Luce Douady

Luce Douady (17 November 2003 – 14 June 2020) was a French climber.[1] She made her debut professional appearance on the IFSC Climbing World Cup circuit, where she finished in fifth place,[2] and became youth world champion in 2019. She also won the bronze medal at senior level at the 2019 IFSC Climbing European Championships in Edinburgh.[3]

Luce Douady
Douady in 2019
Born(2003-11-17)17 November 2003
Died14 June 2020(2020-06-14) (aged 16)
NationalityFrench
OccupationClimber

Douady died on 14 June 2020 at the age of 16, after a fall from an approach path at “Le Luisset – St Pancrasse” in the Isère department of France.[1][4]

Biography

Luce Douady was born on 17 November 2003, in Le Touvet, on the Petites Roches plateau in Isère. She began climbing at the age of 7 in the TCGM, the Grésivaudan valley club, then joined the Chambéry club at the age of 9, there she practiced this sport at a high level, while joining the Voiron hope centre in 2017, then the French national team in October 2019.[5] [6]

In 2019, at the age of 15, Luce Douady, while only a cadet, took part in her first senior competition, the European Cup in Innsbruck, and won an unexpected gold medal. Then, at her first Senior World Cup stop in Vail, Colorado, she reached the final with a promising fifth place finish. Then she became Junior World Champion in the block event in Arco (Trento, Italy) after winning a bronze medal in the difficulty event. The same year, she won a bronze medal at the Senior European Championships in the difficulty event.

Douady in May 2019

She was a great hope for climbing and was part of the "Paris 2024 generation". Climbing also on natural sites, she reached in 2020 a level 8b+ (according to the French rating) while the best female performances in rock climbing were in 9b.

On 14 June 2020 Luce Douady was part of a climbing group at the climbing site of Saint-Pancrasse, located in the Grésivaudan valley (Isère). On an exposed path linking two sectors and equipped with a handrail, on the edge of the Luisset cliff, near Crolles, she slipped and died after a fall of about 150 metres.[7] [8]

gollark: *Why* are you calling it thousands of times? Have you tried doing it fewer times?
gollark: Strange coincidence-or-probably-not-actually-coincidence-for-some-weird-physics-reason, that.
gollark: I suppose it does look the same as the Newtonian gravity formula if you swap out the variables.
gollark: ... isn't that electromagnetic stuff? Why would you want that?
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnes%E2%80%93Hut_simulation

References


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