Jeff Deffenbaugh, Jamie OâBrien and Ilima Kalama inducted into Surfersâ Hall of Fame
Longtime Huntington Beach High School surfing coach Andy Verdone remembers when Jeff Deffenbaugh graduated from Dwyer Middle School and entered high school.
Verdone put Deffenbaugh on varsity immediately. He saw the freshman win many heats, but he believes true character was revealed when he lost one.
âThatâs when you know someoneâs got it,â Verdone told the crowd assembled at Friday morningâs Surfersâ Hall of Fame induction ceremony. âYou look them in the eye and they take the loss hard. They donât say anything. They internalize it, they go back and they work it out. He hates to lose, but heâs a great winner, Jeff Deffenbaugh.â
Deffenbaugh was one of three surf standouts honored in the 2024 class. Hawaiian surfers Ilima Kalama and Jamie OâBrien also put their hands and feet into the wet cement in front of Huntington Surf & Sport, as per Surfersâ Hall of Fame tradition.
Deffenbaugh represented Huntington Beach on the big stage throughout the 1990s. He won seven professional titles, including the Katin Pro-Am crown in 1992 and â98.
Nowadays he continues to give back to the next generation through the Huntington Beach Boardriders Club. This year, he also served as the surfing grand marshal at the annual Fourth of July parade.
Two-time U.S. Open of Surfing champion and Surf City local Brett Simpson, who served as emcee of Fridayâs ceremony, said Deffenbaugh has always made a big impression on him.
âHe just turned 51 and he still goes out there and drops nines with ease,â Simpson said. âEveryone goes, âHow does he get the waves?â Iâm like, âI donât know, just watch him, he knows where to go sit.ââ
Deffenbaugh, during his comments, gave advice to his children.
âIt does move fast,â he said. âYou guys gotta follow your passion, stay focused and stay true to yourself, too. Sometimes you have to bend a little bit in life, but just donât break, OK?â
Kalama, originally from Oahu, moved to Newport Beach with his family at age 16 and immediately made his mark on the mainland. Serving as a Huntington Beach lifeguard, he won the West Coast Surfing Championship in 1962, the eventual predecessor to the U.S. Open of Surfing.
After returning to Hawaii, he came back to California and relocated to Costa Mesa, where he still lives.
Corky Carroll, who also competed in that 1962 contest, offered some thoughts on Kalama during Fridayâs festivities.
âIt was the first year the surf was really big and gnarly,â Carroll said. âIt was like 10 feet, it was blown out ⌠nobody could ride it except for Ilima. He was like this royal Hawaiian kind of dude, with a beautiful stance and just shredding through the pier like it was nothing.â
OâBrien, 41, has the nickname âJOB.â He won the 2004 Pipeline Masters â at 21 years of age â but ended up earning more notoriety as a free surfer, as well as with a very successful YouTube channel.
âWhat an icon to the sport,â Simpson said. âIs there a more barreled surfer in the world? I donât think so.â
OâBrien said when he got an email about being inducted into the Surfersâ Hall of Fame, at first the family didnât think it was real.
âA couple of days later, it was like, âOh, I think this email might be real,ââ he said with a laugh. âThe way they reached out to us was kind of cool. I felt like they could have just asked Brett Simpson, âHey, can you hit up Jamie?â But maybe Brett didnât want to talk to me. He still owes me a board.â
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