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Home-nation Hero Casper Steinfath Wins SUP Sprint Gold for his Fifth World Title for Denmark

Home-nation Hero Casper Steinfath Wins SUP Sprint Gold for his Fifth World Title for Denmark

04/09/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 24010298

 

Home-nation Hero Casper Steinfath Wins SUP Sprint Gold for his Fifth World Title for Denmark
Slovenia's Manca Notar takes Women's SUP Sprint Gold, exemplifying global growth of sport
Casper Steinfath soaks in the pride of winning a Gold Medal for his home country of Denmark.  
Photo: ISA / Ben Reed
 
To see the full results, click here.
 
Copenhagen, Denmark, September 3, 2017 - Local sensation, Casper Steinfathovercame a second-place finish in the semi-final to deliver a commanding gold-medal performance in the 200-meter SUP Sprint Race Final to close a spectacular weekend of SUP racing in Copenhagen at the 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship.
 
The spectacular win by Steinfath in front of an energetic and vocal home crowd was also carried live on Danish national television. Steinfath's victory was another historic moment for the sport of SUP and Denmark.
 
The SUP Sprint Gold Medal is the second consecutive Sprint Title and fifth ISA SUP Racing Title for Steinfath, who also has been a leader in advancing the sport of SUP, serving as the ISA Vice President since 2014.
 
"This is the biggest moment in my life," said Steinfath. "It doesn't feel real!"
 
"People talk about Denmark as the country of fairy tales and I feel the fairy tale of my life just came true. To win in front of my home crowd was just a wild dream. I thought I would never achieve it.
 
"I'm especially stoked after my first-round heat where I hit a wall and barely made the Finals.
 
"I am happy that I decided to not compete in the Distance Race and focus on the Sprints. I respect all the athletes that decided to do both, but my game plan worked. I couldn't ask for anything more."
 
Casper Steinfath, a local of Cold Hawaii, will now look ahead to the SUP Technical Race to take place in Vorupør between September 5-10, just kilometers from his home town of Klitmøller.
 
In the Women's SUP Sprint Final, Slovenia's Manca Notar put on a dominate performance, beating the rest of the field by a decisive three-second margin.
 
"This is incredible!" said Notar. "Coming from Slovenia we only have lakes and a little bit of seaside. I train all the time alone at home and I knew that I had pretty good times, but I didn't know I was this good. All the girls pushed so hard. I can't believe it."
 
Notar's Gold Medal exemplifies the growing reach of the sport in non-traditional SUP nations, just a day after Hungary's Bruno Hasulyo won the first ISA SUP Gold Medal ever for a land-locked nation in the Men's Distance Race. With just over 40 kilometers of coast in Slovenia, Notar's performance symbolizes another significant leap forward for developing SUP nations.
 
The SUP Sprints kicked off on Sunday morning with sunny skies and a light breeze at the Copenhagen Opera House. The 42 participating National teams lined the harbor to root on their athletes competing for Gold Medals. The Men and Women featured four Semifinal heats each, with the top two of each heat advancing to the eight-person Finals.
 
The SUP Sprint Semifinals entered the water first with France's Amandine Chazot(1:08:80) notching the fastest time for the Women and Latvia's Arvis Iljins (0:56:97) the fastest for the Men.
 
Notably, yesterday's Women's SUP Distance Race Gold Medalist, Annabel Anderson (NZL), fell off the pace of the second Sprint Semifinal placing third and missing out on a shot at the podium.
 
During the first of the Men's Semifinals the local Danish crowd held their breath as Casper Steinfath got off to a slow start and came across the finish line in a photo finish for second place with Hawaii's Connor Baxter. The spectators anxiously awaited Steinfath's result, and let out a boisterous cheer when it was announced that he had edged out Baxter by inches to take the advancing second place position.
 
Steinfath's finish in the Final didn't leave any doubt for the judges, pulling ahead of the field by a full board length. New Zealand's Trevor Tunnington followed with the Silver Medal, Brazil's Artur Santacreu with the Bronze, and Australia's Lincoln Dews with the Copper.
 
Manca Notar also displayed stunning acceleration in the Women's Final, finishing well ahead of France's Amandine Chazot who earned the Silver Medal. USA's Jade Howson and Japan's Yuka Sato respectively finished with the Bronze and Copper Medals.
 
After the competition, an award ceremony followed to honor the first SUP Gold Medalists crowned in Copenhagen and bid farewell to the enchanting city that hosted the first leg of the event.
 
ISA President, Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"What a couple of days here in Denmark. It's been a week of firsts: The first time for this event in Europe, the first time Denmark has hosted an ISA event, first SUP World Championship with gender equality, the first time a Danish woman has won a medal, and the first time that Casper Steinfath has won a Gold Medal at home. That's truly special.
 
