Cup circuit, maybe like a private, I don't know, like a private sponsored teams

    831

    01:19:22,880 --> 01:19:27,920

    circuit. Like I can imagine that running alongside like a professional league alongside IFSC stuff.

    832

    01:19:29,440 --> 01:19:31,840

    I can imagine. What would that look like?

    833

    01:19:31,840 --> 01:19:36,160

    You know what I was thinking about this the other day, imagine like you like Formula One,

    834

    01:19:36,880 --> 01:19:41,520

    you've got like Red Bull, like as a team and you race for Red Bull. Like, I mean, if you look at

    835

    01:19:41,520 --> 01:19:45,520

    Red Bull's roster of athletes right now, imagine what the Red Bull team for climbing would look

    836

    01:19:45,520 --> 01:19:50,480

    like. It'd be pretty phenomenal. And then you could have like the added ass team or, I don't know,

    837

    01:19:50,480 --> 01:19:53,920

    yeah, that kind of thing. You know, so I can imagine something like that being potential.

    838

    01:19:53,920 --> 01:19:59,920

    I think that climbers can stand to be full time professional athletes and earn good money from it,

    839

    01:20:00,480 --> 01:20:07,680

    working with sponsors. I think that most national teams will probably have like elite centers,

    840

    01:20:07,680 --> 01:20:10,960

    you know, like the one the US is going to build in Salt Lake. I can imagine that being a real

    841

    01:20:10,960 --> 01:20:18,320

    professional thing. And I can imagine more and more athletes getting, you know, an experience

    842

    01:20:18,320 --> 01:20:24,160

    where they're part of a really well-funded team set up, where they get all their sports,

    843

    01:20:24,160 --> 01:20:28,560

    medicine needs covered and things like that. I can imagine we can really be there. And so I guess

    844

    01:20:28,560 --> 01:20:35,520

    more akin to like, I don't know, let's look at tennis, an example. Like, why, what would it take

    845

    01:20:35,520 --> 01:20:41,680

    for climbing to be like tennis? Like, would we be there in 10 years? Maybe not, but it could be big

    846

    01:20:41,680 --> 01:20:42,480

    like that.

    847

    01:20:42,480 --> 01:20:50,800

    Yeah, I guess in regards to tennis, I not like some I recently watched a video about money in

    848

    01:20:50,800 --> 01:20:57,440

    tennis though, and how expensive it is, how expensive it is for athletes to get into it who

    849

    01:20:57,440 --> 01:21:04,080

    aren't already like at the top. So it's not all sunshine rainbows in the tennis world.

    850

    01:21:04,080 --> 01:21:09,760

    Oh, no. Yeah, no, totally. You're totally right. And I think that that always exists. Like, the

    851

    01:21:09,760 --> 01:21:15,040

    money in elite sport is normally available for those who are already succeeding. And the journey

    852

    01:21:15,040 --> 01:21:20,800

    to get to that is you have to break into that group before you have any of that. And that's

    853

    01:21:21,680 --> 01:21:28,400

    that's like universally a thing. I suppose that's just different. Maybe in team sport, where you can

    854

    01:21:28,400 --> 01:21:33,120

    get picked up and you're like in a team's academy from earlier, maybe that's different. But I think

    855

    01:21:33,120 --> 01:21:39,360

    for individual sports, like you're definitely right there. I think that's the way it is.

    856

    01:21:39,360 --> 01:21:43,920

    I think it's a long journey to the top and it's hard work.

    857

    01:21:43,920 --> 01:21:48,960

    Yeah. So sometimes I just kind of wonder like maybe this is just how sports are like, it's not

    858

    01:21:48,960 --> 01:21:54,480

    necessarily just a climbing issue where there's not enough money in climbing. But overall, it's

    859

    01:21:54,480 --> 01:22:02,320

    just kind of like that for all athletes. But maybe it's more just like, even for the top athletes in

    860

    01:22:02,320 --> 01:22:05,920

    climbing, there's not that much money in the sport for them.

    861

    01:22:05,920 --> 01:22:11,200

    Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I guess like, maybe that maybe like for Yanya, maybe Yanya is making

    862

    01:22:11,200 --> 01:22:17,600

    good money. I don't know. I'm sure she is. But yeah, you're right. It's the preserve of a small

    863

    01:22:17,600 --> 01:22:24,000

    few at the moment. And I guess that will cascade down a little bit. But like you said, maybe not

    864

    01:22:24,000 --> 01:22:31,920

    to the extent we would like to think it would do. But I mean, you know, going to a World Cup

    865

    01:22:31,920 --> 01:22:36,000

    is different to performing at a World Cup and performing at a World Cup is different to consistently

    866

    01:22:36,000 --> 01:22:42,160

    winning World Cups. You know, so I guess the distribution is largely driven by performance.

