Olympic speed climber Julian David breaks down his sport. Video / Alyse Wright
From climbing trees at Tauranga Intermediate to representing New Zealand at the Paris Olympics, Bay of Plenty speed climber Julian David is sprinting to the top.
His rapid rise in speed climbing mirrors the sport itself, where athletes race each other up a 15m wall in just seconds.
Butdespite a growing profile, it is missing from the Commonwealth Games, something David believes it would be a “good opportunity”.
David can race 15m up a wall in about five seconds, and is a youth world champion, a first-time Olympian at 19, with national titles and Oceania Championship wins under his belt.
Fresh from defending his fifth Oceania Championship title last month at home in Mount Maunganui, the 21-year-old said speed climbing’s head-to-head format and fast pace could boost the sport’s profile.
He started on the indoor climbing wall at his school, and soon after, competed at the Aims Games.
“I did the competition with no training or anything, I came third and thought maybe I should actually train in the sport.”
Aims Games was his first competition, and he competed when rock climbing was first introduced in 2018.
He started speed climbing in 2019 and began specialising in 2022.
In 2023, he won gold in the U20 men’s speed competition at the International Federation of Sport Climbing (IFSC) Youth World Championships, New Zealand’s first youth medal in the division.
“The adrenaline of knowing you did a good run, hitting that buzzer and seeing your time, it’s so exciting to see. It gets you hooked and wanting to do it again and again and again.”
Julian David was selected to represent New Zealand in speed climbing at the Paris 2024 Olympics. Photo / Alyse Wright
He then secured first place at the IFSC Oceania Qualifier in Melbourne, earning a spot at the Paris 2024 Olympics.
David said his first Olympics experience was “pretty overwhelming” because it was the “pinnacle” of sports.
He was one of the first New Zealand climbers to ever qualify for an Olympic Games and he reached the quarter-finals of the speed climbing competition.
He climbed the wall in a time of 5.65s to finish eighth out of 14.
“I guess now I’ve set the bar, and I have to beat it and do better for the next one.”
Rob Moore, Climbing New Zealand high performance director and head coach, said the International Federation of Sport Climbing was in discussions to get climbing into the Commonwealth Games.
“We have been working hard in the last few years to build pathways to the elite level in Speed Climbing.”
Moore said Julian was a “great ambassador” for NZ speed climbing and had brought the awareness of speed climbing to a greater audience.
“We have seen around 50% to 80% growth in our national championships, especially in the younger age groups.”
He said Julian had an “amazing jump”, which made him an “incredibly poppy” athlete.
“This, combined with his dedication to training, always turning up on time and doing exactly what is asked of him. He has a great attitude to competing and is just generally a nice guy.”
Kaitlyn Morrell is a journalist for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post. She has lived in the region for several years and studied journalism at Massey University.