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Nazaré Big Wave Challenge Goes on Yellow Alert for 'Probable' Monday Start


A yellow alert has been issued for the "TUDOR Nazaré Big Wave Challenge" set in Nazaré, Portugal, which has entered a waiting period from November 6th!

According to Surfline, a west-northwest swell is expected to enter Nazaré from late January 21st local time, reaching its peak between the 22nd and 23rd.

Good conditions can be expected as the wind is ideal offshore.

BWT's 2023/2024 season features two races: the TUDOR Jaws Big Wave Challenge, set in Nazare and Maui's Jaws (Peʻahi).

The format of the two races is different, with Nazaré being a toe-in team match.

Jaws will be an individual paddle competition.

Will the strongest duo of Kai Lenny and Brazilian Chambo, Lucas Cianca, dominate this season?

Wait for the green alert that tells you 48 hours before the event!

The competitors for this year’s event are as follows:

TUDOR Nazaré Big Wave Challenge Invitees*:

*Teams subject to change ahead of Green Alert/Run Day

Team 1: Lucas Chianca (BRA) and Kai Lenny (HAW)

Team 2: Nic von Rupp (PRT) and Pedro Scooby (BRA)

Team 3: Andrew Cotton (GBR) and Will Skudin (USA)

Team 4: Rodrigo Koxa (BRA) and Kealii Mamala (HAW)

Team 5: João De Macedo (PRT) and Antônio Silva (PRT)

Team 6: Sebastian Steudtner (DEU) and Daniel Goldberg (HAW)

Team 7: Maya Gabeira (BRA) and Antonio Laureano (PRT)

Team 8: Michelle des Bouillons (BRA) and Ian Cosenza (PRT)

Team 9: Justine Dupont (FRA) and Éric Rebière (FRA)

Alternate Teams:

Rafael Tapia (CHL) and Jamie Mitchell (AUS)

António Laureano (PRT) and Pierrot Caley (FRA)

Benjamin Sanchis (FRA) Jerome Sayhoun (MAR)

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Portuguese surfer girl rescued from the rocks during the WSl competition in Portugal



Portuguese surfer Teresa Bonvalot had a scare this Thursday (07/10/21) in Portugal, the day of her 22nd birthday. In the last dispute of the day in a competition in Ericeira, the Portuguese caught a wave and stopped very close to the rocks. The waves did not stop heading towards it, which ended up being thrown on the rocks of Ribeira D'Ilhas beach. Luckily nothing serious happened and she ran back to the sea, but lost the match and was eliminated from the competition.

Images: WSL - World Surf League.


 

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Lakey Peterson ready for WSL resumption

Lakey Peterson says anticipation is building ahead of the World Surf League's return in Newcastle.

 Fresh out of hotel quarantine, American star Lakey Peterson feels the World Surf League has pressed reset as the tour finally kicks off again next week in Newcastle.

The tour opened in Hawaii last December, with Australia's Tyler Wright winning the women's event and Hawaiian John John Florence the men's.

But due to COVID, WSL competitions in California and Portugal, as well as the iconic Bells Beach Classic, were cancelled.

Australia will host the next four - Merewether and Narrabeen in April and Margaret River and Rottnest Island in May.

"It feels like the first event of the year, everyone is so fired up," Peterson told AAP.

"It's so good to see the energy of everyone, they're so excited."

In order to get the WSL back up and running, all international surfers arrived on a charter flight and have spent two weeks in hotel quarantine in Sydney, allowed out last Monday.

Unlike some of the tennis players in hard lockdown in Melbourne before the Australian Open, the surfers at least had opening windows.

Married to Australian surfer Thomas Allan, Peterson said quarantining with her husband made it easier than for many, and she enjoyed the downtime.

Peterson, 26, said it was the longest she'd been out of the water since she was a kid.

"Aside from any injuries that was definitely the longest I haven't surfed or being out of the ocean since I was probably eight-years-old but in a way it was weirdly good to switch off," she said.

"I just totally didn't even think about surfing the whole time and in ways it was needed cause some times you don't realise you need a break until you get one."