    867

    01:22:42,720 --> 01:22:48,480

    So I guess that's the same anywhere, all industries.

    868

    01:22:48,480 --> 01:22:56,240

    I was just thinking there was a sound bite I got from last interview that really stuck with me.

    869

    01:22:56,240 --> 01:23:01,920

    Literally. You said that you like to coach people to their own individual Olympics.

    870

    01:23:02,480 --> 01:23:07,120

    Yeah. And yeah, to be clear, like that's not even mine. I stole that from a swimming coach who's

    871

    01:23:07,120 --> 01:23:14,720

    very famous in the UK. But I like the notion of every individual, you know, not all athletes are

    872

    01:23:14,720 --> 01:23:23,440

    going to do what Toby's just done. Like it can't happen. But all athletes can reach their own

    873

    01:23:23,440 --> 01:23:31,520

    personal potential. You know, they can be the best that they can. And I really enjoy the process of

    874

    01:23:31,520 --> 01:23:38,320

    finding out what makes an athlete work and tick and how can we, I guess, go through a process of

    875

    01:23:38,320 --> 01:23:44,400

    creating their own individualized approach so that they can be the best version that they can.

    876

    01:23:44,400 --> 01:23:47,920

    And for some, that might be a World Youth Championships. For some, that might be a

    877

    01:23:47,920 --> 01:23:53,600

    European Champs or European Cup. Or, you know, for some, it could be like a World Cup. And

    878

    01:23:55,040 --> 01:24:00,320

    I think that as long as that individual is like being the best that they can be as a coach,

    879

    01:24:01,120 --> 01:24:06,880

    your job is to help them find that and bring that out of them. And if you can do that for everybody,

    880

    01:24:07,600 --> 01:24:12,480

    everybody's reached their potential. And it should never be viewed as a failure

    881

    01:24:12,480 --> 01:24:17,920

    because you never won a World Cup, that your career was a waste. Like for some people,

    882

    01:24:17,920 --> 01:24:24,640

    that isn't possible. But if you were the best you could be, then I think that that's really,

    883

    01:24:24,640 --> 01:24:31,840

    really powerful. And, you know, not to be underestimated, you can be a great ambassador

    884

    01:24:31,840 --> 01:24:37,440

    and role model for your country without winning a World Cup. You know, and I think that actually in

    885

    01:24:37,440 --> 01:24:43,520

    the UK, we've got many examples of phenomenal athletes that maybe didn't win Olympic medals

    886

    01:24:43,520 --> 01:24:49,360

    like Toby's just done, but will have inspired others through, you know, consistently being

    887

    01:24:49,360 --> 01:24:54,880

    representing their country, through consistently working hard and, you know, being out there doing

    888

    01:24:54,880 --> 01:25:00,080

    their thing. I think it's really cool. And so I enjoy helping everyone reach that.

    889

    01:25:00,080 --> 01:25:10,080

    I don't know. I guess it resonated with me because sometimes I think about the athletes who maybe aren't like constantly winning or like podiuming or anything like that. I'm like,

    890

    01:25:10,880 --> 01:25:17,440

    what keeps them going? Like, what is the point? But yeah, there's much more to the sport than just

    891

    01:25:18,000 --> 01:25:21,600

    winning a medal or like winning a prize or something like that.

    892

    01:25:21,600 --> 01:25:25,520

    Yeah. I mean, in a way, like, you know, if you look at some of the really big World Cups, you

    893

    01:25:25,520 --> 01:25:33,440

    could have like 120 athletes in the gendered field. Does that mean that there is one winner and 119 losers?

    894

    01:25:35,440 --> 01:25:40,560

    No. You know, and so I think that's where elite sport is quite brutal.

    895

    01:25:41,840 --> 01:25:45,680

    You know, but I think that all athletes want to feel like they're progressing, they're evolving,

    896

    01:25:46,480 --> 01:25:49,360

    you know, that they're delivering the best performances that they can.