"Thanks to everyone that has been with us all these days. This is a bittersweet moment because we had such a great time in this city walking the streets, riding bicycles, and enjoying the culture. Today we wrap up the event in Copenhagen and go to Cold Hawaii to experience the beautiful northwest coast of Denmark.
 
"I would also like congratulate the participants here this weekend and to give a special award to the Mayor of Culture and Leisure of Copenhagen, Carl Christian Ebbesen, so every day he remembers the ISA and the 42 nations that came to visit. We will leave the Sands of the World here in Copenhagen, to remember forever this first encounter of the ISA and the Danish capital."
 
The Mayor of Culture and Leisure of Copenhagen, Carl Christian Ebbesen, said:
 
"Thank you so much on behalf of the City of Copenhagen. I am so proud that all you have managed to put on this incredible event. Congrats to Casper for the Gold Medal and all the other athletes for doing a great job."
 
The full schedule for the remainder of the event will be as follows:
  • Vorupør
    • September 4 - Lay day, Cold Hawaii Welcome Ceremony
    • September 5-10 - SUP Surfing, Technical Races, and Team Relay Race (schedule to be determined according to conditions)
    • September 10 - Closing Ceremony 
To view the full event schedule, click here.
 
The event will be streaming live September 1-10 on www.isaworlds.com.   
Home-nation Hero Casper Steinfath Wins SUP Sprint Gold for his Fifth World Title for Denmark
Slovenia's Manca Notar takes Women's SUP Sprint Gold, exemplifying global growth of sport
Casper Steinfath soaks in the pride of winning a Gold Medal for his home country of Denmark.  
Photo: ISA / Ben Reed
ATTENTION MEDIA: 
For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, click here.
 
To see the full results, click here.
 
Copenhagen, Denmark, September 3, 2017 - Local sensation, Casper Steinfathovercame a second-place finish in the semi-final to deliver a commanding gold-medal performance in the 200-meter SUP Sprint Race Final to close a spectacular weekend of SUP racing in Copenhagen at the 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship.
 
The spectacular win by Steinfath in front of an energetic and vocal home crowd was also carried live on Danish national television. Steinfath's victory was another historic moment for the sport of SUP and Denmark.
 
The SUP Sprint Gold Medal is the second consecutive Sprint Title and fifth ISA SUP Racing Title for Steinfath, who also has been a leader in advancing the sport of SUP, serving as the ISA Vice President since 2014.
 
"This is the biggest moment in my life," said Steinfath. "It doesn't feel real!"
 
"People talk about Denmark as the country of fairy tales and I feel the fairy tale of my life just came true. To win in front of my home crowd was just a wild dream. I thought I would never achieve it.
 
"I'm especially stoked after my first-round heat where I hit a wall and barely made the Finals.
 
"I am happy that I decided to not compete in the Distance Race and focus on the Sprints. I respect all the athletes that decided to do both, but my game plan worked. I couldn't ask for anything more."
 
Casper Steinfath, a local of Cold Hawaii, will now look ahead to the SUP Technical Race to take place in Vorupør between September 5-10, just kilometers from his home town of Klitmøller.
 
In the Women's SUP Sprint Final, Slovenia's Manca Notar put on a dominate performance, beating the rest of the field by a decisive three-second margin.
 
"This is incredible!" said Notar. "Coming from Slovenia we only have lakes and a little bit of seaside. I train all the time alone at home and I knew that I had pretty good times, but I didn't know I was this good. All the girls pushed so hard. I can't believe it."
 
Notar's Gold Medal exemplifies the growing reach of the sport in non-traditional SUP nations, just a day after Hungary's Bruno Hasulyo won the first ISA SUP Gold Medal ever for a land-locked nation in the Men's Distance Race. With just over 40 kilometers of coast in Slovenia, Notar's performance symbolizes another significant leap forward for developing SUP nations.
 
The SUP Sprints kicked off on Sunday morning with sunny skies and a light breeze at the Copenhagen Opera House. The 42 participating National teams lined the harbor to root on their athletes competing for Gold Medals. The Men and Women featured four Semifinal heats each, with the top two of each heat advancing to the eight-person Finals.
 
The SUP Sprint Semifinals entered the water first with France's Amandine Chazot(1:08:80) notching the fastest time for the Women and Latvia's Arvis Iljins (0:56:97) the fastest for the Men.
 
Notably, yesterday's Women's SUP Distance Race Gold Medalist, Annabel Anderson (NZL), fell off the pace of the second Sprint Semifinal placing third and missing out on a shot at the podium.
 
During the first of the Men's Semifinals the local Danish crowd held their breath as Casper Steinfath got off to a slow start and came across the finish line in a photo finish for second place with Hawaii's Connor Baxter. The spectators anxiously awaited Steinfath's result, and let out a boisterous cheer when it was announced that he had edged out Baxter by inches to take the advancing second place position.
 
