Brad Gobright lost his life at Potrero Chico today.
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Hate to start the memorial page for Brad. Sad to lose a man in his prime. I never had the chance to meet or climb with him but a number of folks here have. Hopefully they’ll be able to chime in and offer some insight into a fellow who was no doubt an intriguing and loved character in the climbing community. |
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Damn, what a loss. |
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Layne Zuelke wrote: Hate to start the memorial page for Brad. Sad to lose a man in his prime. I never had the chance to meet or climb with him but a number of folks here have. Hopefully they’ll be able to chime in and offer some insight into a fellow who was no doubt an intriguing and loved character in the climbing community. Rip brad. Huge inspiration and an awesome back story. His climbs in eldo were top tier and feels like he skipped a generation. I never had the chance to know him outside of seeing him a few times at reel rock. Rip dude |
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This photo is from September 19th 2013. After a smokey summer the first fall rain cleared the skies, and I shared a special climb with an incredible partner. I’m sure for Brad Gobright, I was just the most convenient person to climb with that day, but for me it was an opportunity of a lifetime. One of my favorite aspects about climbing is that you get to climb with your heroes, and you touch the same rock. I’d never get the chance to catch a ball thrown by a Hall of Fame athlete, or touch the hallowed ground where a sports history was forged, but here I was climbing on the Monkey Face with Brad. It’s hard to say when Brad ‘made it’ as a climber, but he was at that stage where if you’d kept your ear to the ground you’d heard of him, but there was no sponsorships, he was sleeping in his Honda and scraping by like the rest of us. Pretty soon he’d have feature films, speed records, and Brad pushed his physical and mental endurance as far as his talent and tenacity took him. I’ve always though the pinnacle of rock climbing was a one day free ascent of El Cap. Brad achieved this 5 times. (The next time we talked was 5 years later in a car park in Yosemite right after he had just freed El Corazon in just 19 hours, which he said was the most challenging thing he had done in climbing. I had no idea because I told him we climbed the Rostrum and he preferred to hear what I thought the best pitch was then talk about his own monumental accomplishment). I hiked back and I saw Brad warming up by soloing the Pioneer Route. Brad had recently climbed the Monkey in mind bending 3 minutes, 25 seconds; only for his friendly rival Mason to beat his time. Brad was shaking his head realizing that he just didn’t want to climb that bold to break a record that only about 4 people even knew about. He bailed by walking the Monkey Face highline leashed in with a daisy chain and locker. We chatted for a little bit and I tied in to try ‘Spank the Monkey’ which was the most mentally challenging climb I had done at that point. I remember that I did it without a warm up that day, and that I felt quite secure. I knew it probably wasn’t impressive to Brad, but I wanted to show him that I wasn’t afraid. I certainly didn’t want to let on that I felt like I’d caught the Super Bowl winning pass from a Hall of Famer in front of a crowd of exactly no one else. He was genuinely psyched for me and I belayed him as he casually waltzed up the route. He tried the extension briefly then we packed up. As we hiked back up the hill we both took the same picture looking out towards the Cascades. He used the photo as his Cover Photo on Facebook, the view was easily the most memorable part of that day. Brad passed away today. I’m not sure I could call him a friend, or an acquaintance, but he was my hero, and I will forever be proud to say he was my climbing partner that day in September when rain cleared the sky. |
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Just heard the news myself. This one is hard for me I really liked his personality and was really hoping to meet the guy. I'd love to hear some cool or funny stories about the legend that is Brad. |
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The first time I met Brad I had just recently spent the night on Epinephrine. I had heard that he had set the speed record on it at one point, so I was eager to talk to him about it. |
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I only met Brad once. I was bouldering alone in the Camp 4 boulders in late fall with nobody else really around, trying Cocaine Corner. Brad wandered by and offered me a spot. He introduced himself as Brad, and I kind of figured who he was, but didn’t want to make a big deal of it. He said he’d been doing “a little speed climbing” (i.e. breaking the nose record) and talked about breaking his foot trying Midnight Lightning with no pads. He spotted me a few times, we chatted a bit, then he wandered on down the path and that was it. |
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I only met Brad once. He was hang boarding with a back brace at Movement in Boulder. At the time I had no idea I was witnessing one of the greatest climbers in the game. Since then I’ve reached out to him a few times for route recommendations/beta and he was always a pleasure to chat with. Simply a great guy and a legend. |
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For Brad |
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these stories are incredible. thank you all for sharing. |
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Very tragic indeed. It's always sad when one of the tribe goes, but even more so when it's someone so relatable (in some ways) and humble. I only met Brad a few times, but like all these stories it was a testament to his abilities and easy going attitude. He lapped us on The Chief and El Cap. We had to go back up East Ledges to basically get a haul bag full of turds and Brad and I laughed about it before he started sprinting down the East Ledges. My thoughts are with his friends and family, my friends who knew him more personally, and the climbing community as a whole. Go out there and get after it. Never know what's in the cards. |
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if you haven’t heard it, it’s definitely worth checking out Brad talking to Chris on the Enormocast. It’s great. |
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There are some heartfelt thoughts on here: |
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Thanks for sharing stories folks. This one is hitting me hard as well. |
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I met Brad before he was famous (and helped him get some gear that I'm sure he put into good use). And though I've climbed w/ him, I don't claim to know him; I do know he has a (dark) sense of humor & carried himself unlike the polished packaging of many pro athletes. |
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I never met the man, but we mourn when we lose someone whose passion we share. For those “not surprised,” from the news reports it appears the accident occurred while rappelling, not soloing; food for thought, as we all rappel while very few solo at high levels. |
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We knew Brad from a fairly young age, a very motivated and obvioulsy talented climber, at our local climbing gym (Rockreation in Orange County). Brad was always wanting to learn from others and even after he developed into a top climber, was kind and generous. It is very sad to hear about this accident and his passing. While it is comforting (in a manner) to know that he was living the life he wanted and doing what he loved, a life cut short is always a tragedy. |
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Who among us has never—not once—drifted over the double yellow line? 99% of the time, you correct right back, but all it takes is one semi in the wrong place at the wrong time. Here is not the place for arrogance. |
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Nice article by John Branch in the New York Times, |
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Randy wrote: We knew Brad from a fairly young age, a very motivated and obvioulsy talented climber, at our local climbing gym (Rockreation in Orange County). Brad was always wanting to learn from others and even after he developed into a top climber, was kind and generous. It is very sad to hear about this accident and his passing. While it is comforting (in a manner) to know that he was living the life he wanted and doing what he loved, a life cut short is always a tragedy. Thanks for that, Randy. A beautiful thing to say. I had some interactions with Brad when I was working on a guide book. He got wind of my project and reached out, asking if I needed any photo's. I explained that the designer and publisher had most of the action pics baked in, but could I see some formation pics. He sent me two. Both were better than what I had at the time. I told him I'd like to use them. "Of course. Use them as your own, please don't credit me." I wish I'd been able to hang out with Brad, to have his expressions and personality as things to remember. My heart goes out to those who did. It must be a great loss. rip. |
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I met Brad on a summer afternoon while walking up to Medlicott Dome to admire Peace. At age 20 or 21 with only about two years of climbing under my belt, I was a bit starstruck and probably fanboy-ed in a way that I'd find embarrassing now. He was nothing but gracious and provided detailed beta when I asked. Brad offered to let me use the 80m rope he'd left there in case I wanted to try the moves for myself and made the route seem approachable as a goal to someone who was light years away from that level. |