big breaks
- Share via
Mike Sciacca
All eyes in the world of surfing are focused on Huntington Beach.
The Bank of the West Beach Games featuring the Honda U.S. Open of
Surfing Presented by O’Neill, began Saturday and will continue
through Sunday at the Huntington Beach Pier.
The U.S. Open of Surfing, the most heavily watched surfing event
in the world, is the gem among a beach games action package that
combines skateboarding and BMX competitions in the Soul Bowl, the
first King and Queen of the Beach professional volleyball tournament,
the first Freestyle Motocross Ramp to Ramp Air Show along with demos,
live concerts and an interactive lifestyle festival spread over 12
acres.
Six-hundred athletes are scheduled to compete at the beach games.
“We’re happy to host the Honda U.S. Open of Surfing and have it be
the cornerstone of the fantastic Bank of the West Beach Games,” said
James Leitz, vice president of International Management Group X
Sports, which puts on the beach games. “We’re doubly excited that the
event has been embraced by professional surfing’s elite and we have
such a quality field this year.”
This weekend, the surf industry will be in Surf City for the U.S.
Open final rounds of competition in men’s and women’s divisions,
longboarding and the Lost Pro Junior.
The climax to the competition comes Sunday with the men’s final.
Cory Lopez of Florida is back to defend his men’s title.
Australia’s Chelsea Georgeson returns to defend her women’s crown.
Phenomenal crowds also are expected the pack the pier and its
surrounding areas.
Leitz said that last year’s event drew an estimated record 300,000
people.
“It’s a surfing contest on a global scale and it’s so awesome to
be able to surf it in my own backyard,” said Brett Simpson, a
professional surfer from Huntington Beach who is surfing his third
U.S. Open. “It’s sort of like having a home court advantage, just
like in basketball.”
“I’ve been all around the world and there’s not one event on the
World Qualifying Series tour as big as this one,” he said. “We have
the whole world coming to Huntington Beach.”
The men’s field is considered to be the most impressive in the
45-year history of the event.
Five-hundred of the sport’s elite surfers from around the world
are in Surf City to contend for various titles. Among this year’s
entrants are an unprecedented 40-plus combined World, U.S. Open,
World Junior and U.S. national title winners -- the most ever for
this event.
Ten former World and/or U.S. Open champions headline the 272-count
men’s draw that includes 13 of the world’s top 16 and 85 of the top
100 in the World Qualifying Series.
In addition to Lopez, former world champions Andy Irons of Hawaii,
Kelly Slater of Florida, C.J. Hobgood of Florida, Mark Occhilupo of
Australia, Derek Ho of Hawaii and Tom Curren of California are in
contention for the men’s title, as are several outstanding local
surfers.
A record 136 men are listed as alternates.
Joining Georgeson in the U.S. Open’s women’s field is rookie
Melanie Bartels of Hawaii, No. 1-ranked Sofia Mulanovich of Peru,
Hawaii’s Rochelle Ballard, former U.S. Open and world champion
Pauline Menczer of Australia, Aussie Serena Brooke, Holly Beck of
Palos Verdes and Julia Christian of Carlsbad.
The Honda U.S. Open of Surfing is a six-star WQS event and offers
competitors the largest point allocation of any mainland event, and
is the most critical stop on the 2004 U.S. Open of Surfing Pro
Surfing Tour.
The U.S. Open is considered North America’s original action sports
event and dates back to 1959.
Local Soul Bowl veterans scheduled to compete are Omar Hassan and
Brian Patch, who finished one-two, respectively, in last year’s
event.
Patch, though, earned enough points to become the overall Soul
Bowl champion the past three years.
All events are open to the public free of charge. The main rounds
of surfing began on Monday and run through Sunday.
Festival activities, BMX and skate competitions begin today.
Volleyball and the live music will get underway Friday and Saturday,
and freestyle motocross demos run three times daily on Friday through
Sunday.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.