Steinfath's finish in the Final didn't leave any doubt for the judges, pulling ahead of the field by a full board length. New Zealand's Trevor Tunnington followed with the Silver Medal, Brazil's Artur Santacreu with the Bronze, and Australia's Lincoln Dews with the Copper.
 
Manca Notar also displayed stunning acceleration in the Women's Final, finishing well ahead of France's Amandine Chazot who earned the Silver Medal. USA's Jade Howson and Japan's Yuka Sato respectively finished with the Bronze and Copper Medals.
 
After the competition, an award ceremony followed to honor the first SUP Gold Medalists crowned in Copenhagen and bid farewell to the enchanting city that hosted the first leg of the event.
 
ISA President, Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"What a couple of days here in Denmark. It's been a week of firsts: The first time for this event in Europe, the first time Denmark has hosted an ISA event, first SUP World Championship with gender equality, the first time a Danish woman has won a medal, and the first time that Casper Steinfath has won a Gold Medal at home. That's truly special.
 
"Thanks to everyone that has been with us all these days. This is a bittersweet moment because we had such a great time in this city walking the streets, riding bicycles, and enjoying the culture. Today we wrap up the event in Copenhagen and go to Cold Hawaii to experience the beautiful northwest coast of Denmark.
 
"I would also like congratulate the participants here this weekend and to give a special award to the Mayor of Culture and Leisure of Copenhagen, Carl Christian Ebbesen, so every day he remembers the ISA and the 42 nations that came to visit. We will leave the Sands of the World here in Copenhagen, to remember forever this first encounter of the ISA and the Danish capital."
 
The Mayor of Culture and Leisure of Copenhagen, Carl Christian Ebbesen, said:
 
"Thank you so much on behalf of the City of Copenhagen. I am so proud that all you have managed to put on this incredible event. Congrats to Casper for the Gold Medal and all the other athletes for doing a great job."
 
The full schedule for the remainder of the event will be as follows:
  • Vorupør
    • September 4 - Lay day, Cold Hawaii Welcome Ceremony
    • September 5-10 - SUP Surfing, Technical Races, and Team Relay Race (schedule to be determined according to conditions)
    • September 10 - Closing Ceremony 
To view the full event schedule, click here.
 
The event will be streaming live September 1-10 on www.isaworlds.com.   
Dramatic Finishes, First-time World Champions Mark Opening Races at 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship

Dramatic Finishes, First-time World Champions Mark Opening Races at 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship

03/09/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 23999963

 

Dramatic Finishes, First-time World Champions Mark Opening Races at 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship
New Zealand's Annabel Anderson, Australia's Jordan Mercer, Hungary's Bruno Hasulyo, and Australia's Lachie Lansdown emerge victorious in epic 18 km Distance Races
Bruno Hasulyo expresses pure joy as he earns Hungary's first ISA Gold Medal in their first appearance in the event. Photo: ISA / Ben Reed
ATTENTION MEDIA: 
For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, click here
 
To see full results, click here.  
 
Copenhagen, Denmark, September 2, 2017 - An epic set of 18km SUP and Paddleboard Distances Races led to inspiring performances and photo finishes on the first day of competition at the 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship.
 
New Zealand powerhouse Annabel Anderson dominated the Women's SUP Distance Race while Australian veteran Jordan Mercer overcame personal adversity to win the Women's Paddleboard Race in race that went down to the wire. 
 
On the men's side, Hungary's Bruno Hasulyo, put on a stunning display of SUP racing to become a first-time ISA World Champion on the Men's Distance Race, while Australia's Lachie Lansdown overcame last year's winner, Sam Shepard to win his second ISA World Title.
 
The Women's SUP Distance Race was first to take off in the morning. After 30 minutes into the race Anderson established a lead that would only grow as the race went on. Anderson earned the Gold Medal with a commanding lead ahead of the respective Silver and Bronze Medalists, Sonni Honscheid (GER) and Olivia Piana (FRA). USA's Fiona Wylde rounded out the podium in the Copper Medal position.
 
"I started out the day with no equipment and only my paddles managed to arrive here in Denmark," said Annabel Anderson. "I was riding a board I've never ridden before and I couldn't train on the course with my equipment. I just tried to get a feel for the course on the first lap and waited for my chance to attack. I had to ride on borrowed equipment, so it was a great result for me today."
 
