World tour set to wind down in Hawaii
RICK FIGNETTI
I know it’s the middle of November, but it was looking like summer
again here in Surf City this week with the sunny skies we were having
and the warm air temps during the days. Not quite the crowd on the
beaches though, and those water temperatures have finally started
taking a dip into the 60s. Uh oh, full suits again.
The surf scene has switched over to the North Shore of Hawaii for
the first event in the Van’s Triple Crown of Surfing, the Hawaiian
Pro at Haliewa. The surf was running head high with offshore
conditions as they started on Monday, and the swell was supposed to
pick up more over the next few days.
The event is a popular one and is totally filled up, starting with
the round of 132 where you can pull some big-name talent, even in the
early going. Sixty-six alternates were waiting to get in, but I
wouldn’t count on more than five opening slots opening up.
There were some big upsets already. Former world champ and
multiple Triple Crown winner Derek Ho lost in the first round, along
with fellow Hawaiians Dustin Barca, just off a recent final placing,
and National Air winner Ola Eleogram, not to mention Japan’s rad man
Masatoshi Ohno. Getting to the next round were three-time world champ
Tom Curren, Hawaiian local shredder Mikala Jones, and Aussies Luke
Munro and the “Flying” Kirk Flintoff, to name a few.
The women’s will also run at Haliewa, but it’s a World
Championship Tour event for them -- the Roxy Pro. The top 17 gals and
a wildcard will battle it out in the second to the last event of the
season.
Peru’s Sofia Mulanovich still has a 480-point lead over Hawaiian
Rochelle Ballard in the points race. The women’s tour has pretty much
been dominated by Australian Layne Beachley the last six years, but
her reign looks like it might be coming to an end this season, as she
is down a few spots in the ratings.
Last week, an Xcel Pro warm-up session at Sunset produced an
all-Hawaiian final. The weather had been stormy, rainy and windy,
with some murky brown water runoff, but there was some 4- to 8-foot
contestable surf. Winning again was local boy Fred Pattachia Jr. for
his second in a row. Second was Brian Pacheco. Third went to the
outer island’s Ian Walsh with fourth going to Kauai’s Barca.
We’ve had a few shark attacks here in California, but most haven’t
been fatal. Over in Cape Town, South Africa, an elderly lady was
swimming off the beach on Monday at Sunny Cove when an estimated
18-foot great white swam up and attacked her. Not much could be done
as the attack, witnessed by people on the beach, happened so fast
that the only thing left was her bathing cap. There had been other
attacks in that area the last few years.
The John Boozer Memorial Paddle-Out has been rescheduled for
Saturday at North Bolsa, by Warner Street in the morning. Huntington
Beach will miss another fallen hero and surfer who passed away
recently. Our best wishes and prayers go out to Morgan, his wife, and
family.
That’s it for now; see ya, Fig over and out.
* RICK FIGNETTI is an nine-time West Coast champion, has
announced the U.S. Open of Surfing the last 11 years and has been the
KROQ-FM surfologist for the last 18 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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