The Goldenwest Street gang
Mike Sciacca
Two days before the 2003 Philips Fusion began, as the city braced for
an influx of surfing competitors from across the world, a group of 19
from the local men’s talent pool gathered at the beach near
Goldenwest Street to hone their competitive skills.
It was to be a simple yet effective workout for these 19
professional surfers, among them Danny Nichols, who had brainstormed
with some of his surf buddies the idea of forming a couple of surf
sessions as a group.
Their mission, the 23-year-old said, was to “band together” before
the start of the nation’s biggest surf contest.
“The idea was to put a workout together where we could coach each
other in an effort to make each other better competitors,” said
Nichols, a Huntington Beach resident and 1997 graduate of Huntington
Beach High. “I surf with these guys on a daily basis here in
Huntington. We’re all friends, and there is so much talent here. I
just thought it’d be great to pump each other up for the U.S. Open.”
All 19 of the surfers who gathered at Goldenwest Street the
Thursday before Saturday’s preliminary trials began, Nichols said,
will compete at the U.S. Open. A few, he added, also will surf the
Junior Pro event.
Their morning workout, which lasted 3 1/2 hours, included three
five-man heats and one four-man heat. With each competitive heat,
surfers not in that particular heat sat together on the beach and
judged their peers in the water.
The top 10 surfers with the highest point total at the conclusion
of the heats advanced to the next round.
“It was great to pick up some tips from the other guys” Nichols
said. “Everybody seemed psyched for this. We’re all so competitive,
but we’re friends, so we help each other out. Judging each other, and
being judged by your friends, is a great way to get a better
perspective.”
The group included some of Huntington’s seasoned pros as well as
some of the sport’s top up-and-comers.
Local surfer Jay Larson, who joined the professional ranks 11
years ago, is entering his 11th U.S. Open.
“This is the biggest event of the year, and what makes it even
more special is that it’s in our own backyard,” said Larson, 29, a
Huntington Beach High graduate and Surf City resident. “What this
workout is intended to do is get everybody in contest format and
mode. Who better to judge you than your friends and peers? We learned
some things, but being friends, we had a good time heckling each
other, too. I enjoyed our time out there today.”
No Huntington surfer has won the men’s U.S. Open, but Nichols
feels there may be change in the swell.
“I’m due -- I’ll tell you that much,” he said with a chuckle. “But
really, I think one of us Huntington guys will break out this year.
Someone from Huntington is due to win it. It could be any one of us.
I just think it’s time.
“I know I’ll be rooting all my buddies on 110%. I know the other
guys will be rooting each other on, too. That’s what this workout was
all about -- getting the boys together to get ready for America’s
biggest surfing contest.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.