    897

    01:25:50,560 --> 01:25:54,000

    I think what's just brutal about competition is there is like a ranking sheet. So you're

    898

    01:25:54,000 --> 01:25:59,520

    automatically compared against everyone. So you have to be very mentally robust to be in that space

    899

    01:25:59,520 --> 01:26:07,680

    repeatedly. You know, and also it's, you know, did I make the semi-finals or not? Did I make the final or not?

    900

    01:26:07,680 --> 01:26:16,000

    He or she did and I didn't, you know, that's all pretty, you know, common for athletes to experience highs and lows with that kind of thing.

    901

    01:26:16,640 --> 01:26:23,360

    You know, but for some, I want every athlete I've ever worked to look back on their career

    902

    01:26:23,360 --> 01:26:31,520

    and go, you know what, I did the best I damn could. And I was happy to, you know, to step away from it at that point,

    903

    01:26:31,520 --> 01:26:38,960

    being like I've trained my hardest, I was the best version of myself, and I represented my country really, really well.

    904

    01:26:39,920 --> 01:26:46,240

    And, you know, for some of those athletes that will mean winning medals and for some of those athletes, it will mean not.

    905

    01:26:46,240 --> 01:26:50,320

    But that doesn't mean their endeavor is any less worthwhile.

    906

    01:26:50,320 --> 01:26:59,440

    Yeah, definitely. Okay, so I guess going back a little bit to yourself, anything in the future you're particularly looking forward to?

    907

    01:26:59,440 --> 01:27:06,160

    So, well, firstly, I'm just recovering from my knee surgery, which we talked about a little bit offline before we began this.

    908

    01:27:06,160 --> 01:27:12,400

    So I'm looking forward to being fully mobile again, in the first and foremost.

    909

    01:27:12,400 --> 01:27:18,480

    But I think, you know, professionally, I'm looking forward to doing more private coaching.

    910

    01:27:18,480 --> 01:27:23,280

    I've already been back doing that for a few months, like globally, which has been really good fun.

    911

    01:27:23,280 --> 01:27:31,440

    I'm looking forward to doing some more consultancy stuff and working with Mountain Training here in the UK to help coach education.

    912

    01:27:31,440 --> 01:27:39,840

    But I'm also working on a service for coach mentorship along the lines of what we discussed earlier with a sports psychologist.

    913

    01:27:39,840 --> 01:27:46,640

    So I'm really hoping that as we go forward, we can offer more support to coaches out there

    914

    01:27:46,640 --> 01:27:51,920

    to help them navigate the difficult topsy turvy world of being a professional coach in climbing.

    915

    01:27:51,920 --> 01:27:59,920

    And hopefully through that, help more people to live their best, the best life.

    916

    01:27:59,920 --> 01:28:05,040

    But also, I guess, in a way, you know, we talked about coaching the athletes to their Olympics.

    917

    01:28:05,040 --> 01:28:10,640

    I'd like to support every coach to their own Olympics, whatever that might be.

    918

    01:28:10,640 --> 01:28:13,440

    Awesome. Okay. Well, can't wait to see that.

    919

    01:28:13,440 --> 01:28:21,520

    If you have any links that you want me to share or send out, send them to me and I'll put them in the description for people.

    920

    01:28:21,520 --> 01:28:27,120

    So I think those are the questions I had. I will go into the Discord questions again.

    921

    01:28:27,120 --> 01:28:32,880

    There are like a couple that maybe you have different answers for this time around. Not sure.

    922

    01:28:32,880 --> 01:28:41,120

    But yeah, so the first one, to what extent are national teams, actual teams versus just a random collection of strong climbers in the country?

    923

    01:28:41,120 --> 01:28:43,920

    And do you feel like it makes a difference? It's a good question.

    924

    01:28:43,920 --> 01:28:49,760

    I think it's probably different for each different nation as well.

    925

    01:28:49,760 --> 01:28:55,280

    I know that some nations, the athletes train entirely separately or in different squads.

    926

    01:28:55,280 --> 01:28:58,640

    And then when they come together, they come into the team.

    927

    01:28:58,640 --> 01:29:02,400

    And so I guess in that case, maybe they're made up of different training squads.

    928

    01:29:02,400 --> 01:29:07,040

    And so GB is a bit like that. But then I think France is also kind of similar.

    929

    01:29:07,040 --> 01:29:17,200

    But then the other end of the spectrum, you've got like an Austria or a Slovenia where they are more of a harmonious team and they spend a lot of time together and train together a lot more.

    930

    01:29:17,200 --> 01:29:23,200

    And that is like that. So I think it's probably a bit of a mix, really, to be honest.