The Women's Paddleboard Distance Race took off next and was fiercely contested from start to finish. The 8-time ISA Gold Medalist Jordan Mercer from Australia jumped out into the lead pack of paddlers, strategically drafting behind to conserve energy. The favorite Mercer was never able to break from the pack, and even trailed for moments on the final lap behind the local Danish paddler Katrine Zinck. After 18 grueling kilometers around the Copenhagen Harbor, the race came down to a sprint on the final stretch. Mercer was able to find an extra reserve of energy and pull ahead by less than a board length to take the win. New Zealand's Jessica Miller and Denmark's Katrine Zinck joined Mercer in the all-out sprint and finished respectively with the Silver and Bronze Medals, with Zinck notably earning the first ISA Medal ever for a Danish woman.
 
Mercer let her emotions out and expressed her pride after winning her ninth individual ISA Gold Medal.
 
"Just last night my board arrived at the airport and we discovered that there was a huge crease in it. My teammates along with friends from other competing nations stayed up late last night fixing. The first time I saw my board was this morning before the race and I just had faith that things would go my way.
 
"To paddle for 20km and come down to a sprint finish is the toughest way to have a race go so I knew I had to be really technical and be smart, but you really want to try to push as many girls back as you can.
 
"I just had to win, not just for me but for my family. They are going through a tough time and deserve this happiness and joy in their lives right now."
 
The Men's SUP and Paddleboard Distance Races followed the women in the afternoon, with the SUP men getting off to a quick start out of the gates. The Hungarian brother duo, Bruno and Daniel Hasulyo, set the pace along with SUP superstar Connor Baxterfrom Hawaii. On the third of four laps Baxter made a move to pull away from the group, but the lead was short lived as Bruno Hasulyo was able to close the gap. Baxter and Hasulyo exchanged leads until the final buoy turn where Baxter fumbled his footing, allowing Hasulyo to build a solid 10-meter lead. Hasulyo powered through the finish line, earning Hungary's first Gold Medal in their country's first appearance in the event. Bruno Hasulyo's brother, Daniel, came across the finish line behind Baxter with the Bronze Medal, historically placing another Hungarian on the podium. Baxter's teammate, Mo Freitas took the Copper Medal, adding another medal for Team Hawaii in their pursuit of the overall Team Gold.
 
Bruno Hasulyo exploded with joy after earning a medal alongside his brother.
 
"I've been training so hard for this every day for the last two years this was the main goal in front of me, so I am speechless. I couldn't be happier!
 
"Two weeks ago I said that winning a medal in this World Championship along with my brother would be a dream come true, and we've achieved that. This is huge for us and our country of Hungary."
 
Finishing off the day of competition was the Men's Paddleboard Distance Race, keeping the energy level high with another photo finish. The 2016 Gold Medalist, Sam Shergold (NZL) and the 2015 Gold Medalist, Lachie Lansdown (AUS), asserted themselves as the leaders from the beginning and went neck and neck to the end. Lansdown and Shergold sprinted through the finish, with Lansdown edging out the win by less than half a board length.
 
"Team Australia is super close and we did this as a team," said Lansdown. It's amazing to have their support and hear them cheer me as I passed by. Sam Shergold took the title away from me last year, so it feels great to get it back off him."
 
ISA President, Fernando Aguerre chimed in on the historic day of competition.
 
"Today was a day of firsts at the 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship. In the first day of the first ISA event ever held in Denmark and the first ISA SUP Worlds in Europe, we saw our first Danish woman win a medal and also our first land-locked nation taking a SUP Gold medal. The ISA has been the only international federation truly developing SUP. Seeing two medals from Hungary in their first year in the ISA Worlds speaks clearly illustrates our commitment to the development of SUP racing and surfing all around the world, even in countries without access to an ocean. 
 
"Sunday promises to be a heart stopping day, including local hero and ISA Vice President, Casper Steinfath, going for Gold in the SUP Sprint Races."
 
To see the race lineups for Sunday's SUP Sprint Races, click here
 
The full schedule for the remainder of the event will be as follows:
 
  • Copenhagen
    • September 3 - SUP Sprint Races, 9:00am CEST
    • September 3 - Award Ceremony after competition
  • Vorupør
    • September 4 - Lay day, Cold Hawaii Welcome Ceremony
    • September 5-10 - SUP Surfing, Technical Races, and Team Relay Race (schedule to be determined according to conditions)
    • September 10 - Closing Ceremony
To view the full event schedule, click here.
 
The event will be streaming live September 1-10 on www.isaworlds.com.
Dramatic Finishes, First-time World Champions Mark Opening Races at 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship
New Zealand's Annabel Anderson, Australia's Jordan Mercer, Hungary's Bruno Hasulyo, and Australia's Lachie Lansdown emerge victorious in epic 18 km Distance Races
Bruno Hasulyo expresses pure joy as he earns Hungary's first ISA Gold Medal in their first appearance in the event. Photo: ISA / Ben Reed
ATTENTION MEDIA: 
For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, click here
 
To see full results, click here.  
 
