Success on the horizon
Rick Devereux
Southern California used to be known as a factory of churning out
professional surfers. Jack Haley, from Sunset Beach. Corky Carroll,
from Surfside. Jerricho Poppler, from Long Beach.
If you look at the leaderboard of the recent U.S. Open of Surfing,
no one in the final rounds of the men’s or women’s divisions is from
Southern California. San Clemente’s Brendan White was first and Colin
McPhilips did finish second in the longboard division, though. But of
the 12 finalists, five were from Australia, the most of any country.
Erica Hosseini has hopes of breaking the Aussie domination and
bringing surfing glory back to Southern California.
“There’s barely anyone from California that’s qualified for the
[World Championship Tour],” said the Newport Beach surfer. “I hope to
be one of the people to put the West Coast back on map.”
Hosseini has already made a name for herself in the surfing
community. She made the finals in the first pro contest she entered,
becoming the youngest (14) surfer in pro surfing history to do so.
By the time she was 15 Hosseini had won the Southwest Conference
Open and Explorer titles as well as the Western Championship Open and
Explorer titles. At 16 she won the Dos Equis Oceanside Pro, but now
she’s 17 and has her sights on improving her chances of making it on
the WTC.
“This year I was trying to do well in contests and trying to get
good seeds for [contests] next year,” she said. “It can be pretty
intimidating because you know the people on WTC have experience and
use different tactics out in the water. You need experience to beat
them.”
At the U.S. Open, Hosseini made it to the round of 32 before
finishing fourth with a score of 6.00 in heat No. 8. The round of 32
is the same round she was eliminated the year before, and one round
sooner than her goal.
“I wanted to make it to the end of quarters,” she said. “I made it
to the round right before quarters. That was where I wanted to get to
because that’s where all the [professional] girls are seeded.”
Hosseini is currently ranked No. 29 on the World Qualifying
Series, the circuit directly below the WTC. She has earned 2,258
points and $1,600 this year. Her next contest will be the
Nokia/Lacanau Pro Trophee Feminin in France Aug. 15-21.
Surfing has allowed Hosseini to travel the world, but this will be
her first visit to France.
“This past year I’ve been to contests in Australia, South Africa,
and of course California,” she said. “This will be my first time in
France. Next year I will go to England, but for most part the
contests I surfed in have been based in California and Hawaii. All
contests are different with different waves. You never get really
great waves. You gotta learn grovel and make something out of nothing
with the waves in contests.”
Hosseini credits her participation with the Newport Harbor High
surf team for part of her success.
“There is more competition in boys in high school,” she said
regarding being one of the few females on the squad. “I think it does
to push you more to surf better. It gets you more prepared to be on
WQS.”
While she can’t explain her own style, she knows which surfers she
likes to watch. U.S. Open champion Chelsea Georgeson is one. Matt
Archibald is another. So is Linda Fisher. These surfers all have
certain qualities Hosseini admires.
“I like watching people who are smooth and quick,” she said. “I
like to watch people who have speed. My favorite is Matt Archibald
because he gains a lot of speed on waves.”
Right now Hosseinni is gaining a lot of momentum toward the WTC.
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