Category Contest News

Burrow and Gilmore Claim Quiksilver and Roxy Pro Gold Coast, Take ASP World Title Race Leads 0

The final day of the Quiksilver and Roxy Pro Gold Coast presented by Land Rover culminated today with perennial ASP World Title threat Taj Burrow (AUS), 33, and four-time ASP Women’s World Champion Stephanie Gilmore (AUS), 24, taking the respective wins in clean two-to-three foot (1 metre) waves at the primary venue of Snapper Rocks.

The opening stop on the 2012 ASP World Championship Tour, the Quiksilver and Roxy Pro Gold Coast enjoyed sunny weather, light winds and a capacity crowd for the final day of competition, with the world’s best surfers putting on a spectacular display of high-performance surfing.

Burrow defeated dangerous South American Adriano De Souza (BRA), 25, in a Final that came down to the wire. De Souza caught a wave in the dying minutes and launched into a massive air-reverse, requiring a 7.87 out of a possible 10 to take the lead. The judges deliberated until after the siren sounded and when it was announced that De Souza came a mere 0.27 short, Burrow was chaired up the beach and declared the 2012 Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast champion.

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Is the Surfing Industry Pushing the ASP into the “Kiddie Pool” of City Waves? 0

This story comes from the Wall Street Journal:

As the sport of surfing swells, a battle is brewing between profits and waves.

Under pressure from corporate sponsors keen to sell board shorts and other surfing paraphernalia to the mass market, surfers are turning away from monster waves off remote islands to compete in coastal cities such as New York and San Francisco, where the waters are tamer. Leading surfers in the most recent tour event in late February vied to become Australian Open Champion on Sydney’s Manly beach—a playground for amateur surfers, but where waves rarely rise more than several feet high.

The shift is at odds with surfing’s rugged image of men and women defying 20-foot (six-meter) waves as depicted in documentaries, novels and even given a Hollywood gloss in movie blockbusters such as the 1991 film “Point Break.”

While sensitive to charges the sport is selling out, professional surfers say holding competitions in relatively benign waters near big cities is a necessary change. Surfing’s ability to attract the next generation of wave-riders is being challenged by the rise of other extreme sports. City events allow surfing to broaden its appeal by including skateboarding contests and musical acts such as performances by MGMT and Jimmy Eat World at last year’s U.S. Open of Surfing in California.

Money is also driving the change. Grand-prize purses are meager by the standards of professional sport, where even winning a tour event rarely brings in a paycheck of more than $75,000, leaving most tour surfers dependent on endorsements. That frequently means showing up at events on the doorstep of sponsors’ core customer base. And the most decorated surfer in history, Kelly Slater, with 30 major victories since 1991, has banked prize money of just $3 million. The total prize money for the Pipe Masters, one of the biggest tournaments of the year, is only $320,000.

“The sport should be about crowning champions, even if the industry is about selling board shorts. It’s a tough marriage to work out sometimes,” said Hall of Famer Wayne “Rabbit” Bartholomew, the charismatic 55-year-old former World Surfing Champion immortalized in the award-winning documentary “Bustin Down the Door.”

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Billabong Pro Jeffreys Bay Downgrades from ASP World Title to ASP 6-Star for 2012 0

Feb24

The Billabong Pro Jeffreys Bay, Event No. 5 of 11 on the 2012 ASP World Championship Tour, has been officially downgraded to an ASP 6-Star event for 2012.

In an official statement today, Billabong said: “The change in event status follows a broader review in which we are seeking to identify cost savings throughout the business. By retaining an event at Jeffreys Bay, it now provides two qualifying events back to back in the South African region. The move to an ASP 6-Star also opens the event up to South Africa’s aspiring pro surfers for the first time in 20 years and ensures continuity of the event for the local businesses in Jeffreys Bay.”

The downgrade drops the 2012 ASP World Championship Tour calendar from 11 events to 10, with surfers now counting their best 8 out of 10 results towards their ASP World Title ranking.

“We agreed as a Board that whilst very regrettable, the commercial realities are such that a pragmatic approach by ASP at this time seemed sensible,” Richard Grellman, ASP Executive Chairman, said. “Billabong have been long-time supporters of professional surfing and still sponsor three of the ten World Championship Tour events and we look forward to our deep relationship with them continuing.”

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