Heussenstamm makes waves
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Mike Sciacca
Bron Heussenstamm has been surfing like there’s no tomorrow.
Perhaps that’s because he knows that one setback, one slip-up, and
he’ll be out of contention for one of surfing’s most coveted titles.
With the meat of the Bank of the West Beach Games featuring the
Honda U.S. Open of Surfing Presented by O’Neill now in session at the
Huntington Beach Pier, Heussenstamm joined fellow Laguna Beach
professional surfers in the men’s division main draw.
The 24-year-old surfed two heats on both Sunday and Tuesday and
emerged victorious in all four to advance to Thursday’s Round of 96.
O’Connell had an automatic berth in Thursday’s Round of 96.
The 32-year-old, currently ranked 18th in the world, surfed the
second heat in the Round of 96 on Thursday.
He’s seeded 107th in the U.S. Open of Surfing.
A third Laguna surfer, Mike Todd, did not advance past Wednesday’s
competitions and was eliminated from title contention.
By today, the men’s field will have been whittled to the Round of
64.
The men’s final is slated for Sunday at 12:40 p.m.
Heussenstamm, a business major who returns to school at USC in
late August, says the U.S. Open of Surfing has been on his mind for
some time.
“I’ve been thinking about competing all during this past school
year,” he said. “For not having competed on a regular basis because
of school, I felt really confident out in the water.”
Heussenstamm credited “being patient” with wave selection in
helping him get through one tough heat.
But the waves -- or lack of them -- did Todd in.
Todd needed a score of 3.9 or better on one final wave in his
20-minute heat, but no substantial swell rolled in during the final
eight minutes of his heat, he said.
“It’s was just tough luck out there,” Todd said. “Luck just wasn’t
on my side.”
Tuesday’s competition saw Dane Reynolds of Ventura and Pat
Gadauskas of San Clemente make a statement for the sport’s youth
movement, which figures to present a stiff challenge to veteran pros
like O’Connell, Carlsbad’s Taylor Knox and Cardiff’s Rob Machado in
the battle for the men’s title.
Reynolds finished ahead of Gadauskas in an intense heat Tuesday,
yet both advanced to Thursday’s Round of 96.
Lost Pro Junior, U.S. Open of Longboard semis fields set
Following three preliminary rounds of competition held earlier in
the week at the Huntington Beach Pier, the semifinal fields for the
Lost Junior Pro and U.S. Open of Longboarding has been set.
Joining Florida’s Jeremy Johnston in Saturday’s $10,000 Lost
Junior Pro semifinals is fellow Floridian Eric Taylor, Ben Dunn of
Australia, Brazil’s Adriano De Souza and Jean Da Silva and Hawaii’s
Kekoa Bacalso, Nathan Carroll and Dustin Cuizon.
Bacalso is the two-time defending junior champion.
In the U.S. Open of Longboarding, Colin McPhilips of Capistrano
Beach defeated former O’Neill U.S. Open of Longboarding multiple
champion Joel Tudor from Cardiff to advance to the quarterfinal
round.
In the quarterfinal round, McPhilips recorded the round’s highest
overall heat score, a 16.10, to advance to the semifinals.
Joining McPhilips in Sunday’s U.S. Open of Longboarding semifinals
is Malibu’s Zach Howard, Taylor Jensen of Imperial Beach, Josh Baxter
of San Clemente, Josh Constable and Brendan White.
A profile of Laguna Beach’s Bron Heussenstamm:
Age: 24
Hometown: Laguna Beach. Resides in Los Angeles at USC
High school: Laguna Beach (class of 1997)
Years as a professional surfer: Five
World ranking: “My rating has slipped due to being in college full
time. It will return upon graduation!”
Career highlights: First place at the World Qualifying Series
event at Morro Bay; two-time tour runner-up on the Pro Surfing Tour
of America; No. 3 in the U.S. in final amateur ranking; getting
accepted to USC.
Years competing at the U.S. Open of Surfing: Six
Best finish : “I got fourth-place in the Junior Pro at the U.S.
Open.”
What makes the U.S. Open in Huntington Beach so special?: “It’s a
special contest because I have been going down and watching it for as
long as I can remember. I have always wanted to do well there. I was
really fortunate to do well in the junior pro back in 2000 or so and
make the final. I would hope for a similar placing sometime in the
future in the pro division.
