It’s anybody’s game
Mike Sciacca
Considered to be the most significant surf competition in the world,
the Honda Element U.S. Open of Surfing presented by O’Neill is the
biggest World Qualifying Series surfing competition in North America.
The 2003 U.S. Open Men’s event title is up for grabs and features
a field of outstanding surfers both from around the world and right
here in Huntington Beach.
The event, which began in 1959 as the U.S. Championships, has
grown on the international stage into the sport’s premiere event.
Names like Corky Carroll and David Nuuhiwa set the tone in the
1960s for competitors today.
Each year the men’s competition features standout performances but
the 1996 U.S. Open is widely considered to be one of the best
competition’s ever staged.
That year, Kelly Slater edged out Shane Beschen in a dramatic
showdown that went to the final buzzer.
Beschen is back once again to compete for supremacy and part of a
field that boasts the likes of Rob Machado and Andy Irons.
A look at some of the competitors in the 2003 U.S. Open men’s
competition:
KALANI ROBB
Surfing on a borrowed board, the Hawaiian sensation scored a
wire-to-wire victory last summer to claim his first U.S. Open of
Surfing crown and the $10,000 top prize that accompanied the title.
Known for his quick speed and maneuverability in the water, Kalani
Robb, 26, regularly won National Scholastic Surfing Assn.
championships while working his way from an amateur to the
professional ranks.
Robb, who hails from Oahu’s North Shore, has a reputation for
being a gambler and risk-taker when it comes to competition.
He received a hero’s welcome Sunday from the staff at the Hilton
Waterfront Beach Resort upon his arrival in Huntington Beach for the
2003 Philips Fusion.
CORY LOPEZ
Cory Lopez’s win at the 2001 Billabong Pro -- his first World
Championship Tour victory -- showed the surfing world that he can win
any contest he enters.
The native Floridian, 26, with a goofy-foot stance, said he
prefers to surf glassy barrels, barrels, he said, that “let you do an
air at the end.”
Lopez, a Team O’Neill rider, followed in the footsteps of his
successful brother, Shea, into the world of surfing. He has been
labeled a daredevil when it come to the sport and became known for
his extreme surfing and ability to gain incredible speed on a wave.
He said he’s anxious to make waves in Surf City.
“I love Huntington Beach,” he said. “The huge crowds, the great
competition -- it’s just a great venue for a great surfing event. I’m
ready to go.”
His brother, Shea, won the U.S. Open in 1999.
BRETT SIMPSON
The future looks bright for Surf City’s own Brett Simpson, a
standout in both junior and open division amateur competitions in
National Scholastic Surfing Assn. events.
Currently ranked No. 2 on the NSSA circuit, Simpson scored a
perfect 10 in his heat in the Open Mens Division on the fifth day of
the recent championships.
Simpson was a sensation at last summer’s U.S. Open, winning his
first five heats to advance to the round of 128 on his first excursion in the men’s event.
“It just seems like yesterday,” he said of last July’s
performance. “It was an incredible feeling to begin my first Open
with those wins. It gives me a lot of confidence heading into this
year’s event. It’s going to be a great competition.”
Simpson recently returned from Indonesia where he did a photo
shoot with seven other NSSA athletes for Surfing magazine.
The 18-year-old, who graduated in June from Huntington Beach High,
is the son of former Los Angeles Rams safety, Bill Simpson.
He will compete in both the U.S. Open Men’s and Pro Junior
competitions.
“I’m pretty confident,” Simpson said of his first heat, which he
will surf Friday morning. “I know I can do well again.”
BRANDON TIPTON
Brandon Tipton reached the professional ranks after graduating
from Huntington Beach High in 1999.
The 22-year-old will be competing in his third U.S. Open Men’s
event and has two Pro Junior appearances to his credit.
His best finish was fourth at the 2001 Pro Junior.
“It’s exciting to have the world’s biggest surfing event right
here in my backyard,” he said. “I definitely know the wave here and I
will try to use that to my advantage.”
“Tippy,” as he is called by friends, won the 1999 National
Scholastic Surfing Assn.’s Explorer Season in 1999 and, during his
senior year at Huntington Beach High, was the MVP of the Sunset
League and won the league’s All-Star tournament.
He is currently in his first year doing the World Qualifying
Series with hopes of landing a Top 44 ranking -- which would qualify
him for the World Championship Tour.
Heading into the U.S. Open, Tipton said he’s ranked No. 110.
“I’m just now getting my feet wet, so to speak, and chasing the
points on the WQS,” he said. “But I’m stoked for the U.S. Open.
“I think to be successful I’ll need to be patient and have good
wave selection. I can’t get too excited, just take it heat by heat.
That’s my game plan.”
TIMMY REYES
Edison High graduate Timmy Reyes began surfing Huntington Beach as
a young boy and continues to surf the city he calls home.
Reyes entered several amateur contests and went on to win several
National Scholastic Surfing Assn. individual championships.
He as been a strong contender since joining the World Qualifying
Series two years ago.
At the 2002 Newcastle Pro held in Australia, he placed seventh
among the world surfing champions.
The 21-year-old competed is a rider for Team O’Neill.
Last year, Reyes, whom fellow competitors say has a natural
talent, competed at the U.S. Open despite a hernia operation.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.