Kanoa Igarashi, Courtney Conlogue claim second U.S. Open of Surfing titles
Epic.
There is simply no other way to describe the final minutes of the final heat on the final day of the U.S. Open of Surfing on the south side of the Huntington Beach Pier on Sunday.
Huntington Beachâs Kanoa Igarashi and San Clementeâs Griffin Colapinto found themselves in a âcan you top thisâ menâs championship heat, with Igarashi ultimately getting the best of Colapinto in the Qualifying Series 10,000-point event.
The womenâs final pitted the worldâs No. 1-ranked Stephanie Gilmore, a six-time world champion, against Santa Anaâs Courtney Conlogue, who is just getting back from a broken foot. Conlogue came out on top in the final, winning her second U.S. Open, nine years after her first one in 2009. The contest was the Championship Tour event for the women.
For Igarashi, the victory was his second in a row, matching fellow Huntington Beach native Brett Simpson as the only back-to-back menâs U.S. Open winners.
âLast year I called it the best day of my life; this is probably better than that,â said Igarashi who took home a $100,000 first-place prize. âTwo times in a row is crazy. No matter what you do, doing it twice is really hard. Itâs the extra pressure and the extra sets of eyes on you, but I lapped it up and loved it. That extra pressure is what fired me up and motivated me.â
With thousands watching from the sand and on the Huntington Beach Pier, Igarashi and Colapinto engaged in a surfersâ version of a shootout in 3-4 foot waves. However, because there were no waves ridden in the first 10 minutes of the 35-minute heat, the heat was restarted.
Then at the 27-minute mark, Colapinto got the first wave and rode it to shore, hitting several maneuvers along the way to put up an 8.00. Igarashi countered with a 7.60, but Colapinto backed up his 8.00 with a 7.00 as the clocked ticked under the 10-minute mark.
Last year I called it the best day of my life; this is probably better than that.
— Kanoa Igarashi, two-time U.S. Open of Surfing champion
Time continued to tick away, Igarashi needing a 7.41 to move ahead of Colapinto. Then it happened â with just two minutes remaining, a set wave rolled in and Igarashi hammered it to an 8.17. Colapinto, though, wasnât finished. Needing a 7.78 to move back ahead, he caught a mid-break wave with three seconds remaining, but it was scored a 6.33, allowing Igarashi to take the title, 15.77-15.00.
âI didnât really get a turn on the outside, so the wave let me down a little,â Colapinto said of his last-second opportunity. âSo I was hoping for a huge section on the inside, and I did get a section but it didnât have the meat on the bone that I was hoping for.â
Igarashi and Colapinto, both 20 years old, are no strangers. They met in the U.S. Open Junior menâs final in 2015, with Colapinto coming out on top. And they go back even further, competing against each other in National Scholastic Surfing Assn. contests when they were as young as 9 and 10 years old.
âIâd call it a rivalry at this point,â said Colapinto, who is in his first year on the CT and currently ranked No. 10 in the world. âI want to beat him more than anything. I think we might be in the same heat together in Tahiti [the next CT contest starting next week], so itâs back on, you know?â
âFor sure, we push each other,â said Igarashi, ranked No. 17. âHe just showed how much we bring out of each other. He did his best surfing, I did my best surfing, and he brought the best out of me, so Iâm thankful for that.â
In the womenâs final, it was an emotional victory for Conlogue, whose world championship hopes were dashed early in the year when she suffered a broken foot in training. She missed four events, then returned to the CT last month at J-Bay in South Africa, finishing 13th.
But the Sage Hill High School graduate knows Huntington Beach well, surfing the break all her life, and she smashed through all her heats throughout the contest like a locomotive.
Conlogue had already taken out No. 2 Lakey Peterson in the quarterfinals, before beating No. 1 Gilmore in the final, 13.83-11.86, and taking home the $60,000 first-place prize. It is Conlogueâs second U.S. Open title, the last one coming in 2009 when she was just 16.
âHonestly, itâs different,â Conlogue said when asked to compare the two. âThe one in 2009 was quite amazing for that point in my life. And now this one has its own pinnacle for me. Iâm coming off an injury and itâs the first event Iâve actually felt 100%.â
Paddling to shore after the win to a jubilant crowd of friends, family and fans, Conlogue felt a rush of emotions.
âJoy, relief, so much happiness, thankfulness and just lots of cheer,â she said with a giggle.
In the BMX Pro Cup finals, Dennis Enarson of San Diego won the menâs event and Nikita Ducarroz of San Marcos won the womenâs event.
JOE HAAKENSON is a Huntington Beach-based sports writer and editor. He may be reached at [email protected].
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