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Makuakai Rothman wins O’Neill World Cup at Sunset Beach

Wed Dec 05, 2007 at 07:39AM

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Makuakai Rothman wins the O’Neill World Cup  at Sunset Beach 

 

A childhood dream came true for Sunset Beach resident Makuakai Rothman today, when he won the biggest professional surfing event of his career - the $125,000 O’Neill World Cup of Surfing - at the beach he was born and raised on. The O’Neill World Cup is the second jewel of the prestigious Vans Triple Crown of Surfing series that draws the closing curtain on the ASP World Surfing Tour each year.

Needing a near-perfect score of 9.2 points, Rothman found his way into the tube, earning 9.5 points to turn the tables and seal the victory. World champion-elect Mick Fanning, from Australia, took third place, and O’Neill World Cup giant-killer Daniel Ross, also from Australia, placed fourth in the final. Reaching the final was especially sweet for Ross, who has won his way onto the elite ASP World Championship Tour for 2008 with this result.

Conditions today ranged from clean wave face heights of up to 20 feet prior to the semi-finals, to strong, side-shore wind-blown surf of 10- to 12-feet for the final heats. All four finalists had to surf through four rounds and more than two hours of intense competition in today’s exhausting conditions.

Heading into the final, neither Rothman nor Neves were favored to win, despite the fact that Rothman was literally raised on the waves of Sunset. Fanning had set the waves alight in the earlier rounds today, and Ross had blazed his way through six rounds to reach the final, winning every heat on the way, and emerging with the two highest heat scores of the entire competition by its end.

But the Australians had apparently peaked too early while Rothman and Neves saved their best performances for last. Rothman won $15,000 and moved to fifth on the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing ratings. Neves pocketed $7,000, Fanning earned $4,000, and Ross took home $3,000.

“Besides winning the award for the biggest wave ever ridden when I was just a teenager, this was winning in my backyard at one of the biggest contests of the year. It means everything to me,” said Rothman, 23. “I bled, cried, got my ass kicked, everything, on this beach. It’s just a blessing to make it.

“I know that (wave). I surfed here all my life and I knew. My caddy was telling me go deeper, but every time I went deeper, I was too deep to catch the wave. (The other guys were) too far out and I knew that. I just lined up on the house that my friend lived at all our lives and there’s always a bowl that would break there. And, the wave just came. I paddled as hard as I could and the rest was history after that.”

Despite the last minute lead loss, Neves was gracious with second.

“The heat was too long. I lost in the last three minutes, but that’s okay because I got to surf good, perfect waves,” said Neves, 28. “I love this place. Makua is a good guy and my friend for many years. I came here when he was a small kid now we’re in the same heat. He’s in first, I’m in second.”

Fanning was ecstatic just to be in the running for the Vans Triple Crown title: “It was really hard out there. Nothing really came our way and Leo nailed that first two. Makua just lucked into one and I’m stoked for Makua. He’s a straight up surfer here and it’s awesome. I’m stoked because I’m back in the Triple Crown race.”

Daniel Ross was elated to have qualified and reached the end of an intense event.

“I was pretty tired towards the end of the semi final because of the whole day,” said Ross. “It’s an emotional day for me. It was my dream to qualify and surf with the best surfers in the world. I’m there now, so it’s going to be a great year for me next year.

“It hit me before the final, I was pretty emotional, I was on the phone with one of my good mates, my mom, my dad, my brother and everyone was so stoked for me. It was one of my best days I’ve ever had, it’s the best feeling.”

Australian Bede Durbidge, who reached the final of the first event at Haleiwa, and the quarters here today, leads the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing ratings heading into the Pipeline Masters next week. Roy Powers (Hawaii) winner of the first event, is second on the Vans Triple Crown ratings, followed by Fanning, Buchan, and Rothman.

By virtue of being the highest non-WCT surfer on the Vans Triple Crown ratings, Powers has won a wildcard entry into the third event: the Billabong Pipeline Masters, that will get underway on Saturday, December 8th, running through December 20.

In addition to the $125,000 prize purse for this event, O’Neill partnered with American Racing Equipment, Inc. to offer additional awards for the “Best Barrel” and “Breakout Performance”. Basque surfer Hodei Collazo won Best Barrel, for a perfect 10-point tube ride earlier in the event. Daniel Ross won the Breakout Performance award. They each received a set of American Racing rims out of the ATX Series of all-terrain wheels.

Brazil’s Jihad Khodr won the prestigious Nose Guard Rookie of the Vans Triple Crown.

The O’Neill World Cup of Surfing is the second jewel of the 25th anniversary Vans Triple Crown of Surfing. Carrying the highest WQS rating of 6-stars, and as the last WQS event of the year, the O’Neill World Cup was critical in determining the lineup for the elite World Championship Tour (WCT) next year.

At this stage, the following surfers are guaranteed a berth on the 2008 ASP WCT tour: Jordy Smith (ZAF), Dane Reynolds (Ca.), Rodrigo Dornelles (Brz), Jay Thompson (Aust), Tiago Pires (Port), Aritz Aranburu (Euk), Adrian Buchan (Aust), Ben Bourgeois (Fla), Jihad Khodr (Brz), Kieren Perrow (Aust), Jeremy Flores (Fra), Roy Powers (Haw), CJ Hobgood (Fla), Heitor Alves (Brz), Mikael Picon (Fra), Adriano de Souza (Brz), Daniel Ross (Aus), Royden Bryson (ZAF).

