Wolfgang Güllich


Wolfgang Güllich was a German rockclimber, known for being one of the greatest sport climbers of his generation and pushing the boundaries of climbing grades.

Climbing career

He first started climbing on the Sandstone-rocks of the 'Südpfalz'. Soon he became one of the best climbers in this region and made the first free ascent of Jubiläumsriss at the age of 16.
He travelled to the Elbsandsteingebirge, and to the Shawangunks and Yosemite Valley, US, where he could climb most of the top routes of each area, including a 2nd ascent of Grand Illusion.
Later he moved to the Frankenjura and created a great number of hard climbing routes such as:
Güllich added several grades to the grading system. In fact, with the exception of Ben Moon's Hubble , Wolfgang was responsible for 4 consecutive step-ups, with the world's first 8b, 8b+, 8c, and 9a. However, it is important to note that this exception only exists on the French grade system, while for the UIAA system that Güllich himself used, the four steps were consecutive without exception.
While training for Action Directe, Güllich invented the modern training technique of campus boarding to prepare his fingers for the grueling overhung crimps. He hung the first campus board at a Nürnberg gym named "Campus" in 1988, and made the first ascent three years later. He worked with his friend and fellow climber Jerry Moffatt who found that the power training greatly improved a climber's endurance.
In addition to his sport climbing endeavours, Güllich put up the first ascents of iconic routes like Eternal Flame in the Karakoram and Riders on the Storm in Patagonia. The boldness of these routes showed that he excelled at difficult mountain routes as well as one-pitch sports climbs.
He broke his back falling off the Master's Edge at Millstone Quarry in Derbyshire, England but when he recovered, in 1986, he became the first man to free solo Separate Reality,, a twenty-foot horizontal crack in an overhanging roof in Yosemite National Park, USA.

Personal life

In 1990 he met his future wife Anette, whom he married one year later.
He was a climbing double for Sylvester Stallone in the 1993 movie Cliffhanger, along with Ron Kauk.
On August 29, 1992 Wolfgang fell asleep at the wheel of his car and veered off the Autobahn between Munich and Nuremberg as he made his way home from an interview. Two days later he died in a hospital in Ingolstadt, never having regained consciousness.

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