Coaching

Mat Wright - Outdoor Climbing Performance Coach

Coaching is not about doing more, trying harder, or blindly following plans.

It’s about understanding why your climbing is stalling, and making good decisions about what to work on next.

All of my coaching includes structured, personalised training designed to develop the physical capacities required for your goals. That training is always guided by diagnosis, and shaped around how you actually climb outside - rather than applied in isolation.

I work with climbers who want help identifying the primary limitations holding performance back, prioritising the areas with the greatest potential for progress, and integrating technical, mental, physical, and lifestyle factors in a way that transfers to real rock.

The goal isn’t to optimise everything at once.
It’s to focus on the right thing, at the right time, and let progress compound.

Who Coaching is For:

My coaching is a good fit if you:

  • Care about outdoor performance, not just training metrics

  • Feel capable of more than you’re currently achieving outside

  • Want clarity about what actually matters for your climbing right now

  • Are open to reflection and adjustment, not just being told what to do

  • Value long-term progress over short-term gains

This approach works best for climbers who want to understand their climbing more deeply, apply training with intent, and make consistent, informed decisions over time.


Who Coaching is Probably Not For:

My coaching may not be the right fit if you:

  • Are looking for quick fixes or generic plans

  • Want a rigid program without discussion or adaptation

  • Are only interested in indoor performance

  • Prefer brute force over diagnosis

  • Aren’t willing to question your current approach

This isn’t about intensity or discipline - it’s about direction. If you’re primarily looking for pre-made solutions, there are better options elsewhere.

If you’re unsure where you sit, starting with The Roadmap is usually the best place to begin.

Integrated Performance Coaching

Comprehensive, diagnosis-led coaching

Integrated Performance Coaching is a comprehensive, diagnosis-led coaching relationship focused on improving real outdoor performance.

We begin by building a clear picture of your climbing. This includes structured assessments and a detailed review of your history, goals, constraints, and current approach. From there, we identify the primary limitations holding performance back and prioritise the areas with the greatest potential for progress.

All coaching includes structured, personalised training designed to develop the physical capacities required for your objectives. That training is never applied in isolation. Technical, tactical, mental, and lifestyle factors are considered alongside it, and integrated in a way that supports how you actually climb outside.

Coaching is ongoing and adaptive. Monthly calls are used to review progress, refine priorities, and guide the next phase of work, while day-to-day communication supports decision-making as training and climbing evolve. The focus remains on working on the right thing at the right time, rather than trying to optimise everything at once.

This approach is best suited to climbers who want clarity, consistency, and long-term development - and who value understanding as much as outcomes.

How this typically looks

  • Initial assessment and analysis

  • A follow-up call to clarify priorities and direction

  • Ongoing, personalised training aligned with outdoor goals

  • Monthly calls to review progress and adjust focus

  • Regular communication to support decisions between sessions

Availability is intentionally limited to ensure depth of work and consistency of support.

If this sounds like the right level of support, here’s how to start.

Enquire About Coaching

Physical Training & Capacity Coaching

Physical Training & Capacity Coaching focuses specifically on developing the physical capacities required for outdoor climbing, alongside the lifestyle factors that support training and recovery.

This option is intentionally narrower in scope. Coaching is centred on strength, endurance, resilience, and training structure, and is designed for climbers who already have a clear understanding of their technical and tactical limitations and want structured support in developing their physical preparation.

All coaching includes structured, personalised training tailored to your goals, constraints, and access to climbing. Training is progressive, adaptable, and reviewed regularly, but does not include ongoing technical or tactical analysis, or monthly coaching calls.

This option suits climbers who want guidance with training decisions, consistency, and capacity development, without the broader integration offered in Integrated Performance Coaching.

What this option includes:

  • Physical training assessment and initial testing

  • Personalised training structure focused on strength, power, endurance, rehab and conditioning.

  • Ongoing adjustments based on progress and feedback

  • Guidance around recovery, workload, and lifestyle factors

  • Messaging support for training-related questions

What this option does not include:

  • Ongoing technical or tactical analysis

  • Monthly coaching calls

  • Broad integration of mental and performance psychology work

If this sounds like the right level of support, here’s how to start. Both options include structured, personalised training. The difference is the scope of integration and level of ongoing support.

Enquire About Coaching

PERFORMANCE ANALYTICS FROM ROSS

Client Review
Bar chart comparing weightlifting performance before and after training for Max Hangs, Max Pull-Ups, and Max Bench Press, with black indicating 'Before' and cyan indicating 'After'.

“So happy with the coaching and support from Mat. It goes far beyond the training programme, his truly personal approach is immense, nothing ever seems to much to ask and I'm super thankful for the support and advice. Cheers Mat!”

 

Mat Wright - Outdoor Climbing Performance Coach

DON’T FEEL READY FOR A COACH BUT STILL LOOKING TO IMPROVE?

Here is some free advice on the most common focal points for making meaningful climbing progression.

  • If you want to begin training without a coach, it’s worth doing some research. There is plenty of climbing literature out there these days that gives great advice, such as Dave Macleod’s “9 Out Of 10 Climbers Make The Same Mistakes”, and “Training For Climbing”, by Eric Horst.

    I personally was a big fan of Neil Gresham’s Masterclass series, (DVD’s that are now available in clip-form on YouTube), as they provided easy to follow technical drills, and simple, yet effective exercises to boost strength and endurance. The main thing to remember with training is that everybody is different, and what works for one person may not work for another, so keep an open mind, listen to your body, and always remember to keep a balance between hard training sessions and climbing for fun - that’s what it’s all about at the end of the day!

  • The easiest way to improve your technique is to have one-to-one sessions with an experienced performance coach, but if that’s not an option, then there are a few things you can do on your own that may help. The first is simple - make sure you have the right shoes! Many climbers wear rock shoes that are too baggy, or don’t fit the shape of their feet, then wonder why they’re struggling to stand on small footholds, or can’t heel hook because the heel of their shoe pulls off!

    It’s important to test as many pairs of shoes as you can before you buy - try different brands, different sizes, and really find out what works best for you. A great way to do this is to attend a shoe demo (these happen at walls all over the UK with multiple different brands), where you can test pair after pair of shoes, and find out which ones you like most.

    Another thing that may help with learning technique, is introducing drills into the beginning of your climbing session such as “silent feet”, (climbing whilst trying to make as little sound as possible with your feet), and “technical drill”, (hovering your hand above the hold you are moving to for a few seconds, before actually taking it). These drills force precise footwork and efficient movement - devoting half an hour or so to them every time you climb will almost certainly improve the way you move on the wall.

  • Generally speaking, to improve your overall climbing grade you need to become a stronger, and more efficient climber. A basic finger-boarding routine will improve your finger strength, circuits will develop your endurance, and exercises like pull-ups, and climbing on a steep board such as a Kilter Board, will condition your shoulders.

    You can improve your footwork and general movement with technical drills, climbing with people more advanced than you, and challenging yourself by exploring different rock types, angles, or even climbing walls. Variety is key here, as how are you ever going to improve if you only try a single type of climb?

    Finally (and this is the one that most people forget), try to develop your mental skills. Climbers all over the world struggle to do things that they are perfectly capable of physically, because they are held back by their own minds. Fear is one thing (are you holding yourself back on sport climbs because you are afraid to fall?), but it’s not the only factor at play. Developing a healthy relationship with climbing as a sport is essential. Give your everything when you feel like it, but don’t beat yourself up if you are having a bad day, or force yourself to train or try your project, when deep down you’d rather just be having fun on some easy boulders. As already stated above - climbing is supposed to be fun!