Worth the wait
The 47th annual Brooks Street Surfing Classic finally came to
fruition last weekend, after a 13-week wait.
The event, sponsored by the city of Laguna Beach Community
Services Department, was made possible by a swell that was generated
by hurricanes below Baja, said the department’s Ron Lutz.
The swells arrived Friday and continued through Sunday.
Nearly 16 hours of competition in 54 heats began at 9 a.m.
Saturday and concluded at 2:30 Sunday afternoon.
Champions among 151 competitors were determined in 13 different
categories.
With Beach Marshall Brady Faber and the recreation staff giving
the go-ahead for the event Saturday morning, preliminary competition
began in the larger divisions: pro-am, junior men, masters, senior
masters and longboards.
Chris Taylor and Aaron Gaul shared master of ceremony duties.
A look at the results:
Women’s
In the only final staged on Saturday, Alisa Cairns Schwarzsten, a
perennial champion, repeated as the women’s division winner.
She won the event in 2004.
Jenny Quam finished in second place, followed by Rio Poller, the
winner of the 45th annual event, Rachel Kendall and Heather Fish.
Girls’ 14-and-Under
Returning for the first time in several years was a girls’
14-and-under division. Hannah Fait finished first among six entries.
Finishing behind Fait were Camille Borges, Morea Arthur, Lexi Ross,
Sara Zuziak and Dylan Conroy.
Pro-Am
The division, featuring a $1,800 prize purse, was won by Brooks
Street legend Jeff Booth, who finished second last year.
Pat O’Connell finished second, Tristram Miller was third and Mike
Carter finished fourth.
Grand Masters
(ages 50 and above)
Tex Haines successfully defended his 2004 title. Mark MacRae,
third last year, moved up a notch to second place. Ron Sizemore, who
won the 25th annual competition, was third, and Keith Gregg finished
fourth for the second straight year.
Senior Masters
(ages 40-49)
Richard “Dickie” Carlson, second a year ago, won the division
Sunday. Dave Skarman was second, Aldo “Kirk” Juenthner was third, and
two-time defending champion Scott Holt finished in fourth place.
Masters
(ages 30-39)
Retired pro Pat O’Connell, who was second in the pro-am division,
put on an impressive wave display in winning the Masters title. He
was followed by Tristram Miller, Sean Brown and defending champion
Brandy Faber.
Senior Men’s
(ages 24-29)
The division, which featured four new faces, and was won by Marcel
Mead. In second place was Steve Hearst, with Dan Stafford third and
Dave Strong fourth.
Men’s
(ages 18-23)
Another division with new competitors saw Brad Burdick win the
competition. He was followed by Clayton Snyder, Matt Johnson and
Dylan Fait.
Junior Men’s
(ages 14-17)
Nate Zoller improved upon his third-place standing from a year ago
to win the event. Boys’ division 2004 winner Eli Viszolay finished
second, Max Brick was third and Dylan McDonald was fourth.
Boys’
(ages 13 and under)
In another division dominated by new competitors, Porter Hogan
came up with the top score to beat out Spencer Freidenrich, Christian
Ravenscroft, Henry Ward and Hunter Schwirtz, who finished second
through fifth, respectively.
Longboards
(9 feet and longer)
Juenthner, who finished in third place in the senior masters
division, earned his second plaque of the classic by winning the
event. Keith Gregg, fourth in the Grand Masters division, was second
in longboards, Goff Stepien was third and Chad “Frog” Nelson was
fourth.
Bodyboards
Ron Sizemore, known as the “iron man of Brooks Street” and a
third-place finisher in the grand masters division, won the
bodyboarding event, the last surfing event of the classic. Jordan
“Jordo” Katz was second, Howard Hills third, Ted Taylor fourth, Frank
Carri fifth and Steve Cohn sixth.
Paddleboard race
The 47th annual classic ended with a paddleboard race out to the
second reef and back. It was won by William Mini in a time of 6:10.
He edged out Kelly French, who placed second at 6:16. David Skarman
was third and Ted Taylor fourth.
Cy Chambers Memorial Award
The award, for a young surfer who typifies excellence in
academics, sportsmanship and surfing ability, was presented to Nate
Zoller.
Tom Chambers Memorial Award
Ryah Arthur was named the recipient of an honor bestowed on a
surfer exemplifying artistic and personal style.
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