    931

    01:29:23,200 --> 01:29:29,760

    I wouldn't say it's a one size fits all. But I would also say that obviously it's highly, highly competitive at this end.

    932

    01:29:29,760 --> 01:29:43,040

    So I think there is always probably going to be naturally those like slightly into team rivalries at times, or there's going to be like competitiveness and who's currently like the leading athlete in your team.

    933

    01:29:43,040 --> 01:29:53,040

    I think that's always going to be part of it. But I would say it's not random because all those people are there because they've been chosen because they're the best in their country.

    934

    01:29:53,040 --> 01:29:59,120

    But I would say the level to which that's a really cohesive team is probably quite varied.

    935

    01:29:59,120 --> 01:30:03,600

    As well as the other part of that question is, does it make a difference?

    936

    01:30:03,600 --> 01:30:09,280

    I personally believe that having a cohesive team set up is definitely facilitative of performance.

    937

    01:30:09,280 --> 01:30:20,080

    I think that the losses are dispersed in the same way the successes are dispersed and everyone feels the benefit of that.

    938

    01:30:20,080 --> 01:30:24,400

    I think it can be challenging to create a really harmonious team environment.

    939

    01:30:24,400 --> 01:30:32,320

    But I do think that when there's mutual respect for everybody and you're all there working for a common purpose, I think that's really powerful.

    940

    01:30:32,320 --> 01:30:40,640

    And I think it makes the difficult and somewhat lonely road of international performance climbing more bearable.

    941

    01:30:40,640 --> 01:30:43,280

    When you're spending it with people, you have close relationships with them.

    942

    01:30:43,280 --> 01:30:52,640

    Yeah, definitely. And then, yeah, just like the competitive aspect of it probably helps a lot as well in like pushing yourself further than you think you could on your own.

    943

    01:30:52,640 --> 01:30:53,760

    Yeah, yeah.

    944

    01:30:53,760 --> 01:30:57,360

    Last one, I guess. Most climbers now have their own private coaches.

    945

    01:30:57,360 --> 01:31:02,960

    Did that ever interfere with the work of you as the national team coach?

    946

    01:31:02,960 --> 01:31:06,560

    Yeah, definitely. Yeah, definitely. It is really tricky.

    947

    01:31:06,560 --> 01:31:11,360

    I mean, often you can have maybe a different approach that you want to take.

    948

    01:31:11,360 --> 01:31:13,280

    But the personal coach has a different opinion.

    949

    01:31:13,280 --> 01:31:20,160

    And then it comes down to this jostling of, well, you know, I think my opinion is more than yours, you know, mine, yours.

    950

    01:31:20,160 --> 01:31:25,840

    So that was at times very difficult for me to manage. I've had plenty of experience of that.

    951

    01:31:25,840 --> 01:31:35,760

    And I think sometimes personal coaches can become incredibly anxious around an athlete coming into a different team space and you know how that will go.

    952

    01:31:35,760 --> 01:31:49,360

    So I think that that is a really that's one of the very difficult complexities that comes with being a national team coach versus personal coach is that you sometimes have to work with personal coaches as well and kind of broker deals and build relationships there.

    953

    01:31:49,360 --> 01:31:54,880

    And I've had some examples where it's worked really, really well as well. But yeah, for some where it's been really challenging.

    954

    01:31:54,880 --> 01:32:00,160

    Yeah. What are some of like the challenging examples or the ones where it worked out super well?

    955

    01:32:00,160 --> 01:32:17,440

    Yeah. I mean, I've had athletes been like coming into international events where my coach says that I'm not to warm up with you because you don't know what you're doing and things like that or things like that, which is really like not helping the athlete.

    956

    01:32:17,440 --> 01:32:26,640

    You know, or, you know, not me, but another coach had an athlete from GB said when I'm older, I want to be a coach, but not like you.

    957

    01:32:26,640 --> 01:32:33,920

    You're not really a coach and then named that coach. Yeah, we found that quite funny at the time.

    958

    01:32:33,920 --> 01:32:36,400

    But then similarly, there's been loads of positive examples.

    959

    01:32:36,400 --> 01:32:43,840

    I think the work with Toby and Erin in particular really stand out of the way that that's very collaborative.

    960

    01:32:43,840 --> 01:32:54,720

    And actually, when we look at which athletes have performed really, really well this last season, it's the ones where the personal coach, the athlete and then the GB coaches are all working towards the same thing.

