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Shauna Coxsey

English rock climber

Shauna Coxsey

Summary

English rock climber

FieldValue
honorific_suffixMBE
imageShauna Coxsey GBR 2017-08-19 2214.jpg
captionCoxsey in August 2017
nameShauna Coxsey
birth_date
birth_placeRuncorn, England
height164 cm
weight58 kg
spouse
typeofclimberBouldering
apeindex+8.5 cm
highestboulder
retired2021
updated13 August 2019

Shauna Coxsey (born 27 January 1993) is an English professional rock climber. She is the most successful competition climber in the UK, having won the IFSC Bouldering World Cup Season in both 2016 and 2017. She retired from competition after competing in the 2020 Olympics, and continues to climb at a high level outdoors.

Early life

Coxsey was born in Runcorn on 27 January 1993. She began climbing in 1997 at the age of four, inspired by a television broadcast of Catherine Destivelle climbing in Mali. Although she was not tall enough to be allowed to climb, she continued to insist and was eventually allowed on the wall a few months later.

Climbing Career

Coxsey climbing at the Boulder World Cup finals in August 2017

Coxsey was mainly active in competition climbing and has participated in several international competitions in bouldering. She has won the British Bouldering Championships on multiple occasions. In 2012, she won the 9th edition of the Melloblocco and placed 2nd in the World Cup stages in Log-Dragomer and Innsbruck. She finished third in the 2012 Bouldering World Cup. In 2013, she cleanly ascended her first problem graded when she climbed Nuthin' But Sunshine in Rocky Mountain National Park. In November, she was appointed one of the UK's first British Mountaineering Council Ambassadors.

In 2014, Coxsey placed second overall in the IFSC Bouldering World Cup, and fourth at the Bouldering World Championships in Munich. The same year, she became the third woman ever to boulder when she topped New Baseline in Magic Wood near the Swiss town of Chur. In 2015, she won the British Bouldering Championships in Sheffield and took first place at the Bouldering World Cup in Munich.

In late 2016, Coxsey suffered a shoulder injury which prevented her from competing in that year's Bouldering World Championships, despite topping the overall rankings in the Bouldering World Cup. She won four IFSC Climbing World Cups in Meiringen (SUI), Kazo (JPN), Innsbruck (AUT) and Sheffield (UK). At the World Cup in Munich (GER) she placed second. In 2017, she again won four Bouldering World Cup stages, in Meiringen (SUI), Kazo (JPN), Mumbai (IND) and Vail (USA). In Munich (GER) she again placed second and secured the overall 2017 title. Despite being primarily a boulderer, she began training in lead and speed as part of her bid for the 2020 Olympics, which would feature rockclimbing for the first time as a combined discipline.

In August 2019, Coxsey won two bronze medals at the 2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships in Hachioji, in bouldering and the combined event. During the finals of the combined event, she set a British women's speed climbing record of 9.141 seconds, securing second place in the speed component of the combined ranking by winning races against Futaba Ito and Miho Nonaka before losing to Aleksandra Miroslaw. Additionally, by reaching the finals of the combined event, Coxsey secured a qualification spot for Tokyo's 2020 Summer Olympics, the first to include competitive climbing. When the Olympics was finally in 2021, she was recovering from a back injury, surgical treatment and rehabilitation. She came 10th in the competition, noting that even though she wasn't at peak fitness, she "kind of did a lot better than [she] thought [she] would.". She retired from competitive climbing after the Olympics, while continuing as an elite-level rock climber with a focus on outdoor bouldering.

In 2022, Coxsey continued climbing on indoor climbing walls whilst pregnant with her first child; she worked with a specialist physiotherapist and her husband, who is also a climber, to assess the routes as her body shape changed. Upon returning to outdoor climbing, after having her first child, she has climbed at a high level, including sending three 8B+ (V14) climbs in 2024, and another in 2025.

Commentating

Coxsey commentated for the 2023 IFSC Climbing World Championships in Bern, and in the lead up to the Paris Olympics, and as a pundit for Eurosport/Discovery broadcast of the Olympics.

Personal life

Coxsey was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2016 Birthday Honours for services to climbing. She married fellow climber Ned Feehally in 2021. They reside in Sheffield. She has a daughter called Frankie.

Rankings

World Cup

Discipline20102011201220132014201520162017201820192021
Lead-------30---
Bouldering381934221191061
Speed-----------
Combined-------3---

World Championships

Youth

Discipline2008
Youth B2009
Youth A
Lead919

Adult

Discipline201120122014201620182019
Bouldering16-4--3
Lead-----17
Speed-----41
Combined-----3

World Cup podiums

Bouldering

SeasonGoldSilverBronzeTotal
201233
2013123
20142316
2015134
2016426
2017426
20180
2019112
Total1112730

Outdoor bouldering

Coxsey is the first British woman to climb the V12, V13, and V14 grades.

: :* New Base Line – Magic Wood (Switzerland) – 12 July 2014 – First female ascent of Bernd Zangerl's Boulder (2002) :* Fotofobia - La Pedriza, Spain - March 2024 :* The Boss - Yarncliff Edge, Peak District - May 2024 - 8th ascent, first female ascent. :* Hazel Grace - Gotthard Pass, Switzerland - June 2024 :* Mito - Sintra, Portugal - February 2025 - first female ascent.