She said that Australian surfers, such as Wright and Olympians Fitzgibbons and Stephanie Gilmore, would have a slight advantage having being able to train through that fortnight.

"They've all been surfing and have been able to put more time in so they've had a little bit of an advantage but we still have 10 days to get everything back," she said.

"An American, Jennifer Brady, was in hard lockdown and made the final of the tennis Open so it proves that a lot of it's mental."

Peterson hoped that being married to an Australian since early 2019 and spending plenty of time at their home break of Bells Beach, she would be well supported in Newcastle.

"My husband and I were so happy when the plane landed in Australia, we were like 'Yes, we're back home'.

"I love it here and I guess in a way I'm half Australian now so I really enjoy it."

Australian Associated Press

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Why Measuring Big Waves Will Always Lead to Controversy

Justine Dupont, during the the 2019 Nazare Tow Challenge. Photo Credit: Machado

Everything about surfing is subjective. Including the way big waves are measured. No two waves are the same, nor are they often photographed or filmed from the same angles. So how do you definitively determine a wave’s height? And how can we judge them against one another?

When it comes to judging the height of waves against each other for the Red Bull Big Wave Awards, The World Surf League does their best. But it’s not an exact science — some waves have long, sloping troughs (think Nazaré), and others pull water below sea level (like Teahupo’o). So, where does the ocean end, and the wave begin? It’s hard enough to find a starting point for measurement, and it gets more complicated from there, depending on the angle from which the wave was photographed (land versus water, up high versus down low), and the height of the surfer.
Last week, the WSL awarded Maya Gabeira the 2020 cbdMD XXL Biggest Wave Award for her Nazaré tow bomb back in February during the inaugural Nazaré Tow Surfing Challenge event. It was a liquid monstrosity, one that only the gutsiest of chargers could possibly face. The wave was measured at 73.5 feet (bigger than Kai Lenny’s estimated 70-footer, which won in the men’s division), breaking her previous record of 68 feet, and also setting a new world record for the largest wave surfed by a woman.

But because big-wave measuring methods leave a lot to be desired, the door has been left open for skepticism, and according to France’s premier big-wave charger Justine Dupont, Gabeira’s wasn’t the biggest wave ridden. Of course, Dupont may hold a slight bias, since she was also in the running for the award with her own Nazaré tow wave from the exact same day. After the announcement, Dupont went to Instagram to voice her disapproval of the final decision.

“The @wsl announced that the record for the biggest wave surfed would be awarded to a surfer who does not finish her wave,” Dupont wrote in French, which we’ve translated here. “I decided to smile about it even though I am deeply hurt to be subjected to a decision that I believe is totally unfair. I’m especially disappointed and ashamed of this league which claims to represent our sport.”

Dupont goes on to say that a “dream team” of scientists concluded Gabeira’s wave was “approximately 2 or 3 feet bigger”, after comparing the two women’s heights, the distance between the waves and the photographer, and locating the trough and crest of each individual ride.

Dupont’s biggest points of contention are twofold: For one, she doesn’t agree with the way the wave was measured by the scientists brought in by the WSL, but more importantly, she doesn’t think Gabeira’s wave should have been included in the first place, because Gabeira doesn’t complete the wave (whereas Dupont does).

Digging into Dupont’s first point, how were the waves actually measured? According to Jessi Miley-Dyer, the WSL’s VP of Tours and Competition, the WSL brought in Adam Fincham, the Chief Scientist at the Kelly Slater Wave Co., and Michael Piezska, an R&D Engineer, for a detailed evaluation of the women’s award.

“The analysis was based on video and photo imagery, camera locations, camera lens parameters, and environmental conditions including tides, sunlight and wave set-up,” Miley-Dyer said. “Collinearity equations were used to transform the image coordinates into real-world coordinates based on estimates of the geometric parameters, including the height of the cliff at Nazaré. In addition, fixed reference points in the imagery, including the surfers’ heights, surfboard and jet ski dimensions, and estimated crouching heights were utilized in the scientific calculations.”

