Nick Ranelli
I am a climbing coach out of Philadelphia. I work with outdoor climbers and competition climbers that are motivated to get better at our favorite sport!
Check out the different services I offer and see how I can help you smash your climbing goals!
05/07/2026
Join us for the premiere of The Carnivore Cave.
A climbing story of mentorship, persistence, and the pursuit of personal limits.
šļø Saturday, June 20th
š Tufas Boulder Lounge
ā° 7:00 PM
Rooted in:
Community.
Growth.
Perseverance.
A film celebrating the culture behind climbing.
Bringing together local athletes, filmmakers, and vendors.
RSVP in bio.
See you there.
THE SECRET TO POGOS
If pogos feel impossible for you, itās because your timing is off.
Typically, the issue lies in the climberās timing and direction of movement.
Hereās the breakdownšš¼
1ļøā£Perspective (Most climbers get this wrong)
A pogo isnāt for power; itās for assistance.
The momentum generated from the pogo reduces the power requirement from your upper body and creates flow.
2ļøā£Timing (The common problem)
A pogo only helps if your pull matches it. Donāt let the momentum outrun your pull.
If you pull at the top, itās too late.
If you pull too early, you lose the assist.
Pull as your foot hits peak height.
3ļøā£Direction
Where the foot goes, the body follows. In addition to properly timing the pogo, you need to kick towards the hold youāre going to.
Kick through the hold, not just up.
4ļøā£Mechanics
Stay tight through your core while letting the leg swing freely.
Youāll notice in the video that my pogo leg is mostly straight with some knee flexion, allowing a longer lever to create more momentum while maintaining tension.
Next time youāre working on a pogo, apply these adjustments and watch the magic happen!
Strong climbers miss pogos all the time; itās a movement problem, not a strength problem.
If you want help training movement intentionally, remote coaching spots are available!
š„Personalized Training Programs & Direct Mentorship
š„Structured Skill Practice
š„Periodized Strength Training
š„In-Depth Mental Conditioning
Comment āCOACH,ā and Iāll send the link to apply!
STOP LOSING SWINGS - DO THIS INSTEAD
Canāt control swings?
Youāre over-relying on your fingers instead of body position.
This is the scorpion positionšš¼
š¹Feet drive behind you
š¹Chest drives forward
š¹Shoulder blades come together
This position makes you instantly stronger on the swing, every time.
You donāt control the swing after you catch itāyou control it AS you catch it. Do this insteadšš¼
š„As you go for the hold, pull your shoulder blades together and drive your chest forward.
Most climbers try to fight the swing.
The best climbers redirect it.
š„Practice this on the wall by intentionally jumping between positive holds.
Practicešš¼
š¹Jump between good holds
š¹Hit the scorpion position
š¹Lock it in AS you latch
Strength matters. Positions decide.
If you want to actually fix your movementānot just get strongerācomment āCOACH,ā and Iāll reach out with details on how to apply for remote coaching.
š¹Personalized Training Programs & Direct Mentorship
š¹Structured Skill Practice
š¹Periodized Strength Training
š¹In-Depth Mental Conditioning
WHY YOU KEEP BACKING OFF MOVES (EVEN WHEN YOUāRE STRONG ENOUGH)
How often do you hesitate to do a particular type of move?
You know the fear Iām talking about. The move is insecure, and your brain floods with what-if scenarios.
Fear isnāt randomāit follows a pattern.
The most common reason I see climbers struggle to commit is that theyāre too focused on what they CANāT control.
Fear follows a 3-step loop:
1ļøā£ Trigger
You feel unstable ā your brain flags danger
(Itās not heightāitās uncertainty.)
2ļøā£ Response
āWhat if I slip?ā ā hesitation ā backing off
3ļøā£ Reward
You avoid the move ā your brain reinforces hesitation
šš»This is why fear keeps showing up.
But fear doesnāt have to win ā hereās how you can change the storyšš¼
š„ Analyze The Beta:
Be patient. Break the move down until every hand + foot placement is predictable and thereās no uncertainty left in the movement.
š„ Identify The Trigger:
Pinpoint exactly what creates the insecurity.
Solve that = reduce fear.
š„ Visualize & Speak Success:
Picture yourself sticking the move confidently ā in both first- and third-person views. Additionally, speak to yourself as if youāve already done the move with conviction.
Clarity kills hesitation.
Confidence is built, not felt. Donāt let fear control you; turn it into a tool. Focus on the climbing and your self-talk because thatās whatās in your control and NOTHING ELSE.
If you want help training your mind and building rock-solid confidence, remote coaching spots are available!
š„Personalized Training Programs & Direct Mentorship
š„Structured Skill Practice
š„Periodized Strength Training
š„In-Depth Mental Conditioning
Comment āCOACH,ā and Iāll send the link to apply!
Every climber deals with this at some point.
WHY MOST CLIMBERS FAIL CAMPUS PADDLES
Campus paddles arenāt about powerātheyāre about precision and positioning.
Master these 3 components šš¼
1ļøā£Hand Positioning
Because we need to pull with our upper bodies during this movement actively, we need to find the ideal hand position on each hold that gives us maximum pull in the desired direction.
Hereās what most climbers get wrong šš¼
A common mistake I see is climbers focusing solely on where their torso is during the movement and almost ignoring the hand position on the holds.
šš»Bad Hands = Wasted Momentum
2ļøā£Timing
You canāt pause mid-moveāso timing has to be automatic. When to pull and kip.
As your hands connect and your body moves through space, the tension you intrinsically feel will change throughout the movement.
When your body is in a straight line to the end position, you pull and kip to complete the movement.
