Hot here, hot on tour
RICK FIGNETTI
It looks like a late Indian summer week here in Surf City for
October, with some scorching air temps at the beaches, which climbed
into the 80s. So sun worshipers are loving it, with sunny skies and a
combo that, with a blast of west swell again, gave overhead sets in
the lineup. Water temps are in the mid-60s too, giving us pretty epic
conditions for this time of year at our local beaches.
Heading up north this week will be the Foster’s U.S. Surfing Tour
for its final stop of the 2003 season.
This year the prize money and champions bonuses have pushed the
total purse money to more than $500,000. The two-star $30,000 dollar
O’Neill Cold Water Classic started Wednesday at Steamer Lane, Santa
Cruz, with trials action for the best in the nation and a few top
overseas pros flying in, looking to nab a few more World Qualifying
Series points.
It will run till Sunday’s finals.
This will determine our new national champions that have surfed
events on the east and west coasts of the United States. The last
event that was scheduled for the Outer Banks on the Foster’s tour was
canceled as Hurricane Isabel did the most damage in the last 50 years
to parts of the coastline and raised a lot of havoc to the contest
area.
The other event, the Rip Curl Heritage Pro in Sea Isle City in New
Jersey, saw the points leader, former tour star Rob Machado of
Cardiff, take the win, with Huntington Beach hottie Timmy Reyes
finishing second.
The “Mob,” Rob Machado, does have a substantial lead in the
Foster’s points race, but Reyes, one of our most promising rising
stars from Huntington on the WQS is in second.
East Coast ripper Ben Bourgeois is third; Bobby Martinez is in
fourth; hot Aussie Heath Walker is fifth, while the “Whiz Kid from
HB” Brett Simpson is sixth.
Hawaiian Roy Powers is in seventh, and last year’s overall points
winner, U.S. champ Jessie Merle Jones, is in eighth.
In the women’s, Australian Pru Jeffries is holding down first with
Hawaiian Melanie Bartels knocking on the door in second. Third is
Palos Verde’s new TV star from “Boarding House,” Holly Beck, with
local gal Surfside’s Jodie Nelson fourth, Julia Christian of Carlsbad
fifth, ripper Carmen Buecher sixth and Newport’s young up-and-comer,
Governor’s Cup winner at the national’s Erica Hosseini seventh.
Good luck to the rest of the local shredders in the chilly waters.
Over in Europe at the Billabong Pro at Mundaka, Spain, Hawaiian
Andy Irons, the winner of the last surf contest in France and points
leader, suffered a first round shocking loss and is out.
Six-time world champ, Kelly Slater, second in the standings, will
gain some ground on Irons, after winning his heat, as did Oxnard’s
Timmy Curran and Hawaiian Kalani Robb.
Some bad news is Laguna Beach’s Pat O’Connell tore some ligaments
in his knee during his heat and had to leave the water early,
suffering a loss. Every event is getting more crucial to requalify
for next year.
Hopefully he’ll be back for Brazil, which is next up on the world
championship tour.
That’s it for now. Fig over and out, see ya.
* 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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