Copenhagen, Denmark, September 2, 2017 - An epic set of 18km SUP and Paddleboard Distances Races led to inspiring performances and photo finishes on the first day of competition at the 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship.
 
New Zealand powerhouse Annabel Anderson dominated the Women's SUP Distance Race while Australian veteran Jordan Mercer overcame personal adversity to win the Women's Paddleboard Race in race that went down to the wire. 
 
On the men's side, Hungary's Bruno Hasulyo, put on a stunning display of SUP racing to become a first-time ISA World Champion on the Men's Distance Race, while Australia's Lachie Lansdown overcame last year's winner, Sam Shepard to win his second ISA World Title.
 
The Women's SUP Distance Race was first to take off in the morning. After 30 minutes into the race Anderson established a lead that would only grow as the race went on. Anderson earned the Gold Medal with a commanding lead ahead of the respective Silver and Bronze Medalists, Sonni Honscheid (GER) and Olivia Piana (FRA). USA's Fiona Wylde rounded out the podium in the Copper Medal position.
 
"I started out the day with no equipment and only my paddles managed to arrive here in Denmark," said Annabel Anderson. "I was riding a board I've never ridden before and I couldn't train on the course with my equipment. I just tried to get a feel for the course on the first lap and waited for my chance to attack. I had to ride on borrowed equipment, so it was a great result for me today."
 
The Women's Paddleboard Distance Race took off next and was fiercely contested from start to finish. The 8-time ISA Gold Medalist Jordan Mercer from Australia jumped out into the lead pack of paddlers, strategically drafting behind to conserve energy. The favorite Mercer was never able to break from the pack, and even trailed for moments on the final lap behind the local Danish paddler Katrine Zinck. After 18 grueling kilometers around the Copenhagen Harbor, the race came down to a sprint on the final stretch. Mercer was able to find an extra reserve of energy and pull ahead by less than a board length to take the win. New Zealand's Jessica Miller and Denmark's Katrine Zinck joined Mercer in the all-out sprint and finished respectively with the Silver and Bronze Medals, with Zinck notably earning the first ISA Medal ever for a Danish woman.
 
Mercer let her emotions out and expressed her pride after winning her ninth individual ISA Gold Medal.
 
"Just last night my board arrived at the airport and we discovered that there was a huge crease in it. My teammates along with friends from other competing nations stayed up late last night fixing. The first time I saw my board was this morning before the race and I just had faith that things would go my way.
 
"To paddle for 20km and come down to a sprint finish is the toughest way to have a race go so I knew I had to be really technical and be smart, but you really want to try to push as many girls back as you can.
 
"I just had to win, not just for me but for my family. They are going through a tough time and deserve this happiness and joy in their lives right now."
 
The Men's SUP and Paddleboard Distance Races followed the women in the afternoon, with the SUP men getting off to a quick start out of the gates. The Hungarian brother duo, Bruno and Daniel Hasulyo, set the pace along with SUP superstar Connor Baxterfrom Hawaii. On the third of four laps Baxter made a move to pull away from the group, but the lead was short lived as Bruno Hasulyo was able to close the gap. Baxter and Hasulyo exchanged leads until the final buoy turn where Baxter fumbled his footing, allowing Hasulyo to build a solid 10-meter lead. Hasulyo powered through the finish line, earning Hungary's first Gold Medal in their country's first appearance in the event. Bruno Hasulyo's brother, Daniel, came across the finish line behind Baxter with the Bronze Medal, historically placing another Hungarian on the podium. Baxter's teammate, Mo Freitas took the Copper Medal, adding another medal for Team Hawaii in their pursuit of the overall Team Gold.
 
Bruno Hasulyo exploded with joy after earning a medal alongside his brother.
 
"I've been training so hard for this every day for the last two years this was the main goal in front of me, so I am speechless. I couldn't be happier!
 
"Two weeks ago I said that winning a medal in this World Championship along with my brother would be a dream come true, and we've achieved that. This is huge for us and our country of Hungary."
 
Finishing off the day of competition was the Men's Paddleboard Distance Race, keeping the energy level high with another photo finish. The 2016 Gold Medalist, Sam Shergold (NZL) and the 2015 Gold Medalist, Lachie Lansdown (AUS), asserted themselves as the leaders from the beginning and went neck and neck to the end. Lansdown and Shergold sprinted through the finish, with Lansdown edging out the win by less than half a board length.
 
"Team Australia is super close and we did this as a team," said Lansdown. It's amazing to have their support and hear them cheer me as I passed by. Sam Shergold took the title away from me last year, so it feels great to get it back off him."
 
ISA President, Fernando Aguerre chimed in on the historic day of competition.
 
