Shauna Coxsey
Shauna Coxsey is an English professional rock climber. She is Britain's most successful climber, having won the IFSC Bouldering World Cup Season in 2016 and 2017.Early life
Coxsey was born and raised in Runcorn, Cheshire. She began climbing in 1997 at age four, after being inspired by seeing French climber Catherine Destivelle on television climbing in Mali.Career
Coxsey is 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 competition Melloblocco, and she placed 2nd in the World Cup stages in Log-Dragomer and Innsbruck. She finished third in the 2012 Bouldering World Cup.
In 2013, she sent 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. In the same year, she became the third woman ever to boulder when she topped New Baseline in Magic Wood near Chur, Switzerland. In 2015 she won the British Bouldering Championships in Sheffield, UK and took first place at the Bouldering World Cup in Munich, Germany. Coxsey was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire in the 2016 Birthday Honours.
In late 2016, she suffered a shoulder injury, preventing 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, Kazo, Innsbruck and Sheffield. At the World Cup in Munich she placed second. In 2017, she again won four Bouldering World Cup stages, in Meiringen, Kazo, Mumbai and Vail. In Munich she again placed second and secured the overall 2017 title. In August 2019, Coxsey won two bronze medals at the 2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships in Hachioji, Japan, in bouldering and the combined event.
During the finals of the combined event she set a British women's speed climbing record of 9.141s, 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, she secured a qualification spot for Tokyo's 2020 Summer Olympics.Rankings
Youth
Discipline | 2008 Youth B | 2009 Youth A |
Lead | 9 | 19 |
Adult
Discipline | 2011 | 2012 | 2014 | 2016 | 2018 | 2019 |
Bouldering | 16 | - | 4 | - | - | 3 |
Lead | - | - | - | - | - | 17 |
Speed | - | - | - | - | - | 41 |
Combined | - | - | - | - | - | 3 |
Number of medals in the Climbing World Cup
Bouldering
Outdoor bouldering
Coxsey is the first British woman to climb the V12, V13, and V14 grades.