Skip to main content

Ready to Compete

TEEN CLIMBER Colin Duffy is the youngest member of Team U.S.A.’s sport-climbing squad. Here, he competes in Los Angeles, California, on February 28, 2020. CAROL COELHO—GETTY IMAGES

Some of the world’s best athletes will be at the Summer Olympics, in Tokyo, Japan. There are four sports new to the Games. Learn about them. Then meet some members of Team U.S.A.

Sport Climbing

Colin Duffy is 17 years old. He’s been climbing since he was 5. In July, Colin will take a big trip. He’ll go to Tokyo, Japan. He’s on Team U.S.A.’s first Olympic sport-climbing team.

“I feel super excited,” Colin told TIME for Kids. “It means so much to me.”

At the Olympics, climbers will be competing in three styles. These are speed, lead, and bouldering. In the speed contest, two climbers will race up a wall. In lead, a climber has six minutes to go as high as possible. In bouldering, climbers follow fixed routes.

ON THE WALL Kyra Condie has always dreamed of climbing in the Olympics. Here she is on June 8, 2019, at the IFSC Climbing World Cup, in Vail, Colorado.

JOSEPH L. MURPHY/GETTY IMAGES

TFK Kid Reporter Jeremy Liew spoke to another climber. Her name is Kyra Condie. She is from Shoreview, Minnesota. Climbing is a “mental and physical” sport, she says. “You have to be problem-solving as you’re competing.”

MAKING A MOVE Brooke Raboutou competes at the IFSC Climbing World Cup, in Switzerland, on April 17.

FABRICE COFFRINI—AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Like Colin, Condie started training at a young age. So did Nathaniel Coleman. He’s from Utah. Brooke Raboutou did too. She’s from Colorado. They’re also part of Team U.S.A.

The COVID-19 pandemic delayed the Summer Olympics. The athletes had to find new ways to train. Colin says he was lucky. “I was able to climb outside,” he says. “I also have a climbing wall in my basement.”

LOOKING AHEAD Nathaniel Coleman eyes his next move while competing in Switzerland on April 17.

MARCO KOST—GETTY IMAGES

Athletes will be competing for Olympic medals. But Colin isn’t putting pressure on himself to win them. He’s focused on something else. He wants to enjoy his time in Tokyo. He’s looking forward to meeting athletes from all around the world. It’ll be “life-changing,” he says. “I want to remember it forever.”

Surfing

SURF’S UP Carissa Moore takes part in a surfing competition in Narrabeen, Australia, on April 20.

CAMEROM SPENCER—GETTY IMAGES

Surf’s up! For the first time, there will be surfing at the Olympics. Surfers won’t just be competing against one another. They’ll also be competing against the ocean. Part of a surfer’s score will depend on the wave he or she rides. The tougher the wave, the higher the score can be.

Surfers have 30 minutes. Only their two highest-scoring waves count. So you can expect to see athletes waiting for the perfect moment to make their move.

Kolohe Andino

HARRY HOW—GETTY IMAGES

Skateboarding

READY TO RIDE Skateboarder and Olympic hopeful Zion Wright competes in Brazil in 2019.

ALEXANDRE SCHNEIDER—GETTY IMAGES

At the Olympics, skateboarders compete on two courses. Park-style events take place in a big concrete bowl. Boarders perform tricks. In street-style events, they face stairs, rails, benches, and more.

Nyjah Huston

HARRY HOW—GETTY IMAGES

Karate

STAYING FOCUSED Sakura Kokumai takes part in the 2018 Karate World Championships, in Madrid, Spain.

MANU REINO—SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKET/GETTY IMAGES

Eighty athletes will take part in the first Olympic karate competition. There are three fighting categories. There is also one kata category. In kata, athletes perform karate moves for the judges. They must be precise in their movements.

Tom Scott

HARRY HOW—GETTY IMAGES

Watch the Tokyo Olympics with all the Team U.S.A. athletes starting July 23 on NBC.

In the original version of this story, a photograph of Brooke Raboutou was misidentified as Kyra Condie. The photograph has been replaced.