Talkin’ turkey and waves
RICK FIGNETTI
Happy Thanksgiving everyone. Be thankful for your health, loved ones,
family and friends and be thankful for what was the best surf I can
remember for this time of year in a while -- and the Figster is
getting up there.
One down, two to go, in the Hawaiian Triple Crown Surfing Series
as the first jewel on the North Shore has been completed.
The $125,000 Hawaiian Pro has concluded at Haliewa Beach in some
windy 3- to 5-foot surf. Australian dark horse Troy Brooks beat the
odds, coming out of the big contingency of surfers to score the win
and pocket $15,000.
The 24-year-old Aussie now has a chance to show more of his stuff,
as he gets a seed into the trials of the World Championship Tour
event up next at Sunset. If Brooks can place in the top six of the
trials, he’ll get a wildcard slot into the main event with the top 44
surfers in the world.
Second at the Hawaiian Pro was Brazilian Armando Daltro, who was
ripping, too, and won $8,000. Third was Australian Jake Paterson, who
had a good run, and fourth was another Brazilian, Neco Padaratz, who
won the overall title on the World Qualifying Series with his
placing, which will assure him a spot on the C.T. again next season.
Making it to the semis and finishing equal fifth was Oxnard’s
Timmy Curran and Aussie Trent Munro.
Kawaiian Andy Irons and six-time world champ Kelly Slater, the two
surfers who are neck and neck, battling for the world title crown,
placed equal seventh. Slater is No. 1 in the standings and Irons is
No. 2.
“Slates,” with his semifinal appearance, has pushed himself over
the $1-million mark for career purse winnings, a first ever by a pro
surfer.
Slater also said he’d like to win the Triple Crown award this
year, which is the highest points total for the three Hawaiian
events, but he is looking at the overall picture and the big goal of
another, possible seventh, world title.
Equal ninth was Andy’s brother, Bruce Irons, Aussies “Parko” Joel
Parkenson and Richard Lovett, and Brazil’s Victor Ribas.
The waiting period for the $250,000 Rip Curl Cup at Sunset has
started and goes till Dec. 7 and the Pipe event is Dec. 8 through
Dec. 20.
The women ran their event at Haliewa too, the six-star “Roxy Pro,”
with Peruvian Sophia Mulanovich getting the biggest win of her life,
picking up $6,000, and edging local Hawaiian ripper Melanie Bartels
in the final.
Bartels clinched the World Qualifying Series overall points race
and qualifies for the C.T. now, while Brazilian Tita Tavares was
third and Australian Samantha Cornish placed fourth to round out the
action-packed final.
Huntington Beach surfer Gavin McKiernan, the Boys & Girls Club
Delaware Street director, is putting on the Pizza Pig-out Dec. 5 at
the club and also just helped coach their junior basketball program
to first place in Orange County, not too mention they were voted top
club in the nation this year.
Didn’t I see local surf star Danny Nichols driving Miss Surf City.
in the Christmas Parade last Sunday night down Main Street,
incognito? It sure looked like him.
That’s it for now, see you turkeys in the lineup.
* RICK FIGNETTI is an eight-time West Coast champion, has
announced the U.S. Open of Surfing the last nine years and has been
the KROQ-FM surfologist for the last 17 years, doing morning surf
reports. He owns a surf shop on Main Street. You can reach him at
(714) 536-1058.
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