Maximum exposure
Mike Sciacca
This is just how Mike Gerard had hoped it would pan out.
A few months removed from unveiling a restructured Surfing America
in Huntington Beach, and just days before the 101st staging of Surf
City’s Fourth of July Parade and Celebration, the organization is
putting on its own fireworks show by presenting the USA Championships
at the Huntington Beach Pier.
The big event, presented by the Surf Industry Manufacturers Assn.,
began Monday, continues today and Friday with quarterfinal and
semifinal round action, and concludes Saturday with championship
finals.
More than 300 of the nation’s top amateur surfers have entered the
competition -- including several from Huntington Beach. Each is vying
for an individual title, as well the chance to land a spot on the
48-member 2005 USA Surf Team.
Competition starts daily at 7:30 a.m.
“This is the perfect setting for us,” said Gerard, the executive
director for Surfing America, the national governing body of
competitive surfing. “We’re holding this competition the weekend of
the city’s big Fourth of July celebration, which is what we had
planned to do.
“It’s sounds pretty patriotic to be selecting the members of the
USA surf team, right here in Surf City USA, on the weekend the
country celebrates the Fourth of July. And that’s cool.”
The USA Championships contest has drawn athletes from five
regional member organizations: the Eastern Surfing Assn, Hawaii
Amateur Surfing Assn., National Scholastic Surfing Assn., Texas Gulf
Surfing Assn., and the Western Surfing Assn.
The nine divisions of competition include open men, open women,
boys’ under-18, boys’ under-16, boys’ under-14, girls’ under-18,
girls’ under-16, open longboard and open bodyboard.
Seven major industry brands and SIMA . members -- Billabong, Body
Glove, O’Neill, OP, Quiksilver, Reef and Rip Curl -- and eight surf
media partners -- Fuel TV, Surfer, Surfing, SG, Surfline, Surf Life
for Women, Transworld Business and Transworld Surf -- are sponsoring
the event and the USA Surf Team.
For many of these amateur competitors, the lure of the USA
Championships can be found in its ability to present unprecedented
exposure to up-and-coming surfers who Gerard said would like to carve
out a professional career.
The 2004 USA Surf Team was selected during a competition staged at
the front end of last summer’s U.S. Open of Surfing. The roster was
officially unveiled last December at Pier Plaza during a ceremony
where Mayor Cathy Green presented the team with a key to the city.
A few months later, the team went on to capture a silver medal at
its first attempt at an International Surfing Assn. event, the
Quiksilver ISA World Junior Championships in Papenoo, Tahiti.
The 2004 USA Surf Team was the first team fielded by Surfing
America since it had been awarded national governing body status by
the ISA in March. Everyone in the surfing industry took notice.
“An event like this, in an arena such as Surf City, gives these
young surfers maximum exposure, from the media to travel around the
world,” Gerard said.
“The purpose of the USA Surf Team is to train and develop young,
talented surfers in the USA and help them build their portfolio as
future professional surfers. Our goal is to present a team that
properly represents the level of surfing talent we have in the U.S.”
One surfer looking to land a spot on the USA Surf Team is Kris
Wiernicki. The 15-year-old, a resident of Melbourne Beach, Fla., is
competing in the boys’ 16-under division.
Wiernicki has been in town for the past week. He won the East
Coast championship in April and last weekend placed fifth in the
Explorer Boys’ division at the NSSA national championships at Lower
Trestles.
This is Wiernicki’s first visit to Huntington Beach, and the hype
of “Surf City” hasn’t gone unnoticed.
“I mean, this is one of the surfing hot spots in the world, and
it’s great to be able to experience it,” said Wiernicki, who won the
sixth heat on the opening day of competition on Monday. “It’s a lot
more populated than I expected, compared to the other surf spots I’ve
been to. It was a bad current out there today, but it was fun.”
Wiernicki said landing a spot on the USA Surf Team would be a
stepping-stone to his professional surfing aspirations.
“The exposure, the chance to travel, those are the things all
surfers crave,” he said. “Those are the things that appeal to me, and
I hope to continue to be consistent with my surfing these next few
days to land a spot on the team. That would be awesome.”
Gerard said Surfing America will bring the Quiksilver ISA World
Junior Championships to Huntington Beach in October.
“This is a celebration of the future of surfing,” Gerard said. “We
are creating a system, a competitive road map, to nurture these young
competitors who, ultimately, hope to make it.”
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