:

:* Ropes of Maui – Dinas Mot (United Kingdom) – 5 April 2016 – First female ascent (first ascent by Pete Robins, 2014) :* One Summer in Paradise – Magic Wood (Switzerland) – 3 July 2014 – Second female ascent (first ascent by Martin Keller, 2005) :* Zarzaparrilla – Albarracin (Spain) – 31 March 2014 – First female ascent :* Nuthin But Sunshine – Lower Chaos (Rocky Mountain National Park, United States) – 26 June 2013 – First female ascent (first ascent by Dave Graham, 2000) :* Wild Wild West - La Pedriza, Spain - March 2024 :* Pin y Pon - La Pedriza, Spain - March 2024 :* Fat Lip - Raven Tor, UK - April 2024

Filmography

  • Life on Hold (2012)
  • Red Bull Backyards: How A World Champion Climber Trains In Her Basement (2021)
  • The Wall: Climb for Gold (2022)
  • Red Bull Dual Ascent (2022)
  • Great British Menu S19 E3: North East England: Judging (2024)

References

References

  1. "Shauna Coxsey". International Federation of Sport Climbing.
  2. Coxsey, Shauna. (10 April 2017). "The Paywall". Shauna Coxsey's blog.
  3. Anderson, Maria. (24 April 2019). "Podium Dreams: Two-Time Bouldering World Champ Shauna Coxsey Guns for the Olympics".
  4. "Shauna Coxsey – Climbing – Official Athlete Page".
  5. "Shauna Coxsey".
  6. "Landman and Coxsey crowned new British bouldering champions". The British Mountaineering Council.
  7. "BMC British Bouldering Championships - results". The British Mountaineering Council.
  8. "2015 Munich Bouldering World Cup – Results". OnBouldering.com.
  9. McCracken, Steven. (26 September 2016). "Ondra Retains Crown at 2016 Paris World Championships". Vertical Gear.
  10. (2018-12-07). "I Never Leave Without... My Pillow from Home {{!}} Shauna Coxsey, Professional Climber".
  11. (8 October 2017). "Tokyo 2020 Olympics: British climber Shauna Coxsey confirms bid to compete at Games". BBC Sport.
  12. (29 August 2024). "Speed finals: Villars 2024". IFSC.
  13. (20 August 2019). "Dream week for Shauna Coxsey: two bronze medals and Olympic quota place". The British Mountaineering Council.
  14. Majendie, Matt. (19 May 2021). "Shauna Coxsey's basement is a slice of climbing heaven and we want in".
  15. (2021-08-04). "Tokyo Olympics: Shauna Coxsey says she was 'not in the shape I wanted to be'". BBC.
  16. (2021-06-14). "Shauna Coxsey Retiring from Comps after Olympics".
  17. "Shauna Coxsey Retirement".
  18. (4 August 2021). "Shauna Coxsey retires after failing to qualify for Olympic final".
  19. (2022-05-18). "'I'm a pregnant woman making choices': Shauna Coxsey on climbing – and the 'bullies' who want her to stop".
  20. White, Xa. (4 March 2024). "8B+ and two 8B's for Shauna Coxsey". UK Climbing.
  21. White, Xa. (2 May 2024). "Shauna Coxsey climbs The Boss, 8B+". UK Climbing.
  22. (4 June 2024). "Shauna Coxsey climbs her third Font 8B+ of 2024". Climber.
  23. (2025-02-10). "Shauna Coxsey Tops Her Fifth V14". Gripped.
  24. https://www.tntsports.co.uk/climbing/olympic-games-paris-2024/2024/two-time-world-cup-winner-shauna-coxsey-to-bring-olympic-insight-to-ifcs-and-eurosport-broadcasts-on_sto9721258/story.shtml {{Bare URL inline. (August 2025)
  25. https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/olympics-pundits-and-commentators-for-bbc-and-discovery-from-gabby-logan-to-laura-woods/ar-BB1qtjJl {{Bare URL inline. (August 2025)
  26. {{London Gazette. (11 June 2016)
  27. (10 June 2016). "The Queen's Birthday Honours 2016". [[Cabinet Office]].
  28. (12 July 2014). "Shauna Coxsey climbs New Base Line, third female V14 ever". OnBouldering.com.
  29. (7 April 2016). "Shauna Coxsey climbs Ropes of Maui". OnBouldering.com.
  30. (4 July 2014). "One Summer in Paradise, another 8B for Coxsey". OnBouldering.com.
  31. Duncan Campbell. (April 2014). "Shauna Coxsey Climbs 2nd 8B". UKClimbing.com.
  32. Björn Pohl. (June 2013). "VIDEO: Shauna Coxsey climbs Nuthin' but sunshine, 8B". UKClimbing.com.
  33. (2024-04-16). "Shauna Coxsey climbs Fat Lip, 8B". UK Climbing.
  34. "Shauna Coxsey’s basement is a slice of climbing heaven and we want in".
  35. "Dual Ascent 2022".
  36. (August 20, 2019). "World Cup Rankings".
  37. (August 20, 2019). "Coxsey's profile and rankings".
  38. Chris Parker. (27 June 2013). "Shauna Coxsey Cranks First Female Ascent of Nuthin' But Sunshine – V13". rockandice.com.
  39. "Shauna Coxsey Runner-up in IFSC Climbing World Cup". ifsc-climbing.org.
  40. "Shauna Coxsey sets a New Baseline for Britain". thebmc.co.uk.
  41. "Inspirational climbers become BMC Ambassadors". thebmc.co.uk.
  42. "Results of the IFSC World Championships Munich 2014 – Boulder". ifsc-climbing.org.
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