Is the caliber of world competitors getting better each year? “The
talent on tour is definitely getting better. Where you see it is down
in the low rounds. The caliber of surfing down in the trials has
really increased.”
Where would you like to see professional surfing go from where it
stands now? “I would like to see them expand on the top 44 feature to
include more surfers. There is only like six to 10 new surfers each
year going onto the tour. Our sport is getting too large for such a
small number. In major golf and tennis competitions there is usually
between 128 to 256.”
How often are you traveling worldwide for competitions? “Not as
much as I used to, with college now. I will be attending all of the
major ones this summer while I am out of school. After the U.S. Open,
I am headed to Europe for four weeks for four competitions. I will do
the entire tour for the first time in my career when I graduate in
2006.”
Final thoughts: “I just wanted to say that it is good to see
Laguna Beach getting behind its athletes. There is some special
talent from Laguna Beach in surfing right now. It’s amazing that
there are so many good surfers in Laguna for how small the town is.”
The Schedule
Today
8 a.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, Round 64 (heats 9-16)
9 a.m. - Soul Bowl (open practice)
9 a.m. - Volleyball, King & Queen of the Beach (qualifiers)
10:30 a.m. - Soul Bowl (Masters of Skate, qualifier)
11:20 a.m. - Honda Women’s U.S. Open of Surfing, quarterfinals
(heats 1-4) Noon - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
1 p.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, Round 64 (heats 1-8)
1 p.m. - Soul Bowl (Young Guns Skate, qualifier)
2 p.m. - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
3 p.m. - Soul Bowl (Women of Skate, practice)
3:30 p.m. - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
4:15 p.m. - Soul Bowl (BMX practice)
4:30 p.m. - Concert Stage (Greenbrier Lane performs)
6 p.m. - Concert Stage (Alien Ant Farm performs)
Saturday
8 a.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, Round 64 (heats 9-16)
8 a.m. - Volleyball, King and Queen of the Beach (semifinals,
finals)
8:30 a.m. - Soul Bowl (open practice)
10:30 a.m. - Soul Bowl (BMX practice)
11 a.m. - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
11:20 a.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, Round 32 (heats
1-8)
12:30 p.m. - Soul Bowl (BMX High Air Competition)
1 p.m. - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
2:30 p.m. - Soul Bowl (Women of Skate final)
2:40 p.m. - Honda Women’s U.S. Open of Surfing, semifinal No. 1
3:05 p.m. - Honda Women’s U.S. Open of Surfing, semifinal No. 2
3:30 p.m. - Soul Bowl (Masters of Skate final)
3:30 p.m. - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
3:50 p.m. - Lost Pro Junior, semifinal No. 1
4:10 p.m. - Honda Women’s U.S. Open of Surfing, finals
4:30 p.m. - Soul Bowl (Grand Masters of Skate)
4:30 p.m. - Concert Stage (Chronic Future performs)
6 p.m. - Concert Stage (TBA)
Sunday
8 a.m.. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, quarterfinals (heats
1-4)
8:30 a.m. - Soul Bowl (open practice)
9:40 a.m. - O’Neill U.S. Open of Longboarding, semifinal No. 1
10 a.m. - O’Neill U.S. Open of Longboarding, semifinal No. 2
10:20 a.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, semifinal No. 1
10:30 a.m. - Soul Bowl (Young Guns of Skate, final)
10:45 a.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, semifinal No. 2
11:10 a.m. - Paul Mitchell TWSA Expression Session, USO Surf
Stadium
11:40 a.m. - Lost Pro Junior, final
Noon - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
12:10 p.m. - O’Neill U.S. Open of Longboarding, final
12:15 p.m. - Soul Bowl (Longest Air Over the Hip; Skate - Best
Trick
12:40 p.m. - Honda Men’s U.S. Open of Surfing, final
1:30 p.m. - Soul Bowl (BMX practice)
1:30 p.m. - FMX Venue (FMX Demo)
2 p.m. - Soul Bowl (BMX Bowl Comp)
2:45 p.m. - Soul Bowl (BMX Hard Trick, Best Trick)
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