Tom Randall


Quick Info

From: United Kingdom 🇬🇧
Gender: Male
Hardest Boulder (Worked): 8B
Hardest Trad (Worked): E10
Hardest Trad (Onsight): E7
Notable Partnerships
Pete Whittaker
Ollie Torr

Tom Randall is a British climber known for being a crack-climbing specialist, one half of WideBoyz and co-owner of Lattice Training.

Contributors
112 contributions since 13th January 2021.
TdG
34 contributions since 6th September 2025.
6 contributions since 10th February 2025.

Quick Info

From: United Kingdom 🇬🇧
Gender: Male
Hardest Boulder (Worked): 8B
Hardest Trad (Worked): E10
Hardest Trad (Onsight): E7
Notable Partnerships
Pete Whittaker
Ollie Torr

Tom Randall is a British climber known for being a crack-climbing specialist, one half of WideBoyz and co-owner of Lattice Training.

Contributors
112 contributions since 13th January 2021.
TdG
34 contributions since 6th September 2025.
6 contributions since 10th February 2025.

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Ascents

40 recorded ascents.

This timeline is missing some ascents where the date of the ascent is unknown.
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Climb Grade Style Ascent Date Suggested Grade
Climb Grade Style Ascent Date Suggested Grade

Video caption lists the route as E8. UKB thread as 'V8 highball :)' [2]

References

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRWTwogA8tQ#

[2] https://ukbouldering.com/threads/routes-cleaned-or-re-equipped.9392/page-8#post-260144

Climb Grade Style Ascent Date Suggested Grade

I'd not anticipated this would become a relatively risky project initially, but I guess I know my limits fairly well, and the style of movement is really predictable. It did weigh on my mind that if I fell it'd be a head-first job, but initially the fact that there was a river under the middle twenty metre section made it feel more justifiable. Only later on did I discover that it was shallow and not much use for a bailing option, but by that time I'd committed to my strategy and I just needed to do some mental gymnastics. [2]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DAV59jDMiLm/?img_index=1

[2] https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2024/10/tom_randall_makes_first_ascent_of_hard_urban_offwidth-73812

[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBFuJHXZlQI

References

[1] https://vimeo.com/5897862

I think this particular crack project has been one of the biggest struggles for me, due to a combination of factors. The climbing is really quite hard, the conditions on the line are incredibly fickle and the moves are so complicated that each time I would come down, I’d waste at least half a day remembering how to move my body. The route starts up a very strange and steep 2 bolt sport route which is more like climbing a long boulder problem. This then gives you access to an 80 degree finger roof crack. The sequence through the roof is around V10 and involves amazing spins on finger jams, an undercut mono-style move and some funky heel action. All of this has to be stopped in the middle of though, to place two micro nuts, which caused me problems on a few occasions! [1]

References

[1] https://tomrandallclimbing.wordpress.com/2014/08/18/dina-crac-e9-7a-welsh-limestone-trad/

[2] https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2014/08/new_e9_7a_roof_crack_for_tom_randall_-_dina_crac-69120

The Final Round First ascent. E9 Lead | worked Sep 2015
Ronny Medelsvensson E9 Lead | worked 2017

Tom found a knee bar on the crux section which he felt reduced the grade.

References

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGFjKjCN7Pc

I was really pleased to get this line done, as me and Pete [Whittaker] don't always end up doing that many repeats in the area as we're so obsessed with FAs. In a way, it's nice to calibrate our recent developments and remind ourselves that other people have contributed hard lines and that we should all continually cross-pollinate for difficulty and quality! Fortunately, we've been training thin hands in the last two months, so this was a perfect line at the perfect time. I opted to place extra pieces in the runout middle crux, whereas Pete did his usual "go all-in" and I'm not sure how far he'd have been off the ground if he'd blown it at the end! [1]

References

[1] https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2019/04/roof_crack_repeat_by_randall_and_whittaker_-_necronomicon_513d14a-71912

Fast forward a decade and I accidentally (or was it by necessity?) starting singing Ava Max “Kings & Queens” to myself on Once Up A Time down in Devon. Almost instantly, I just got lost in the words and the movement flow combo. Literally everything just connected together and what (for me) was quite an intimidating climb became ridiculously fun and engaging. I almost wanted the whole thing to never end. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/CUVVcwes1-Q/

Mechanical Bull E9 Lead | worked
Belly Full of Bad Berries E8 Lead | worked Oct 2011
My Kai First ascent. E8 Lead | worked 2013
Nah'han First ascent. E8 Lead | worked 2013
Concepción E8 Lead | worked
Gobbler's Roof First ascent. E7 Lead | worked 22nd Apr 2009
Thai Boxing E7 Lead | worked 25th Jul 2010
The Angry Pirate Finish First ascent. E7 Lead | worked 2011

The beginning of a long relationship with the route. Since making this ascent Tom and Pete Whittaker have made it a tradition to reclimb the route each year on their birthday, usually in some sort of fancy dress. For example, they've climbed it in fat suits, dressed as minions and even as a multipitch.

References

[1] Tom's first ascent https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtKLXSGjop4

Jon Fullwood:

I belayed Tom on the second ascent (Pete did 1st) and given this was a week before he was due to go to the states to try Century Crack (ie. quite crack fit!), how skin-of-the-teeth his ascent was, and how dismally I failed to second it… I would say it is a bit of a sandy sandbag at E5!

References

[1] https://ukbouldering.com/threads/our-forte-stanton.28037/

Climb Grade Style Ascent Date Suggested Grade
The Crackhouse 7c+ Boulder | worked