Strength Training for Rock Climbing, part one

Although rock climbing is my favorite sport, my day job is that of a strength coach. At our facility, we train athletes of all walks of life, and the majority of what we do is strength training with weights. We also have a climbing gym at our facility, and we often get questions from our climbers on how much, if any, resistance training they should be doing.

For the most part, I am reluctant to prescribe weight training for climbers. I think its too easy to confuse a hard workout with effective training. What’s more, adding strength to poor technique is simply a way of reinforcing that poor technique. With that being said, I will now outline which climbers should do supplemental strength training, when they should do it, and I will outline some basic programs.

Looking at other sports can be a useful tool when it comes to knowing how to train climbers. The problem is, many of us look to the wrong sports for comparison. Climbing is nothing like triathlon or distance running; it’s more like wrestling or gymnastics or even short-distance running. One of the most important lessons we can take from elite performers in sport similar to rock climbing is that there are no top-level athletes that simply use their sport as conditioning for that sport. In this regard, rock climbers that don’t do supplemental strength training are about 100 years behind elite-level athletes in similar sports. This is clearly evidenced by the fact that the best climbers of today can still perform at a world class level in multiple disciplines.

Understanding that a maximum level of strength and power cannot be maintained even by doing the most intense climbing does not contradict the principle of specificity, but underscores it. The reason we do strength training outside the arena of climbing is because climbing’s multi-faceted nature doesn’t allow for sufficient focus on strength alone. When high levels of the sport are reached, training must become “partitioned” in order for the climber to advance. The hardest moves on rock simply cannot be correctly executed without sufficient strength.

This is especially true for any climber who is not an under-30 male. Because of the hormonal profile of athletes outside this group, we recognize an even greater need to increase and maintain strength that cannot be achieved at the crag.

The mechanism by which supplemental strength training helps climbers should be understood. The basic idea is that for any given move, a stronger climber will use a smaller percentage of his maximum strength, and will thus be better able to climb with technical correctness and will be more resistant to fatigue. Elite-level climbers rely heavily on ATP-CP energy systems, the energy that is present and most-readily available for muscular work. These systems are best developed by increasing strength. Elite level climbers don’t rely as heavily on glycolytic (lactic) metabolism, which allows for quicker recovery at rest stances and better day-long endurance. (This is a critical distinction and will warrant an entire post in itself.)

How much supplemental strength training is appropriate? Depending on the time of year, I like to see my climbers do anywhere between 2 and 4 short strength sessions per week. During a preparatory or off-season period, building strength is a priority. Many athletes train strength at this time, only to see decreases in strength as they move into a peaking or performance phase. With this in mind, we plan on maintaining some level of strength and power training throughout the year.

Training that increases muscle size and strength can be useful, but building maximum strength for minimum size is the most important training goal. By careful planning, this is fairly straightforward. By avoiding hypertrophy, we create an increase in relative strength, making for a more efficient climber.

To make this a bit more clear, we can look at it this way:

Absolute Strength is the maximum possible force a muscle could generate. Maximal Strength is the maximum force that can be initiated in athletic movements, usually 70-90% of absolute strength. Finally, the Strength Deficit is the difference between the two. Strength training (some climbers are fond of calling this recruitment training) is the method of reducing this deficit.

How do we train strength? We train with compound (multi-joint) movements  through a full range-of-motion. We work at very high loads (no toning and fiming here!). Most important, we train strength as an adjunct to developing the skills of the athlete.

In part two of this article, I will cover the specifics of planning and implementing strength training in a climbing program. I will also go over the weight-training exercises best used by climbers, and why. Finally, we will review both why and how climbers must both increase strength and avoid any change in mass.

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7 thoughts on “Strength Training for Rock Climbing, part one

  1. Nice article!

    One thing I’m confused about is the bit about the ATP system. I thought that system gets depleted really quickly and replenishes slowly, so that for any boulder problem or route of reasonable length, you’re pretty quickly going to be relying on the glycolytic system; hence the need to train anaerobic endurance (lactic acid tolerance). So I thought the reason being stronger buys you better endurance is just because the glycolytic system isn’t working as hard.

    I’m sure that’s pretty confused, but that’s the mental model I’ve developed reading various training books over the years. Can you set me straight?

    • Hi Ian,
      I agree, it is a bit confusing. They’ve done some studies on elite gymnasts and wrestlers and found a strong inverse correlation between maximal strength and blood lactate concentrations post-routine (or match). What these studies suggest is that since the muscles are working at a very small percentage of their potential, the number of muscle fibers involved in any contraction can be “conserved” and the muscle recovers more quickly as a result.
      The important part of this idea is that strength gains have a greater adaptation persistence than anaerobic endurance, so we have slightly more to work with.
      I am a big fan of AE training, though I’m finding it can be trained more infrequently than strength and we’ll still get results.
      I have a whole manual on AE training for climbing I’m trying to put together as a download, which should help explain it all a little better.
      If getting good at climbing were simple, we’d all hate it!

  2. Can’t wait for Part II. I LOVE the rethinking of fundamental sports science principles as they apply to climbing. And i LOVE the open-mindedness of this site and its rejection of unthinking climbing training orthodoxy. Keep it up!

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