Should Adrian Buchan, Royden Bryson and Adriano de Souza use their WCT results to qualify, then Dayyan Neve (Aust), Luke Munro (Aust), and Nic Muscroft (Aust) will join the WCT qualifiers list for 2008. Neve and Munro are also capable of qualifying via this year’s WCT ratings. Should they enter via the WCT rankings, along with Buchan, Bryson and de Souza, then Gabe Kling (Fla) and Shaun Cansdell (Aust) can make the 2008 WCT cut.

Competition now moves to Pipeline for the final stop of Series: the Billabong Pipeline Masters. The official holding period at Pipeline begins Saturday, December 8, and runs through December 20, 2007.

The $740,000 Vans Triple Crown of Surfing consists of the
Reef Hawaiian Pro, Haleiwa, Nov. 12-24 (6* WQS, men and women), the O’Neill World Cup of Surfing, Sunset Beach, Nov.25-Dec.6 (6*WQS men and WCT women), the Billabong Pipeline Masters (men), Pipeline, Dec. 8-20 (WCT) and Billabong Pro Maui (women), Honolua Bay, Maui, Dec. 8-20 (WCT).

In addition to $740,000 in prize money, both the men’s and women’s Vans Triple Crown champions will receive a limited edition $25,000 Chevy Colorado truck. The men’s champion will also receive a custom $10,000 Nixon watch.

All of the action of this year’s Vans Triple Crown of Surfing can be experienced live via the internet at: www.triplecrownofsurfing.com powered by surfspot.com.Additionally, surfline.com will be offering original daily content, and Surfing Magazine will provide a daily blog.

  Taj Burrow          

   Inside section at Sunset              

  Bruce Irons

 

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V-Land Session  

Wed Dec 05, 2007 at 07:15AM

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Time: 07:15 AM Cond: Semi-Clean Up Fun
Surf: 10ft+ Crowd:
Wind: Tides:
Scored some 15ft+ V-Land early... before it got stormy.  It should be cleaned up by the weekend with another NW swell rising from 5-12ft+

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The biggest swell to ever hit British Isles

Mon Dec 03, 2007 at 11:07PM

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SURFERS RIDE BIGGEST SWELL TO EVER HIT BRITISH & IRISH ISLES, RAISE THE BIG WAVE BAR IN THE PROCESS.

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 1 December, 2007 : - - As Ireland was battered today by the largest ocean swells ever predicted by the Marine Institute’s weather buoys (14 metres), a group of four surfers braved the stormy conditions to successfully take on the biggest waves ever ridden in the British and Irish Isles, off Mullaghmore Head, south Donegal Bay, Ireland.  Duncan Scott (Newquay, Cornwall, UK), Alistair Mennie (Portrush, N.Ireland), Gabe Davies (Newcastle, UK) and Ritchie Fitzgerald (Bundoran, Co. Donegal, Ireland) motored out at first light on two jetskis to await the arrival of the massive, storm-driven swells. 

With manageable winds forecasted for the early morning, ahead of the arrival of the full brunt of the storm, the surfers had a fleeting window for tide, wind and swell to coincide favourably. The session produced what appears to be the biggest ridden surf ever recorded in the British and Irish Isles. It was, for these surfers at least, the ‘perfect storm.’ 

‘You could wait years for another opportunity like this.  None of us have ever seen a more promising forecast to tow into some of the biggest waves of our lives,’ commented Portrush’s Mennie. The surfers had been watching the internet weather and swell forecasts for days in anticipation of the swell’s arrival.

According to surfing community website, Surfers Village, “Computer-generated wave forecasts, using information picked up on the Marine Weather Buoy Network, showed that waves with a significant height of up to 14m, about 45 feet, could occur in the seas to the west of Ireland were. Previously the biggest waves recorded by the Marine Institute's data buoys were at the M1 Buoy to the west of Galway Bay on 17 January 2005, waves of 13.4m, about 40 feet. 

The unique bathymetry of Mullagmore Head, where open-ocean swells jackknife up over a shallow reef ledge, magnifies these swells vertically. The deepwater volume and energy of the swell is forced upwards, translating into several wave faces ridden over the 60 foot mark.  The crew, all professional surfers and watermen, chose to utilise the jetskis as both launch vehicle, propelling them into the unbroken waves, and as a rescue tool. 

‘There is a physical size barrier to what size wave a person can paddle into by armpower alone, and today exceeded that limit – the waves just move too fast. We have trained extensively with the use of jetskis as rescue vessels to enable a safer approach to very demanding oceanic conditions,’ stated Scott, chairman of the British Towsurfing Association.  He added, ‘It was incredible to be out in the ocean with so much energy running through it. It was an unforgettable session.’ 

Combined with the technology was the surfers’ own dedication. Years of surfing development and travel to locations like Hawaii, Mavericks in Northern California and Dungeons, off Cape Town, South Africa, have fostered both an appreciation and respect for the oceans’ power. Today they returned to the beach buzzing with adrenaline, having successfully challenged a wrathful sea and surviving, and raising the big wave bar even higher. 

Recent surf spot discoveries like Aileens, beneath the imposing Cliffs of Moher, and today’s Mullagmore session have put Ireland’s big wave potential firmly on the global map.  In a reversal of traditional perceptions and travel routes to big wave locations, surfers from Hawaii, California, Australia and South Africa are now journeying to surf in Ireland. Today’s session will cement Ireland’s growing big wave reputation.

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