The CrossFit Open Leaderboard: See Who’s Currently Dominating

The submission deadline for 18.2 and 18.2A scores has officially passed, and the CrossFit Open leaderboards for men and women are currently fluctuating like crazy. We’re not saying that we’re glued to our screens, constantly refreshing the page or anything weird like that.

… Okay, we totally are…

Can you blame us?! As of this moment, here are the top five women:

  1. Emma Ferreira
  2. Carolyne Prevost
  3. Emma McQuaid
  4. Kara Saunders
  5. Cassidy Lance-McWherter


Not far below that is Camille Leblanc-Bazinet in ninth, Jessica Coughlan in 11th, and Katrin Davidsdottir in 12th. We spy with our little eye Brooke Wells in 15th, Kristin Holte in 23th and Tia-Clair Toomey in 33nd.

While Mat Fraser’s rankings have fluctuated a bit over the last couple of weeks, he’s wrapping up the second week of the CrossFit Open strong and at the very top of the leaderboard.

18.2 385# @roguefitness #hardworkpaysoffs #HWPO

A post shared by Mathew Fraser (@mathewfras) on


Here are the top five men:

  1. Mat Fraser
  2. Alex Vigneault
  3. Anthony Davis
  4. Michael Palomba
  5. Piotr Szczycinski

Patrick Vellner, who competed with Noah Ohlsen at the live announcement for 18.2 and 18.2A, is currently sitting in 12th. Speaking of Ohlsen, he’s currently ranked 80th — but we all know how much will change by the time the Open comes to a close.

We’re not sure what to expect over the next couple of hours, as there are still notable names missing. For instance, Annie Thorisdottir, who was in second place after 18.1, hasn’t yet entered her latest scores. Neither has Margaux Alvarez. (Ladies! The suspense is killing us!)

Did any of your favorite athletes make it in the top five?

Main image: Mat Fraser/Instagram

These are the Current Leaderboard Standings

We know it’s early in the game, but our eyes are glued to the leaderboard, same as yours. #SorryNotSorry

The rankings are sure to change, and probably a lot. The pros typically hold off on submitting their scores until the last minute. It’s a strategic move done in part to prevent other athletes from repeating the workout, intent on beating them. Wise, very wise. Meanwhile, the suspense is torturing us.

Sam Briggs set the bar high during the live announcement, but that hasn’t stopped a few women from sneaking in ahead of her, including two-time Games champ Katrin Davidsdottir. But! Worth noting is that according to Instagram, it looks like Briggs redid 18.1 and says she beat her score. How many reps do you think she got this time?

The men’s current leaderboard is looking extra spicy, with Tencer and Ganin tied for fourth.
open 18.1
Athletes still have time to submit their scores, and there are definitely a lot of big names missing. Who do you think will be in the top five once the submission deadline hits?