After watching the video break down of Fincham and Piezska’s findings, and reading the detailed report, it’s obvious the WSL went to great lengths to determine a winner, analyzing every available piece of information, including the tides and the angle of the sun at the time of each ride. But, the findings aren’t exact (because exact doesn’t exist when measuring moving mountains of water), and in many ways are still an opinion. According to the last line of the WSL’s report, it appears even they agree. “Although there are likely other sources of error, the fact that the same procedure was applied to the two waves in question, reaffirms that despite the possibility that numerical values determined for the wave heights could be off, Maya’s wave is once again determined to be larger.”

Now, to Dupont’s second point that Gabeira doesn’t complete the wave. The WSL (obviously) disagrees, and points to their rulebook for clarification. “For a ride to be deemed successful and eligible to be considered as a Submission to the Big Wave Awards, a surfer must be standing only on their feet on a board and complete the meaningful portion of the wave while in control and under the power of only the wave and gravity (‘Ride’),” the rule states.

Again, “the meaningful portion of the wave” is a gray area. In the WSL’s eyes, Gabeira was swallowed by the whitewater at the bottom of her wave in part because she took a more aggressive line. Dupont vehemently disagrees. “For me, it makes no sense,” Dupont tells us in a direct message exchange. “It is really wrong for the sport and for safety as well. It doesn’t push the sport toward performance.

This rekindles the conversation around the relevance of incomplete rides in big-wave surfing. It seems that every year around the time of the Big Wave Awards the make-versus-no-make debate rears its ugly head. And for good reason. In a ‘CT event, if you come out of a barrel on your belly, the tube ride is deemed incomplete. If you fall on your butt after an air, you aren’t getting the score. But in big, scary, dangerous surf, you can pull into a barrel, not come out, and still win the Ride of the Year. But should it be that way? Surfers like Albee Layer have been outspoken in their opinion that change is needed. Dupont agrees.

“When you are surfing and pushing the limits you try to find the best line possible,” Dupont continues. “If you get caught by the wave or if you wipeout, it is a fail. Maybe you took a line that you didn’t control or you were not technically ready to surf that line. Regarding safety, it is pushing people to do things that they don’t necessarily control. We will see people trying to go straight on giant waves just to get the record. What will be the responsibility of the WSL and The Guinness Book when someone dies like that? If you look at free diving, the Federation protects its athletes with protocols. When the diver attempts a record, he has to come back to the surface and follow the protocols to show that he is in control. And the record is validated only if the protocol is perfectly executed.”

Dupont makes valid points. But, like everything in surfing, it’s still a convoluted issue. Both women took critical lines on 70-foot-plus waves. Both were touched by a mountain of water at the bottom. Dupont held on. Gabeira didn’t. Unfortunately for Dupont, until the WSL adds a strict “must-make” clause into its rules (and until there’s a more iron-clad way of measuring waves), awards like this will continue to be subjective, and big-wave records will always be up for debate.


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Maya Gabeira wins cbdMD XXL Biggest Wave


Maya Gabeira got whipped into an absolute mind-blowingly large wave at Nazaré, setting the Guinness Record for the largest wave ever surfed by a woman at 73.5 ft while also securing the Red Bull Big Wave Awards cbdMD XXL Biggest Wave. For More Check Out: BIG WAVE OVERALL PERFORMANCE WINNER - KAI LENNY | Red Bull Big Wave Awards - https://youtu.be/bNnqQeDKtTM CRAZIEST WOMEN'S PADDLE OF THE YEAR! Paige Alms wins Red Bull Big Wave Awards Women's Paddle Award - https://youtu.be/_edAA3DEU9w MEN'S PADDLE IN OF THE YEAR WINNER - Eli Olson | Red Bull Big Wave Awards - https://youtu.be/voem4P0gGJw WIPEOUT OF THE YEAR WINNER - Keala Kennelly | Red Bull Big Wave Awards - https://youtu.be/iSozcia8hxE THE GNARLIEST BIG WAVE RIDES OF THE YEAR!!! Red Bull Big Wave Awards - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiIKB... THE BIGGEST WAVES SURFED IN 2020!! cbdMD XXL BIGGEST WAVE w/ Kai Lenny, Sebastian Steudner - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjfnW... BIG WAVE Overall Performance 2020 Nominees!! | Red Bull Big Wave Awards - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GO5xy...