"Today was a day of firsts at the 2017 ISA World SUP and Paddleboard Championship. In the first day of the first ISA event ever held in Denmark and the first ISA SUP Worlds in Europe, we saw our first Danish woman win a medal and also our first land-locked nation taking a SUP Gold medal. The ISA has been the only international federation truly developing SUP. Seeing two medals from Hungary in their first year in the ISA Worlds speaks clearly illustrates our commitment to the development of SUP racing and surfing all around the world, even in countries without access to an ocean. 
 
"Sunday promises to be a heart stopping day, including local hero and ISA Vice President, Casper Steinfath, going for Gold in the SUP Sprint Races."
 
To see the race lineups for Sunday's SUP Sprint Races, click here
 
The full schedule for the remainder of the event will be as follows:
 
  • Copenhagen
    • September 3 - SUP Sprint Races, 9:00am CEST
    • September 3 - Award Ceremony after competition
  • Vorupør
    • September 4 - Lay day, Cold Hawaii Welcome Ceremony
    • September 5-10 - SUP Surfing, Technical Races, and Team Relay Race (schedule to be determined according to conditions)
    • September 10 - Closing Ceremony
To view the full event schedule, click here.
 
The event will be streaming live September 1-10 on www.isaworlds.com.
ISA Holds First-Ever Olympic Solidarity Supported Course in Fiji

ISA Holds First-Ever Olympic Solidarity Supported Course in Fiji

10/08/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 23691913

 

ISA Holds First-Ever Olympic Solidarity Supported Course in Fiji
Twelve surf coaches from Oceania receive their ISA certification via the ISA's first Olympic Solidarity course in Fiji. Photo: Fiji Surfing Association
La Jolla, California, August 9, 2017 - The International Surfing Association (ISA)recently took a big step in the global development of Surfing and held its first-everOlympic Solidarity supported coaching course in Fiji from July 20-27.
 
Olympic Solidarity is a global development initiative of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) that is aimed at supporting National Olympic Committees (NOC) around the globe, particularly those with the greatest need. With the IOC's decision to include Surfing on the Sports Programme of the Tokyo 2020 Games in August of 2016, Surfing is now able to access the IOC's initiatives which help to support the global development of the sport.
 
Olympic Solidarity offers support for technical courses for coaches, scholarships for athletes, and programs that promote the values of Olympic Agenda 2020, such as sustainability, gender equality and diversity, and social development.
 
The ISA Surf Level 1 and Surf Level 2 courses that took place in Fiji were done in collaboration with the Fiji Surfing Association and the Fijian National Olympic Committee. The support from Olympic Solidarity allowed the courses to open to surf coaches from countries throughout the Oceania region and the course was an incredible opportunity to improve the standard of surf coaching in throughout the region and to give these coaches access to a higher level of surf coaching training and methodology.
 
The courses took place on Malolo Island, just a short distance from the world-class Fijian reefbreaks of Cloudbreak and Restaurants, providing the coaches with world-class waves to surf and practice the delivery of their coaching lessons. Six of the participating surf coaches came from Fiji, three from Vanuatu, and three from Samoa, with the expert instruction of ISA Course Presenter from New Zealand, Lee Ryan.
 
The ISA plans to build on the success of this first Olympic Solidarity course in Fiji, with plans in the near future to hold courses in the Dominican Republic and Guatemala. The ISA aims to strengthen its collaboration with Olympic Solidarity, its National Federations, and their corresponding National Olympic Committees across all five continents to develop the sport in traditional and non-traditional Surfing nations that lack adequate funding.
 
ISA President, Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"We are grateful to Olympic solidarity and the IOC for supporting the ISA and our friends in Oceania on this debut of our collaboration.
 
"Olympic Solidarity represents a fantastic opportunity for the ISA, our surf coaches and surfers around the world to benefit from surfing's inclusion in the Olympic Games through such coaching courses. The ISA is committed to working closely with the IOC and Olympic Solidarity to maximize this collaborative opportunity and to help contribute to the growth and well-being of the sport.
 
"This is one of the numerous examples of the positive, global impact of Olympic surfing. Olympic Solidarity will be a key tool in bolstering support for surf programs in traditional surfing nations as well as reaching new surfers in non-traditional nations that wish to practice the sport."
 
ISA Course Presenter Lee Ryan from New Zealand said:
 
"The ISA Courses held in Fiji with the support of Olympic Solidarity were a milestone for the development of Surfing in Oceania and a huge step for improving the coaching standard in the region. The knowledge and new skills gained over the past few days in Fiji by the participants during these courses will help them further develop surfing in their respective regions. I am excited to be apart of this important development initiative and am looking forward to helping the ISA train more instructors in the Oceania region in the future."
 
