Holiday season in the surf
RICK FIGNETTI
Let’s start this column off with a Merry Christmas to everyone, no
doubt kicking back with the day off, ready to meet with the family
and friends later.
If you’re lucky, you might be able to sneak in a little session in
the water before all the festivities. Don’t eat too much or that
surfboard won’t be floating you as well as it used to. Or, on the
other hand, the workout training to work those calories off might not
start until next year. I’ll take that excuse.
Big news -- flash bulletin from Hawaii on the North Shore. A storm
went by, slamming the islands with some bad weather, rain and north
winds. After it passed, it cleaned up a bit, not quite as epic as it
could have been. Still, there was a lot of sand in the reef and still
some leftover winds, but there’s some surf.
The finals for the XBox Gerry Lopez Pipeline Masters were held in
some contestable 6-foot-plus barreling waves. The race for the world
title went all the way down to the last heat of the year. Making it
two titles in a row, coming from behind, was Hawaiian Andy Irons.
Irons stepped up at Pipe, getting some of the top scores of the
event, even busting his board in the quarterfinals. With glass
peeling off the bottom of his board, he continued on.
In the finals, A.I. posted an 8.33 score with a cover-up, and
buckled another surfboard while caught inside on a set, but he didn’t
panic, got another stick and continued on his victory run. Irons was
the Pipe winner, the Triple Crown winner and the overall points
winner all in one day.
Finishing second was Aussie Joel Parkinson, who was ripping too.
Halfway through the heat, “Parko” went on a wave he didn’t make that
peeled perfectly, which may have been one of the keys to A.I.’s win.
Florida’s Kelly Slater would have been in position for a possible
10-point, perfect-scoring wave, but he had to let it go and ended up
fourth in the final -- a little out of sync.
Australian Phil MacDonald finished up a solid third. Equal fifth
were Bruce Irons, who qualified for the Championship Tour next
season, and Aussie Luke Hitchings. Equal seventh were Hawaiian power
master Pancho Sullivan, a wildcard, and Florida’s Corey Lopez. World
champ Irons got a beer shower from the Kauai boys in front of the
Volcom house after his huge win, just before the awards ceremony.
Final year end standings on the World Championship Tour: First,
Irons, 8,964 points; second, six-time world champ Slater with 8,544
points; third, Aussie Taj Burrow; fourth, Aussie Mick Fanning; fifth,
Parkinson; sixth, Aussie Kieren Perrow; seventh, Carlsbad’s Taylor
Knox; eighth, Aussie Michael Lowe; ninth, Lopez; 10th, Aussie Dean
Morrison; 11th, Aussie Jake Paterson; 12th, Floridian Shea Lopez;
13th, MacDonald; 14th, Florida’s Damien Hobgood; 15th, Aussie Danny
Wills; 16th, Aussie “Occy” Mark Occhilupo.
Other USA notables: 19th, Floridian C.J. Hobgood; 20th, Hawaiian
Kalani Robb; 35th, Laguna Beach’s Pat O’Connell; 43rd, Hawaiian Sunny
Garcia; and 44th, Oxnard’s Timmy Curran.
The parents and family of a Surf City local surfer who passed
away, “Johnny Lee Smith,” would like to express thanks to all those
who attended the paddle out at the pier. Mahalo, and we’ll miss him!
God Bless and see ya next year. Fig over and out.
* 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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