The wave at other angles
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Pedro Scooby at Nazaré - Ride & aftermath - 2017


Video from WSL Big Wave Awards

Pedro "Scooby" Vianna (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is depicted in a third drone angle as he tows in and streaks for daylight at Praia do Norte, Nazaré, Portugal on February 28, 2017. 

In this special, extended version we see the aftermath of the ride, with fellow Brazilian Lucas "Chumbo" Chianca coming to the rescue on a PWC, only to have both surfers bucked off on the inside. 

Spectacular drone video coverage by Maquina Voadora. 

An entry in the Billabong Ride of the Year category of the 2017 WSL Big Wave Awards. 
For more information see www.WorldSurfLeague.com/bigwave.


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Mick Fanning fights off shark during ‪‎Jeffreys Bay in South Africa


The final of the J-Bay Open had only just started when Fanning was knocked off his surfboard and into the sea.









Exclusive interview with Mick Fanning following the ‪#‎JBayOpen‬ shark attack








Slater gives a hug Mick Fanning after he escaped from shark attack 

Photos: WSL
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Owen Wright Wins 2015 Fiji Pro

Owen Wright Wins 2015 Fiji Pro with Perfect Score






































Owen Wright (AUS) has won the Fiji Pro in historic fashion today, claiming his second Perfect 20 of the event in the Final bout against compatriot Julian Wilson (AUS) held in pumping eight-to-ten foot (2.5 - 3 metre) barrels.


Stop No. 5 of 11 on the 2015 Samsung Galaxy WSL Championship Tour (CT), the Fiji Pro, has been treated to an abundance of swell and incredible performances by the world’s best surfers, culminating today with Wright’s unparalleled mastery of Cloudbreak.


“I can’t believe it, to finish with a couple of 10’s is a dream come true,” said Wright. “I’ve been doing a lot of work behind the scenes and watching the top guys closely and it’s definitely paid off. Gabriel Medina has been a huge inspiration for me, especially watching him at this event last year and what he’s done.”


Wright was the form surfer of the event after a series of incredible performances and huge scores, including a flawless Round 5 heat where he posted his first perfect heat total (only the then-seventh in sport’s history). The Australian made history today by delivering another Perfect 20 in the Final, the sport’s eighth ever perfect heat total, as the first surfer to achieve this incredible feat twice in one event.


“I’ve done two trips to Tahiti already this year and I think that’s where some of the barrel riding has come from,” continued Wright. “I have to pay a big tribute to my boards - I’ve never felt better doing turns out there and I love the turns as much as I love the barrels.”


Wright’s win at the Fiji Pro is his second CT victory, after a previous win at the Quiksilver Pro New York in 2011. Wright came into to the event ranked sixth in the world and the result sees him jump up to third on the Jeep Leaderboard. A combination of deep barrel rides and carving rail-work helped the goofyfooter reach the Final after defeating Jeremy Flores (FRA) in the Semifinals and Joel Parkinson (AUS) in the Quarters earlier today.


“Yesterday was a dream come true and today is even better,” Wright said. “To finish with two 10’s is really special. I was watching the ocean before the Final and I knew it would turn on. I knew I just had to be in that rhythm and the waves came and I took them. I’m stoked to be back up on the podium and wouldn’t be here without all the support back home.”


Wright dominated the Final from start to finish, opening early with a 9.60 and quickly putting Wilson in a combination. With less than five minutes remaining Wright delivered an epic ride, opening with a huge turn and big barrel, and was rewarded with a Perfect 10. Another long, critical tube ride moments afterwards earned him another Perfect 10, his fourth of the competition and his second Perfect heat total, to seal his victory


 Here’s Owen Wright’s 2nd perfect 10 from the final:
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TAG Heuer enters the Surf World!

