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Siri Schubert
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Highline World Championships in Laax: athletics, acrobatics and thrills at lofty heights

Siri Schubert
25.7.2024
Translation: Megan Cornish

The idea of balancing on a swaying belt 20 metres above the ground would terrify most people and make them feel dizzy. Not the 42 athletes who competed in the Highline World Championships in Laax. They showed incredible sporting performance. And they clearly had fun doing it.

Cheers, applause and then silence. Cecilia Stock, 29-year-old finalist at the Laax Highline World Championships, is preparing for her next combo at a height of 20 metres. She bounces up and down on the slack line to gain enough momentum and height for the tricks.

Shoulder stands, turns around the line and rotations all follow in quick succession. «Back Yoda, Nevermind to Feet, Underflip, Kamikaze,» the commentator describes the tricks. «Wonderful, it takes incredible skills to do that with so much elegance,» he adds.

Competitor and defending champion Louise Lenoble from France’s moves are no less dynamic, rotating around the line from a few metres away like a somersault and trying to score points with challenging sequences of tricks. She falls a few times and lands on the safety line instead of on her feet. Will she still be able to defend her 2022 world championship title?

After some thrilling battles, the new world champions are crowned

In the freestyle battle format, two athletes compete against each other. Once the first has performed a combo, the second responds with a sequence of tricks that plays with the theme, continues it, or gives it a new twist. This creates a creative choreography where everyone can demonstrate their own style and strengths.

«It’s incredible how quickly the sport is developing,» says commentator Ian Eisenberg, who’s also an experienced, successful highliner. «A few years ago, we were wondering if a trick was even possible. Now we’re seeing it with a triple twist.»

The freestylers’ combinations are scored using a points system that factors in difficulty, execution and style. Points are deducted for falls onto the safety line.

Things are tense until the very last moment after three packed days of competition. Then the judges decide: Cecilia Stock wins the women’s final and is the new world champion in highline freestyle. Cheers break out. «Ceci, Ceci,» chant the fans. The German-Italian had already won the speed final the day before.

«It’s an absolute dream come true for me,» says the newly crowned two-time world champion. «I’m so happy and grateful.» She won the speed competition ahead of Brazilian Erika Sedlacek and beat defending champion Louise Lenoble from France in the freestyle.

Exciting competitions in two disciplines

Slacklining sprang out of the climbing community in California in the 1970s and has become increasingly popular around the world in recent decades. Alongside Brazil, Germany and Austria, Switzerland is a slacklining hotspot. The Swiss Slackline association estimates that one in 20 Swiss people owns a slackline.

Unlike tightrope walking, the synthetic fibre band – which is between 2.5 and 5 centimetres wide – is stretched loosely. This means that it sways, swings, bounces and bobs with every movement, making balancing even more challenging.

In addition to the spectacular freestyle category, the highliners also competed for the world championship title in the speed discipline.

Sascha Grill, winner of the men’s speedline, knows this too. He started slacklining when he was 15. First just as a hobby in the park, but then he caught the bug. «It’s so much fun to challenge yourself and keep improving and beat your personal best,» says the 22-year-old. He’s come a long way in recent years: «The first time I was on the highline, it took a lot of effort for me to even stand up,» he says.

This feeling of fear and overcoming comes up in almost all the conversations I have with the slackliners at the World Championships. Because walking or doing somersaults on a swaying, wobbling line at a height goes against all human protective instincts. Nevertheless, balancing really appeals to people. The small practice slackline that was set up for spectators was extremely popular, and not just with children.

The world champion is a tightrope walker by profession

Cecilia is one of the few who can combine a passion for balancing at heights with professional ambitions. She completed a five-year dual course at circus school and in the theatre departments at university in Paris and Turin. At circus school, her main focus was on tightrope walking.

For Cecilia, one of the best parts of highlining is that she spends so much time outside in the fresh air and interacts with the outside world and the elements, especially the wind. Another is that she has to concentrate on the line and constantly be in the here and now. It’s pure mindfulness. She finds it increasingly easy to find her balance on the swinging, bobbing line. «Sometimes I’m better at it on the slackline than in normal life,» she says.

Header image: Siri Schubert

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Research diver, outdoor guide and SUP instructor – I love being in, on and around water. Lakes, rivers and the ocean are my playgrounds. For a change of perspective, I look at the world from above while trail running or flying drones.


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