    961

    01:32:54,720 --> 01:33:00,640

    And that same vision is for the athlete to do really well. So that's that's worked really well.

    962

    01:33:00,640 --> 01:33:07,200

    All right. Well, that's all the questions. Do you have any like final thoughts or words of wisdom you want to get out there?

    963

    01:33:07,200 --> 01:33:14,480

    Probably not. Just I really just to say thank you again for having me back on for Take Two.

    964

    01:33:14,480 --> 01:33:18,160

    Definitely. It's been really good. It's been really good chatting.

    965

    01:33:18,160 --> 01:33:25,600

    And I think really like when I first the one thing I would say is when I first started this, there was no pathway.

    966

    01:33:25,600 --> 01:33:32,400

    And in many ways, like I had to like make make my own future to get the opportunity.

    967

    01:33:32,400 --> 01:33:40,320

    And I can remember my dad saying like when I went to university, what do you want to do? And I was like, I want to get into coaching and I want to take the sport forward in my country.

    968

    01:33:40,320 --> 01:33:46,800

    So it's very rewarding to be in a position later when I can look back and say I went some distance to achieving that.

    969

    01:33:46,800 --> 01:33:49,840

    But I think most coaches now don't know where to start.

    970

    01:33:49,840 --> 01:33:54,720

    And I think sometimes you've just got to take it upon yourself to get out there and start.

    971

    01:33:54,720 --> 01:33:57,520

    You know, don't wait for it to be the perfect moment.

    972

    01:33:57,520 --> 01:34:05,120

    Like make it make that moment for yourself. You know, and now there's lots of people coaching and it's great.

    973

    01:34:05,120 --> 01:34:10,720

    You know, I think it's fantastic. More and more people can have access to a knowledgeable person to support them on their journey now.

    974

    01:34:10,720 --> 01:34:14,560

    So I think the more people coaching, it's great.

    975

    01:34:14,560 --> 01:34:17,600

    It's yeah, it's cool. It's cool. I enjoy it.

    976

    01:34:17,600 --> 01:34:20,480

    And I really enjoyed seeing how the sport's changed over the last few years.

    977

    01:34:20,480 --> 01:34:23,200

    And I'm really excited to see where it goes in the next 10 years.

    978

    01:34:23,200 --> 01:34:26,480

    Awesome. Great final words to end on.

    979

    01:34:26,480 --> 01:34:29,680

    Yeah, thank you so much for joining me again.

    980

    01:34:29,680 --> 01:34:34,160

    First episode I've ever had to redo. So thank you for taking the time.

    981

    01:34:34,160 --> 01:34:37,120

    You want to let people know where they can find you?

    982

    01:34:37,120 --> 01:34:40,720

    Yeah, I guess if everyone's interested in coaching, what's there more you can reach out to me.

    983

    01:34:40,720 --> 01:34:46,400

    Probably like my Instagram handle will be fine. Like green old Tom. That's my professional one.

    984

    01:34:46,400 --> 01:34:54,960

    Yeah, you can follow me there. Shoot me a DM if you want. I love talking to other coaches. That'd be great.

    985

    01:34:54,960 --> 01:34:57,200

    I think that's probably probably the best way right now.

    986

    01:34:57,200 --> 01:35:00,960

    Or you can email me at Tommy Green, all that gmail.com as well.

    987

    01:35:00,960 --> 01:35:03,440

    I'm more than happy to answer any questions.

    988

    01:35:03,440 --> 01:35:05,600

    All right. I'll put those links in the description.

    989

    01:35:05,600 --> 01:35:09,920

    Well, thank you so much for joining me. And it was great to talk to you again.

    990

    01:35:09,920 --> 01:35:12,160

    Yeah, thanks. Likewise, always a pleasure.

    991

    01:35:12,160 --> 01:35:15,440

    Thank you so much for making it to the end of the podcast.

    992

    01:35:15,440 --> 01:35:21,200

    Don't forget to like and subscribe if you enjoyed. Otherwise, you are a super fake climber.

    993

    01:35:21,200 --> 01:35:26,320

    If you're listening on a podcasting platform, I'd appreciate if you rate it five stars and you can

    994

    01:35:26,320 --> 01:35:32,000

    continue the discussion on the free competition climbing discord linked in the description.

    995

    01:35:32,000 --> 01:35:51,680

    Thanks again for listening.

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29: Sofya Yokoyama, Switzerland Boulderer & OG Youtuber