Suddenly Summer: No waves like home
Richard Dunn
When the two biggest surfing contests on the U.S. mainland are hosted by
neighboring Huntington Beach in July, many of the top local surfers will
follow their heat, grabbing their boards and heading down Coast Highway
for more wave-catching thrills.
For years, since the Op Pro Surfing Championship was launched in 1982,
pro surfers like Richie Collins, Todd Miller and Troy Eckert would remove
their colored competitor’s jerseys, towel off, pack up their cars and
head off in search of freedom from the competition and, in the minds of
many, even better waves.
They drive south less than four miles to the south side of the Santa Ana
River, then unload and surf the breaks at 56th and 58th streets in
Newport Beach.
While it might be sacrilege to say Newport’s swells provide better rides
for surfers than nationally renowned Surf City, those with an ardent
opinion who frequent the popular West Newport breaks wouldn’t trade their
home shores for anybody else’s.
“There are better waves in Newport than Huntington Beach, more
high-performance waves,” said Pat Towersey, a Newport Harbor High senior
and standout in the junior circuit.
“There are more barrels ... more tubes. Maybe it’s because of the way the
sand forms at Newport. [The length of the sand from the shore to the
sidewalk] is not as far out as Huntington Beach, and the waves are not
really as mushy.”
Known more for the largest recreation-only harbor in the country, Newport
Beach has a unique graduating scale of surfers along the jetties on the
west side, starting at about 22nd Street north of the Newport Pier, where
mostly beginners surf.
“The higher the street, the better the ability,” said Scott Morlan, a
longtime surf instructor for the city of Newport Beach and a teacher and
surf coach at Newport Harbor High. “You tend to get smaller swells
[closer to the pier]. We start our lessons at about 36th Street, then,
when the kids get better, they graduate to the bigger streets.”
With a surfing history as funky as any town with warm water, good surf
and a mild year-round climate, Newport Beach has also produced several
pros, including Collins, who was once rated fourth in the world.
Collins, Miller, Eckert, David Giddings, Todd Morcom, Brad Dougherty,
Maikai Makena, Cordell Miller, Dave Post and James Crush are the most
recent locals to surf professionally, while Costa Mesa’s Veronica Kay
made it big on the women’s circuit, primarily as a model.
“She was going to make our girls surf team really hot, then she got
famous as a Roxy Girl,” Morlan said. “She had her chance and took it. ...
when she started out on the team [two years ago], we were winning
everything, and when she left, we were just pretty good. Now she’s
surfing at exotic places and I’m sure she’s making good money.”
While the city of Huntington Beach prepares for the Blue Torch Pro
(formerly the Op Pro) July 19-23 and the U.S. Open of Surfing July 24-30,
devotees of the celebrated West Newport breaks believe Surf City has
nothing on them in terms of producing quality surfers and offering
excellent waves.
“There are a lot of really good surfers who come from Newport -- pros and
amateurs both,” said Towersey, who plans to attend Loyola Marymount in
the fall and major in business.
Another top junior surfer, Costa Mesa’s Joe Alani, said “Huntington Beach
sometimes has mushier waves and the breaks are farther out. Newport is
kind of a quick, faster wave. It’s more high-performance, and sometimes
there are more barrels around Newport.
“I’d rather surf Newport, but that’s because I grew up here. I just like
it better. Sometimes, it’s not as crowded as Huntington Pier.”
At Newport Harbor, Morlan teaches a surf class in the spring semester and
coaches the surf team in the fall. The surf team was once a club sport,
but Morlan said the program is now a lettered sport that competes in the
Sea View League with Los Alamitos and Laguna Beach, and emphasizes
balance in the students’ lives.
“It started off as this maverick sport, with surfers [having a
reputation] for throwing parties and causing trouble, but there’s not
that problem anymore because we try to hold the kids accountable,” Morlan
said. “They’re neat kids. Some of them are working hard on their grades
to be on the team because (academic achievement is mandatory). For some,
their life is surfing and school is hard, but we’re trying to get balance
in their lives.
“When you don’t get an education, it really screws you up. I really push
the kids. We have a lot of really super students, like Pat Towersey ...
kids who have taken care of business. Now, he has options.”
No one from Newport or Costa Mesa surfs full-time on the 2000 Association
of Surfing Professionals Tour, but many will be in competition this
summer at the Blue Torch Pro and U.S. Open of Surfing.
Collins captured the 1989 Op Pro championship, toppling the world’s best
surfers in what is still considered in local lore as the single-greatest
triumph for an area competitor.
The Rusty Newport Pro-Am held every September is the largest surfing
contest in Newport Beach, featuring pros and amateurs riding the breaks
at 54th and 56th streets -- depending on conditions. The event is
sanctioned as a World Qualifying Series contest with more than $20,000 in
cash and prizes.
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