Emmaās cue to pull and kip for the finishing jug is that split second where tension increases.
šš»Move Too Early/Late = Youāll Miss
3ļøā£Pull & Kip
The other common mistake I notice is climbers relying on their momentum to carry them through the entire movement.
Itās crucial to actively pull through with your upper body and kip your hips as you enter the ideal ending position of these campus paddles.
šš»Momentum Starts It. Pulling Finishes It.
Emma didnāt hit this right away.
She learned to feel the timingāand everything clicked.
Movement is the multiplier. Train it as it matters.
If you want help training movement intentionally, remote coaching spots are available!
š„Personalized Training Programs & Direct Mentorship
š„Structured Skill Practice
š„Periodized Strength Training
š„In-Depth Mental Conditioning
Comment āCOACHā and Iāll send the link to apply!
TRAJECTORY IS KING
If you keep barn-dooring on slab, itās not a strength issue.
Positions > Power is a movement principle that will come up just about every session.
Slab is no exception to this rule.
A common issue climbers experience when performing these quick stand-up moves is falling away from the wall as they approach the hold.
They stand up.
They grab hold.
They barn-door off.
Incorrect Trajectory -> Barn-Door Effect -> Position & Hold Become Impossible to Control
Your body goes where your setup sends it.
Fortunately, thereās a simple way to fix the incorrect trajectory.
By creating space from the wallāspace you can use to correct your trajectory.
This is exactly how Emma sniped this slot.
At first, she was experiencing the same issue with her body barn-dooring away from the wall as she grabbed the handhold.
Initially, her chest was against the wall as she initiated the movement, causing her to fall away from the wall.
The fix she made was to lean her right shoulder and chest away from the wall right before she stood up for the slot, allowing her to find the ideal ending position.
She didnāt try harder. She moved better.
Movement is the multiplier. Train it intentionally.
If you keep barn-dooring, download the self-assessment in my bio.
ACCURACY STARTS WITH THE EYES
Youāre not missing because youāre weakāyouāre missing because you canāt aim.
Most climbers will try moves over and over again, falling for the same reason every time.
On every failed attempt, my hands were too low on the paddle and I was struggling to latch the hold. I kept missing.
I realized I wasnāt aiming well; my visual gaze was too broad.
If you canāt point to the exact spot youāre grabbing, youāre guessing.
The simplest way to improve your accuracy on the wall is to stop looking at the whole hold.
Looking at an entire hold doesnāt allow you to find that perfect spot at a high percentage. You might get lucky at times, but itās unreliable.
As soon as I shifted my focus to the top of the hold, I consistently landed my hands in the ideal position and latched the move on command.
Nothing changed but my focus.
Before you move, decide exactly where your hand is going to land.
This is called visual targeting.
Pick your target before you leave the hold.
If youāre missing moves and donāt know whyāthis is exactly the problem.
Take the assessment in my bio.
WHY MOST CLIMBERS FAIL MANTLES (And How To Fix It)
Ever stall halfway through a mantle? You push, flail, maybe even throw yourself over ā but nothing sticks. Most climbers fall into the classic trap.
Youāve likely fallen into the classic trap with mantles.
The š to mantles isnāt just about brute strength (though dips definitely help)!
Itās about technique ā and most people miss this one detailšš¼
š„Hereās the trick:
š¹Push and lean over your foot
š¹Stand up instead of muscling up
š¹More space = smoother mantle
Center of Mass controls stability ā move it over your base and the mantle flows.
Watch Emma: she stalls, shifts over her foot ā mantle unlocked!
Shifting your focus to your foot lets you lean over, making it easier to stand up and finish the mantle smoothly!
Try this in your next session if you struggle with mantles!
Iāll be breaking mantles down at my next clinic: The Art of The Mantle
Saturday, April 25th @ Tufas Boulder Lounge
If your mantles and topouts feel desperate, this clinic is for you.
Movement multiplies strength ā train it intentionally.
Link in bio to sign up.
03/19/2026
Regionals 26ā
2026 wasnāt the start Iād hoped for. However, exactly what was needed.
Team Primal showed up and trusted the process, getting everyone through to divisionals comfortably!
Special congrats to:
Emma: š„ Boulder, š„ Lead (F-17)
Maya: š„ Boulder
Weāre not done. Divisionals š
YOU HAVE TO BELIEVE
Your brain can literally reduce your power output before you even jump.
Your self-talk dictates how you perform.
Belief is the first step toward growth.
Your nervous system responds to your self-talk.
š¹Positive belief INCREASES commitment and power.
š¹Negative self-talk can literally REDUCE motor unit recruitment.
Yes, your body responds physiologically to positive self-talk.
Thatās exactly what was happening here with Abbyās triple clutch.
Watch the video.
She finds the positions.
Her timing is right.
Her hands hit the holds.
Yet she still canāt latch the move.
During the session, I realized she didnāt actually believe she could stick the move.
She was limiting her own physical capabilities before she even jumped.
The central nervous system downregulates power output when failure is predicted. Thatās exactly what Abby was doing.
As soon as I realized Abby was doing this, we shifted how she was talking to herself. She started rephrasing her thoughts.
We went from:
āIām not sure I can do this.ā
to
āIf I just grab and pull as hard as I can, I can do this.ā
Not just belief, but also what needs to happen to unlock the move.
Knowing the exact beta + believing with conviction are š.
Now this triple clutch is part of her warm-up circuit š¤Æ
She didnāt get stronger.
She just believed.
If you predict failure, your body prepares to fail.
Have you ever missed a move you know you should have stuck?
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