To learn more about Olympic Solidarity support for Surfing from the ISA and how to apply, click here.   
 
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ISA Holds First-Ever Olympic Solidarity Supported Course in Fiji
Twelve surf coaches from Oceania receive their ISA certification via the ISA's first Olympic Solidarity course in Fiji. Photo: Fiji Surfing Association
La Jolla, California, August 9, 2017 - The International Surfing Association (ISA)recently took a big step in the global development of Surfing and held its first-everOlympic Solidarity supported coaching course in Fiji from July 20-27.
 
Olympic Solidarity is a global development initiative of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) that is aimed at supporting National Olympic Committees (NOC) around the globe, particularly those with the greatest need. With the IOC's decision to include Surfing on the Sports Programme of the Tokyo 2020 Games in August of 2016, Surfing is now able to access the IOC's initiatives which help to support the global development of the sport.
 
Olympic Solidarity offers support for technical courses for coaches, scholarships for athletes, and programs that promote the values of Olympic Agenda 2020, such as sustainability, gender equality and diversity, and social development.
 
The ISA Surf Level 1 and Surf Level 2 courses that took place in Fiji were done in collaboration with the Fiji Surfing Association and the Fijian National Olympic Committee. The support from Olympic Solidarity allowed the courses to open to surf coaches from countries throughout the Oceania region and the course was an incredible opportunity to improve the standard of surf coaching in throughout the region and to give these coaches access to a higher level of surf coaching training and methodology.
 
The courses took place on Malolo Island, just a short distance from the world-class Fijian reefbreaks of Cloudbreak and Restaurants, providing the coaches with world-class waves to surf and practice the delivery of their coaching lessons. Six of the participating surf coaches came from Fiji, three from Vanuatu, and three from Samoa, with the expert instruction of ISA Course Presenter from New Zealand, Lee Ryan.
 
The ISA plans to build on the success of this first Olympic Solidarity course in Fiji, with plans in the near future to hold courses in the Dominican Republic and Guatemala. The ISA aims to strengthen its collaboration with Olympic Solidarity, its National Federations, and their corresponding National Olympic Committees across all five continents to develop the sport in traditional and non-traditional Surfing nations that lack adequate funding.
 
ISA President, Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"We are grateful to Olympic solidarity and the IOC for supporting the ISA and our friends in Oceania on this debut of our collaboration.
 
"Olympic Solidarity represents a fantastic opportunity for the ISA, our surf coaches and surfers around the world to benefit from surfing's inclusion in the Olympic Games through such coaching courses. The ISA is committed to working closely with the IOC and Olympic Solidarity to maximize this collaborative opportunity and to help contribute to the growth and well-being of the sport.
 
"This is one of the numerous examples of the positive, global impact of Olympic surfing. Olympic Solidarity will be a key tool in bolstering support for surf programs in traditional surfing nations as well as reaching new surfers in non-traditional nations that wish to practice the sport."
 
ISA Course Presenter Lee Ryan from New Zealand said:
 
"The ISA Courses held in Fiji with the support of Olympic Solidarity were a milestone for the development of Surfing in Oceania and a huge step for improving the coaching standard in the region. The knowledge and new skills gained over the past few days in Fiji by the participants during these courses will help them further develop surfing in their respective regions. I am excited to be apart of this important development initiative and am looking forward to helping the ISA train more instructors in the Oceania region in the future."
 
To learn more about Olympic Solidarity support for Surfing from the ISA and how to apply, click here.   
 
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MEXICO'S JHONY CORZO CROWNED MEN'S ISA WORLD CHAMPION AT 2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

MEXICO'S JHONY CORZO CROWNED MEN'S ISA WORLD CHAMPION AT 2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

30/05/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 22702308

 

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May 28, 2017
MEXICO'S JHONY CORZO CROWNED MEN'S ISA WORLD CHAMPION AT 2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES, JOAN DURU (FRA) WINS SILVER, 
PEDRO HENRIQUE (POR) BRONZE, 
JONATHAN GONZÁLEZ (ESP) COPPER
Mexico's Jhony Corzo soaks in the pride of being crowned ISA World Champion. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Biarritz celebrates France's Team Gold Medal, Team Portugal earns Silver, 
Spain Bronze, Mexico Copper
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit 
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
 
Biarritz, France, May 28, 2017 - A historic week of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games in Biarritz, France concluded on Sunday as an edition to go down in the record books. Mexico's 18-year-old prodigy Jhony Corzo earned the Gold Medal in the Open Men's Division, the first-ever individual Medal for Team Mexico that also propelled his team to their first Medal in history with the overall Copper.
 
2017 ISA World Surfing Games Gold Medalist, Jhony Corzo said:
 
"It's an amazing feeling to be crowned World Champion! I don't have words for it. This is something that I wanted ever since I was young and started surfing. This is my first time competing in the ISA World Surfing Games and I got the Gold. It's a dream come true."
 
