Collins bows out
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Patrick Laverty
Richie Collins is a surfer.
Some people are artists, some people are salesmen and some people
just surf.
A 20-year professional, Collins was back doing what he does best
this week at the 2003 Honda Element U.S. Open of Surfing. After two
years of selling cars, Collins was back competing in the water.
Any questions about his competitive spirit at age 34 were answered
when he lost in the seventh round, the round of 96, on Thursday.
“How disappointing is it to go through seven rounds and lose after
coming in as an alternate?” Collins said. “Very disappointing. More
than you can imagine. But I made it through six heats, got to the
seventh round. That’s a lot of heats for me.”
After advancing through the first six rounds, Collins had an
excellent chance to continue his remarkable run with five minutes
remaining in his heat Wednesday. At the time, he held second place.
But he didn’t catch another wave until there was just one second
remaining in the heat. By that time he had dropped to fourth and only
the top two competitors from each heat advance.
“That’s the ocean,” Collins said. “The waves come and go. The only
thing I can say I did wrong was that I moved out of the place I was
sitting in the whole week and I shouldn’t have moved.”
Collins paddled south, away from the pier, after seeing two of his
competitors catch good waves in that direction. But after Collins had
left his spot, South Africa’s Travis Logie caught the best ride of
the heat, recording a 9.17 that catapulted him into first place.
While Logie was finishing his ride, Collins was left to catch one
last wave in the final seconds of the heat. But it wasn’t strong
enough to vault him back into second place.
“I went over there hoping to get a little bit of a left and I just
couldn’t get a wave,” Collins said. “I thought it was breaking better
over there. I should’ve just stayed put and I didn’t.”
Collins has rarely stayed put throughout his lifetime. The
lifelong Newport Beach resident was once ranked as high as No. 4 in
the world. But his entire professional career, which began when he
was 14, has included a back injury so serious, that twice during
competitions he has had to be carried out of the water.
“The back’s shot, but I’m surfing” Collins said. “It’s pretty
bombed. But I’ve had this injury for 20 years and I’ve dealt with it
for 20 years. I know how to deal with it. It’s not fun to deal with
it, but you know, that’s just part of life.”
Surfing will always be a part of Collins’ life, no matter how many
forays he makes into car sales and the like, but the U.S. Open was
only his second competitive event since last September. Both times, a
few weeks ago in Oceanside and this week, Collins finished one round
out of the money.
“You can’t make [surfing] a career if you keep losing right before
the money round,” Collins said.
But with his auto sales career behind him, Collins is going to
keep surfing. He’s back to making boards, which he’s done ever since
he was a young child, and he has already booked a trip to France next
week for the O’Neill Surf Challenge.
Without a sponsor, Collins paid for the trip himself and he had to
fight off the disappointment of Wednesday’s finish thinking about the
flight to Europe.
“Now I just don’t want to go, it’s just a depressing thing,”
Collins said. “You work that hard. You train really hard. You get
this far. I’ve just got to bite my tongue and go and surf.”
That is, after all, what Collins does best.
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