Money lull grips surf series
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Bryce Alderton
An eight-year Huntington Beach surfing tradition faces a nasty wipeout
this year unless organizers can find a new sponsor.
The professional portion of the Huntington Beach Pro/Am Surf Series
may be canceled unless owner and event director Seth Matson can find
another blanket, or main, sponsor in the next three to four weeks to
replace Hurley International, which was the event’s blanket sponsor for
three years.
Hurley backed out in January, Matson said, for reasons he doesn’t
know. He said he is still waiting for a return phone call from Hurley.
“I never heard back from them,” Matson said. “Hurley agreed to do it
and changed their mind in January.”
Hurley representatives could not be reached for comment.
Matson still hopes to have amateur competitions if he can’t find
another blanket sponsor.
A blanket sponsor typically spends more than $100,000 on permits,
prizes, trophies, insurance and cash prizes for all four competition
dates, Matson said.
Matson and friends Andy Williams and Everett Gesford started the
Pro/Am Surf Series in 1994, as an event where children could surf
alongside professionals.
“It takes kids off the streets for the weekend and gets them to look
forward to something every month,” Matson said.
Huntington Beach surfer Jeff Deffenbaugh, who has won the Pro/Am
division the last three years, said he would be disappointed if parts of
the series had to be canceled.
“It’s a great place for everybody to compete, it’s not just an
ordinary contest,” Deffenbaugh said. “Seth does a good job of bringing
lots of guys that wouldn’t do competition out to the ocean. Pros come
from all over like San Diego and Ventura. Sure they come for the money,
but it’s a fun contest.”
In 1994, the competition had only three divisions. Since then, the
event has expanded to offer 11 different divisions for men’s and women’s
professionals and amateurs in age groups ranging from 7 to 40, Matson
said.
The series is United States Surfing Federation sanctioned and surfers
that finish among the top four overall are eligible to surf in the USF
surfing championships.
The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have caused surf companies to scale
back their budgets significantly, Matson said.
“We’re looking for someone to save the day, be our knight in shining
armor,” Matson said.
Deffenbaugh has also noticed a reluctance in surf companies sponsoring
events.
“It’s becoming a heavy task, almost like pulling teeth trying to get
sponsors,” Deffenbaugh said. “Surf companies have thousands of dollars
but seem to turn their backs, not wanting to give any of it back in the
way of competition.”
But not all surf companies have had to scale back their budgets since
September.
Quicksilver hasn’t had to pull out of its core events, such as the
Eddie at California Big Wave Event and the Men Who Ride Mountains at
Maverick’s event, said Geoff Bremmer, the company’s marketing
coordinator.
“Overall we haven’t had a budget reduction or pulled out of too much
of anything,” Bremmer said. “Core events are still scheduled to run. It
hasn’t come to the event level.”
Possible blanket sponsors Matson is hoping to nail down include
Coca-Cola, General Motors, Nokia, Virgin Records and Wal-Mart.
Tentative competition dates for the 2002 series are May 2-5, June 6-9,
July 11-14 and Sept. 5-8.
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