TAG Heuer Joins World Surf League as Official Timekeeper of Big Wave Tour





























This multi-year partnership will see the TAG Heuer inject its #DontCrackUnderPressure campaign into the heart of big wave surfing, serving as the Official Watch of the tour, and supporting the “Biggest Wave” and “Biggest Wipeout” components of the annual WSL Big Wave Awards.




Jean-Claude Biver, President of the LVMH Group Watch Division and CEO of TAG Heuer commented: “Be Unique, Different and the First has always been my personal philosophy in all my 40 years of activities, from products development to marketing and sponsoring. TAG Heuer is the first luxury brand to enter the Surf World. Our motto #DontCrackUnderPressure fits perfectly with the WSL Big Wave Tour and makes our partnership different and innovative. It will give TAG Heuer a great boost in terms of connecting with young people, with the support of our friend Kai Lenny and his highly contagious enthusiasm.

“When the WSL acquired the Big Wave Tour and Big Wave Awards, we believed it was an opportunity to elevate some of the most inspiring sportsmen on the planet and their passions to a bigger stage,” Paul Speaker, WSL CEO, said. “This elevation has not only seen a surge in attention to this incredible sport but has also provided the League with the opportunity to partner with world-class entities. We’re thrilled to announce TAG Heuer as the Official Timekeeper of Big Wave surfing and we look forward to a long and fruitful partnership.”
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Sebastian Steudtner wins the XXL Biggest Wave Award


The German surfer Sebastian Steudtner was the big winner of the XXL Big Wave Awards.



                                                                                                                                                             
Photo: Rui Oliveira



















The surfer won with the wave surfed in Nazaré, Portugal on December 11, 2014
Photo:Miguel Prata

Photo: Jeff Flindt


Other Nominees:
Ross Clarke-Jones (Avoca Beach, New South Wales, Australia) at Nazaré, Portugal on December 11, 2014. (Video Nominee: Humberto Santos. Photograph Nominees: Antonio Balau, Daniela Carneiro, Andre Carvalho, Jose Pinto, Luis Rodrigues, Mark Wengler.)

Mick Corbett (Perth, WA, Australia) at Cow Bombie, Australia on August 9, 2014. (Photograph Nominee: Jamie Scott.)

Jarryd Foster (Dodges Ferry, Tasmania, Australia) at Cow Bombie, Australia on August 9, 2014. (Photograph Nominee: Jamie Scott.)

Hugo Vau (Terceira, Azores, Portugal) at Nazaré, Portugal on December 11, 2014. (Video Nominee: Bro Cinema. Photograph Nominees: Bruno Aleixo, Red Bull/Jeff Flindt, Mark Wengler.)


Source: WSL
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Priority - Surfing Web Series from the WSL




With the worlds best battling it out at a wet and windy Bells beach this week, the WSL were on the internet. No, not because of Kelly Slater’s terrible April fools joke – the WSL quietly released a new web series called Priority, which follows three professionals behind the scenes.

Josh Kerr, Laura Enever and rookie Matt Banting are gearing up for the Quiksilver and Roxy Pro on the Gold Coast, and along for the ride is the WSL film crew. Taking you behind the scenes as they prepare, compete and wind down after the event, it’s a fantastic look at a professional surfing event from start to finish.

With Laura Enever being knocked out in her first round, she took off to go skydiving in later rounds of competition, but young rookie Matt Banting caused a major upset when surfing the first round of the Quiksilver Pro, knocking out his idol Mick Fanning. He reminisces after his heat, “you shut everything off, and instincts kick in as soon as you take off on that wave. It’s kinda just all a blur, as soon as you top off you ask, what did I actually do? Was that one better than the last one?”

The show follows both Matt and Josh as they compete in the small swell, with some candid interviews with Josh after ‘that’ tantrum where he was filmed punching the nose of his board. Matt also bowed out to Jordy Smith, leaving all three of the featured surfers on the sidelines. Not to worry, that means more time for interviews!

Check out episode one of ‘Priority’, the World Surfing Leagues new web series about the behind the scenes life of surfing’s elite.


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