Deja vu at Lost Pro Juniors
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Mike Sciacca
Dustin Cuizon had been there before.
For Hank Gaskell, the finals of the $10,000 Lost Pro Junior men’s
competition at the Bank of the West Beach Games were new ground.
But the ending to America’s largest and most prestigious junior
surfing event had an all-too-familiar feel for Cuizon.
He finished runner-up again. Just like he had in 2004. And in
2003.
Not even a crowd-pleasing big air reverse could finally nab the
crown for Cuizon, who was outscored by Gaskell, 14.8 to 14
Gaskell, 19, was competing in the Los Pro Junior for just the
second time. He left Surf City on Monday to fly to England for his
next competition.
“Dustin and I have been competing against each other in NSSA
events since we were 10 years old,” said Gaskell, who lives in Maui.
“Dustin’s a great guy and a competitor who I really respect.
“I was really nervous, just hoping to get another wave that might
carry me through. I got really lucky.”
The Lost Pro Junior started with 120 of the world’s finest surfers
age 20 and younger, battling for a $2,500 first-place prize and
critical points toward the Assn. of Surfing Professionals’ world
junior championship in Australia.
After the various rounds of competition, it was the two Hawaiian
competitors who faced off for the title.
Cuizon opened strong with a 6.67 score out of a possible 10.
Following three mediocre waves, he hit a 7.33 to move into a
comfortable lead and come within reach of his initial title.
He then launched into a big air reverse that brought cheers from
the crowd, yet it was Gaskell who scored big late to pull out the
win.
“This is my last time in the junior event, and I was hoping to win
it in my last try,” Cuizon said. “I felt good out there, but I made a
few mistakes that ended up costing me. Now, I move on to the next
level.”
Like the U.S. Open of Surfing, the Lost Pro Junior implemented the
World Championship Tour’s man-on-man format, instead of the
four-person heats that had been used in years past.
The man-on-man format was used from the quarterfinal round through
the finals round.
The junior title is considered to be a springboard to a
professional career and has been won in the past by Kelly Slater and
Andy Irons, both of whom went on to win the U.S. Open of Surfing
men’s title.
Irons won his second U.S. Open men’s title on Sunday.
In the $10,000 Target Women’s Junior Pro, Nikita Robb of South
Africa claimed the title.
Robb, who won $2,500 for her win, finished ahead of runner-up
Karina Petroni of Florida, third-place finisher Coco Ho of Hawaii and
fourth-place finisher Erica Hosseini of Newport Beach.
Twelve-year-old Courtney Conlogue of Santa Ana, in her first
Women’s Pro Junior event, won her first two heats to advance to the
semifinal round. There, she finished third in a heat that was won by
Hosseini, with Robb finishing second.
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