Big wave season arrives
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RICK FIGNETTI
Winter’s in full swing, with those northwest swells rolling down the
coastline. The National Scholastic Surfing Assn. has been taking
advantage of those conditions lately, with the last open-season
event, on Jan. 17 and 18 at the Huntington Beach Pier, scoring
overhead surf.
Event seven was a three-star, points-rated contest on the south
side that had more than 300 student surfers entered. Local knowledge
and talent was the key factor for some Surf City rippers to make the
finals. In the men’s, the toughest division, Oxnard’s Nick Rozsa took
the win, but hot on his heels was Huntington’s Chase Newsom who’s
been shredding it up. Palos Verde’s photo boy, Alex Gray, was third,
and San Clemente upstart Dane Ward finished fourth.
In the junior’s division, Colin Schildhauer from up north in
Goleta won it, but two Huntington Beach High School shredders, Marty
Weinstein and Logan Strook, took third and fourth. Boys’ action,
meanwhile, saw Newport’s Andrew Doheny win his incredible fifth event
this season and Ford Archbold place fourth with some nice moves.
Erica Hosseini, the national champ from Newport, won women’s, with
Surf City’s Allison Arvizu grabbing third.
In long-boarding, La Jolla’s Felipe Bacerra claimed the victory
with Huntington’s Mike Jorensen getting third and Shane VanHerk
rounding out the top five. Next up is Ponto, Feb. 7 and 8.
At the Explorer season’s fifth event at Seaside Reef, good-sized
lefts were again breaking way outside, some reforming all the way
through. Huntington Beach’s Anthony Duarte dominated the men’s
division for the win, with San Clemente’s national ripper Dane
Gudauskas finishing second, Huntington’s Brandon Guilmette third and
Todd Hutton fourth.
Juniors saw up-and-coming Chad Montgomery of San Clemente place
first, with local Newsom taking fourth. In boys, Bryan Doheny of
Newport took the win and in the little guys, menehunes, Shana Saraiva
was fourth overall.
In the super seniors, Seal Beach’s Scott Waring won his second
event this season with some nice turns, while “The Schlickster,” Pat
Schlick, was in top form, placing second.
Having a great run this Explorer season in women’s, Arvizu won her
fourth contest, racking up a big lead in the points race. Next up is
Mission Beach, San Diego, Feb. 14 and 15, as the National Scholastic
Surfing Assn. 2003-’04 tour continues.
On the big Monday a couple of weeks ago, the Big Guns went out to
the Cortez Bank, which was huge, but not quite as huge as they
thought it would be. According to “Flea,” Darrell Virosko, the
big-wave “Mavericks” winner a couple years ago, it was crowded. Lots
of boats, skis and crews out there trying to get a shot. It was
40-plus, he was saying, and they wanted mo’ bigga! But it was a good
tune-up session for figuring out the break, which is about 100 miles
out to sea.
Flea was saying when it hits at 60- to 70-plus, the crowd will
thin down and the break has the potential to hold it. Mavs is
heavier, he said, with the freezing water, the undertow-suck into the
Cauldren reef below, the current push into the point and rocks and
the possibility of great whites cruising the lineup. Scary!
That’s it for now, see ya.
* RICK FIGNETTI is an eight-time West Coast champion, has
announced the U.S. Open of Surfing the last nine years and has been
the KROQ-FM surfologist for the last 17 years, doing morning surf
reports. He owns a surf shop on Main Street. You can reach him at
(714) 536-1058.
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