Surf and school
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Mike Sciacca
Bron Heussenstamm calls Laguna Beach home.
But in essence, he’s comfortable anywhere in the world.
Heussenstamm, a very successful surfer, has traveled the globe in
search of perfect surf, prize money and all important ratings points
as he continues to ride the wave of his third year on the World
Qualifying Series tour.
His journeys have taken him to the shores of South Africa, the
Hawaiian Islands, throughout Europe, the Far East and to Tahiti.
Next week, though, he’s sticking closer to home as he contends for
the 2002 Men’s Division title at the Philips Fusion U.S. Open of
Surfing at the Huntington Beach Pier.
This is the sixth time the 1997 Laguna Beach High graduate has
competed in the Mainland’s largest surfing extravaganza.
His best finish was fourth place in the Billabong Pro Junior
competition in 1999. That placing came a month after he finished in
fourth place at the National Scholastic Surf Assn.’s Men’s Division
national championships.
“It seems like I’m surfing one contest or another, whether it’s
here in the states or overseas,” the 22-year-old said. “It’s pretty
hectic, but I like it like that way.”
As Heussenstamm continues to prepare for the U.S. Open of Surfing
and a busy summer surfing schedule, he’s also getting ready for the
upcoming school year.
He’ll be entering his second semester at Saddleback College at the
end of August, with plans of working toward an academic scholarship
and a transfer to USC, he said.
“I want to show others that you can go to college and still surf,”
he said. “Both are very important to me.”
It’s that balance -- between surfing the big contests and
remaining focused on education, that Heussenstamm seems to have
mastered.
He not only takes his board with him on his surfing excursions but
avoids the trappings of exotic travel by taking his school books.
The business major continues to learn about the world firsthand as
he travels it.
“We travel so much, and it’s easy to get caught up in the surfing
lifestyle,” he said.
Heussenstamm, who says he first surfed as a sixth-grader but
didn’t really get into the sport until he was 15 -- “When I got my
license, that was it, I was hooked,” -- surfs by day and takes night
classes at Saddleback.
He says he’ll miss the start of the fall semester due to a
rigorous surfing schedule that finds him first at the U.S. Open, then
flying off to Europe for four consecutive contests -- three in
France, one in Portugal. Then it’s back home to Laguna Beach before
departing for New Jersey and another contest. He’ll come home one
more time before leaving for a contest in Japan.
He welcomes the chance to stay close to home to surf the big
contest at Huntington Beach.
Heussenstamm, Mike Todd and Pat O’Connel are three Laguna Beach
athletes vying for the 2002 U.S. Open title.
They’ll be part of a stacked division featuring the world’s top
male surfers.
The Open is a six-star rated event and offers a $100,000 total
prize package, a $10,000 winner’s purse and offers competitors the
largest points allocation of any Mainland event in 2002.
Such surfing luminaries fighting for the title include defending
champion Rob Machado, reigning world champion C.J. Hobgood and former
world champions Kelly Slater and Sunny Garcia.
“The U.S. Open of Surfing has such an international flavor and the
caliber of men’s competitors is phenomenal,” said James Leitz, vice
president of Image Marketing Group, which stages Philips Fusion and
the U.S. Open of Surfing.
“But it’s the local angle that makes this event what it is, and
surfers like Bron Heussenstamm make the men’s field even stronger.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. He can be reached at 494-4321 or by e-mail at
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