X marks the spot
Mike Sciacca
A grand experiment last year at the Huntington Beach Pier has turned
into a solid reality for the ESPN X Games.
The success of the games’ first surf competition, dubbed “The
Game,” last summer led to ESPN officials adding the contest to its
regular lineup of action sports.
The Game, featuring some of the world’s hottest surfers, will be
played out at the south side of the Huntington Beach Pier at 10:30
a.m. Saturday.
The X Games celebrates its 10th anniversary this weekend. More
than 150 of the world’s best action sports athletes are scheduled to
compete in a wide variety of sports categories, including
skateboarding at Staples Center in Los Angeles.
Huntington Beach professional skateboarders and residents Geoff
Rowley, Mark Appleyard and Bastien Salabanzi are scheduled to do a
skate jam and skate competition at Staples Center, beginning today.
The X Games X runs through Sunday.
The Game surfing format will pit an all-star team of East Coast
surfers against an all-star West Coast team.
The West Coast will be looking for a bit of revenge Saturday. Last
year, the East Coast, led by six-time world champion Kelly Slater,
handily won the inaugural the Game, 209.06-188.20.
“It was some of the worst surf conditions of the year last year,
but we all had so much fun,” said Orange County surfer Pat O’Connell,
who reached the quarterfinal round of last weekend’s U.S. Open of
Surfing men’s competition.
O’Connell will be back this weekend to add his talents to the West
Coast team.
Other key competitors include Slater, two-time world champion and
ratings leader Andy Irons and Rob Machado, one of surfing’s all-time
greats.
Also competing is Taj Burrow, last weekend’s U.S. Open men’s
winner.
“I’ll be there, ready to go again,” Burrow said.
Florida’s Cory Lopez, the 2003 U.S. Open men’s winner and
third-place finisher last weekend, also will compete.
“We’ve got almost every top surfer in the world competing in
Huntington Beach,” said Jeff Cutler of the National Surf League,
creator of The Game. “This year’s field is more stacked than last
year and it should be really exciting for everybody who comes out to
watch.”
For the first time, Cutler said, a surfing event will be televised
live: ESPN will carry live, first-quarter coverage of The Game, and
ABC television will pick up live, fourth-quarter coverage.
“We consider the X Games to be the All-Star event of the National
Surf League,” Cutler said. “It’s an exciting, three-hour game
featuring surfing’s top athletes. It’s going to be a big weekend.”
Saturday’s action begins with 10:30 a.m. introductions, followed
at 11 a.m. by the official start of “The Game.”
The West Coast squad is composed of Rob Machado, Cardiff; Andy
Irons, wildcard, Kauai; Taylor Knox, Carlsbad; Dane Reynolds,
Ventura; Shane Beschen, San Clemente; Tim Curran, Oxnard; Pat
O’Connell, Laguna Beach; Mike Losness, San Clemente; Jason “Ratboy”
Collins, Santa Cruz; Nate Yeomans, San Clemente; Mike Parsons, head
coach, San Clemente; Dino Andino, assistant coach, San Clemente; and
Garth Tarlow, assistant coach, Newport Beach.
The East Coast squad is composed of Kelly Slater, Cocoa Beach,
Fla.; Taj Burrow, wild card, Yallingup, Australia; CJ Hobgood,
wildcard, Satellite Beach, Fla.; Damien Hobgood, Satellite Beach,
Fla.; Cory Lopez, Indian Rocks Beach, Fla.; Aaron Cormican, New
Smyrna, Fla.; Asher Nolan, Neptune Beach, Fla.; Dean Randazzo,
Atlantic City, N.J.; Peter Mendia, West Palm Beach, Fla.; Bryan
Hewitson, Indialantic, Fla.; Matt Kechele, head coach, Melbourne
Beach, Fla.; and assistant coaches Todd Kline and Wes Laine.
Huntington Beach’s Geoff Rowley, Mark Appleyard and Bastien
Salabanzi have been invited to skate the Street Men’s competition at
Staples Center.
Appleyard, who has graced the covers and pages of skating
magazines, was Thrasher magazine 2003 Skater of the Year. TransWorld
Skateboarding honored him with Rookie of the Year honors in 2002,
Best Street Skater in 2003 and Reader’s Choice in 2004.
This will be Appleyard’s first appearance at the X Games.
“I’m looking forward to going to Staples to have a great time
skating and hanging out with my friends,” the 21-year-old said. “It’s
just another contest to me.”
Rowley has not competed in the X Games since 1997. The 28-year-old
has spent the past year skating and working on videos and
advertisements for sponsors. His name also can be found on four
brands of skateboard shoes by Van’s shoes.
He, Appleyard and Salabanzi are members of Flip Skateboard Team,
which was named Best Team by TransWorld Skateboarding the past four
years.
“I haven’t done the X Games the past few years because I didn’t
agree with the way they were run and the contest format,” said
Rowley, who added that he, Appleyard and Salabanzi will drive up to
Staples Center together today, spend the night, then skate through
the weekend.
“It wasn’t a very friendly or inviting atmosphere, and I think
competitions and jams should always be very relaxed and fun,” he
said. “They’re trying to make it a lot better and I’m going to give
them another chance, but I’ll watch them with an eagle’s eye.”
Rowley said he skates, on average, just two contests per year.
His last trip to the X Games, he recalled, wasn’t a fond memory:
He broke his right hand in two places.
He’s healthy coming into X Games X.
“I do like contests, but they should be less about the money and
more about the experience,” he said. “Some things in skating are hard
to figure out, like I want to know, why Huntington Beach has more
kids skateboarding than in any other city in the whole of Southern
California, and yet has two of the smallest skate parks in the whole
country? It doesn’t make sense.”
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