Lots of surf on tap in Hawaii
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WET AND WILD WITH ROCKIN’ FIG
More good weather and surf has hit Surf City beaches this last
week. Again, light Santa Ana wind conditions have left many a glassy
afternoon session, when normally, it’s heavy onshore winds.
Air temps have climbed to the 70s, unheard of in January. And the
El Nino storm track system has been downgraded because we haven’t
seen much rain or snow in our local mountains so far this year.
Over in Hawaii, they held the QuickSilver Masters World
Championships at Makaha Jan. 20 through 28. That’s where all the top
world tour standouts from yesteryear come together and surf it out
like old times.
In the Masters ages 35 to 44 division, some big ripping was going
on in the 4- to 6-foot good surf for the final. Aussie Gary Elkerton,
a runner-up to the world title numerous times, was in top form.
Elkerton met up with top-10 standout Brad Gerlach, a former
Huntington Beach resident, who was mowing through the rounds to set
up the showdown.
In the final, Elkerton was picking off the sets and throwing some
mean power carves in the pocket to take it. Elkerton, who never won a
title back in the 1980s, has come back to win three Masters world
titles in a row.
Gerlach, who was a runner-up in his younger days, too, was
runner-up again, placing second with 17.25 to 13.25. Gerlach had some
great exchanges, and some surfers were saying that, the way he was
surfing in the event, he could be in the top 20 right now.
Equal thirds went to Aussies Robbie Bain, one of the fiercest
competitors ever, and the 1989 champ Martin Potter. Equal fifth was
former U.S. Champ from San Clemente Mike Parsons, four-time world
champ from Santa Barbara Tom Curren and former world champs
Australian Barton Lynch and Hawaiian Derek Ho, who has won the Triple
Crown too many times to count.
In the Grand Masters Division, big ripping was going on too. The
‘78 world champ and Assn. of Surfing Professionals President Wayne
“Rabbit” Bartholomew had a great run and met up with the legendary
Mark Richards, a four-time world champ ’79 through ‘82, in the final.
Rabbit got on a roll and took the 45-and-older win with a decisive
victory, 17.50 to 13.40, in the action-packed final too. Bartholomew
and Richards were getting compliments on the art of surfing they were
displaying throughout the event.
Placing equal third were Hawaiians Buzzy Kerbox, who has moved on
to big-time modeling, and Bobby Owens, the ’98 Grandmasters winner
and Sunset Beach Hawaii standout. Equal fifths were former world
champ from South Africa the “Ambassador” Shaun Tomson, Hawaiian Pipe
dominator Michael Ho and Australian veterans Terry Richardson and
Paul Nielson.
Honorable mention goes to Surf City resident and the 1976 word
champion, “P.T.” Peter Townend, who lost out in round three, as did
former Seal Beach ripper Marty Thomas, who was in the top 16 four
times in his career.
See ya.
* RICK FIGNETTI is a seven-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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