Aussie is awesome at U.S. Open of Surfing
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Mike Sciacca
Although Pat O’Connell felt he hadn’t reached his potential at the
Honda U.S. Open of Surfing presented by O’Neill, the Laguna Beach
athlete’s performance at the Huntington Beach Pier last weekend was
more than enough to turn some heads.
O’Connell was impressive in riding his way into the men’s
quarterfinal round, where his bid to win his first U.S. Open title
ended.
The men’s winner was Australian Taj Burrow, whose score on a
last-minute wave Sunday catapulted him from third place to his first
U.S. Open victory.
“Huntington Beach, man, you gotta love it,” said a soaking wet and
obviously elated Taj Burrow, as he emerged from the water, moments
after winning the event.
Burrow finished second to winter Cory Lopez of Florida in last
year’s men’s final.Lopez was third, overall, in Sunday’s final.
Burrow and Lopez were trailing front-runner Trent Munro of
Australia in the waning moments of a 30-minute heat fought out in
front of an estimated record crowd of 100,000 at the Huntington Beach
Pier.
But Burrow, who hails from western Australia, was the lone rider
on the last big break of the heat, and his score of 7.03 in the final
minutes was enough to catapult him past fellow Aussie Munro into
first place.
“I tell ya, mate, this is pretty awesome,” said Burrow, suddenly
surrounded by a media blitz that included television and newspaper
reporters from around the world. “It was anybody’s game and that last
wave was just enough to get me to the top.
“I was second last year, so to go one up and win the title this
year feels fantastic. This is one of the biggest contests in the
world, and it feels pretty good right now.”
He won $15,000 for his first-place finish.
Munro finished second, Lopez placed third and Hawaii’s Frederick
Patacchia, who was making his first appearance in a men’s final,
finished in fourth-place.
The U.S. Open men’s division started last Saturday with 272
competitors and more than 100 alternates.
O’Connell blazed his way into the Round of 32 with solid surfing.
The 32-year-old had defeated eventual finalist Munro, 13.67 points
to 12.50, in a heat July 30.
“It seemed like the smaller waves were better shaped,” O’Connell
said. “The large waves were really hard to ride.”
In the Round of 32, O’Connell finished second in a heat won by
Munro.
O’Connell finished ahead of third-place Mark Occhilupo of
Australia, who was inducted July 30 into the Surfers’ Hall of Fame,
and fourth-place Shane Beschen of San Clemente.
“Honestly, I felt I hadn’t surfed to my potential during the U.S.
Open,” O’Connell said. “I never felt that I really linked into a
heat. I talked to Taj just before he paddled out for the final, and
he also said he felt he hadn’t surfed to his potential, either.
“You just have to hang in there, and Taj came up with the wave
score when it counted most.”
Laguna’s Bron Heussenstamm had emerged through four heats in a
two-day period to reach the men’s Round of 96.
Mike Todd, also of Laguna, was eliminated from title contention on
July 28.
Sunday’s surfing finals capped a nine-day stretch of the Bank of
the West Beach Games at the pier that drew more than 600 world class
athletes and featured competition in skateboarding, BMX riding, men’s
and women’s volleyball and freestyle motocross demonstrations.
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