Rounding out the podium for the Open Men's Division were France's Joan Duru with the Silver Medal, Portugal's Pedro Henrique with the Bronze Medal, and Spain's Jonathan González with the Copper Medal.
 
Team France got off to a blazing start in the week-long competition with the dominant Gold and Silver Medal performances of Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay in the Women's Division on May 22. The French Men also dominated their side of the competition, complementing their Gold Medal that was clinched after Saturday's competition with the individual Silver Medal of Duru and Semifinal finish of Jeremy Flores.
 
Team Portugal earned the Team Silver Medal for an impressive third consecutive year. Team Spain finished their solid run in the event with the Bronze Medal and Team Mexico took the Copper, their first time standing on the medal podium in the event's history.
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"Congratulations to the Team Gold Medalist, Team France, and the individual Gold Medalists Jhony Corzo and Pauline Ado. Jhony and Pauline will stake their names in history as ISA World Champions crowned in Biarritz along with legendary surfer Tom Curren. As all the other ISA competitors, they surfed in true Olympic spirit, for the honor of representing their countries.
 
"Forty-seven nations came together from around the world to surf in this record-breaking ISA World Surfing Games for a phenomenal week of surfing and team camaraderie. We are watching the sport grow before our eyes, with excellent surfers coming from all five continents and many new nations joining the international Surfing family. In three years' time, we will look back on this moment and remember which Olympians in Tokyo 2020 competed in this edition of the event."
 
Sunday morning kicked off with waist to chest high waves and clean conditions at Grande Plage. The Open Men's first Semifinal took to the water where Mexico's Jhony Corzo ignited his run for Gold. After falling behind early, Corzo found a combo of waves that gave him a heat total of 13.70 and sent him into the Final along with Portugal's Pedro Henrique. France's Jeremy Flores was unable to find waves with scoring potential and finished fourth in the heat, bowing from the competition along with Spain's Vicente Romero.
 
In the second Semifinal the European surfers prevailed, as Jonathan Gonzalez's (ESP) 13.90 and Joan Duru's 13.17 sent them through to the finals, eliminating Morocco's Yassine Ramdani and USA's Jordy Collins, who both had inspiring performances deep into the competition.
 
The final got underway as the tide approached its lowest point, drastically changing the shape of the wave at Grande Plage. Jhony Corzo notched an impressive ride in the excellent range, which when coupled with a solid back up score of 6.33, launched him into first position. In the dying minutes of the heat France's Joan Duru landed an air reverse in a last-ditch effort to catch Corzo, needing a high seven-point ride that came up short as a 7.23. Team Mexico let out a sigh of relief and stormed out into the tide to greet their World Champion. Portugal's Pedro Henrique followed in third place with the Bronze Medal and Spain's Jonathan Gonzalez less than a point behind Henrique with the Copper Medal.
 
To cap off the week of competition, the athletes from the top eight countries from the 2016 ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica competed in the ISA Aloha Cup, a tag-team style competition featuring four men and one women on each team. Each athlete rode a total of two waves during the 45-minute-long heats, where the waves from all five team members were summed to get the total team score.
 
The Semifinals and Finals of the ISA Aloha Cup took to the water after the finish of the Open Men's Final. Peru and France advanced through the first Semifinal, setting up for a final showdown with Portugal and USA, who advanced through the second Semifinal.
 
In the Final, Team France emerged victorious in front of the crowd at Grande Plage, giving them another spot atop one of the event's podiums. Team Portugal challenged France until the end of the Final, but couldn't match high scores from the powerful French surfers, finishing with the Silver Medal. Peru earned the Bronze and USA finished with the Copper.
 
Team Rankings
1 (Gold) - France
2 (Silver) - Portugal
3 (Bronze) - Spain
4 (Copper) -  Mexico
5 - Japan
6 - Peru
7 - USA
8 - Brazil
9 - Costa Rica
10 - South Africa
 
 
Open Men Medalists
Gold - Jhony Corzo (MEX)
Silver - Joan Duru (FRA)
Bronze - Pedro Henrique (POR)
Copper - Jonathan Gonzalez (ESP)
 
Open Women Gold Medalists (Women finished on May 22)
Gold - Pauline Ado (FRA)
Silver - Johanne Defay (FRA)
Bronze - Leilani McGonagle (CRC)
Copper - Bianca Buitendag (RSA)
 
ISA Aloha Cup
Gold - France
Silver - Portugal
Bronze - Peru
Copper - USA
 
To replay past days' webcasts, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/live/
 
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May 28, 2017
MEXICO'S JHONY CORZO CROWNED MEN'S ISA WORLD CHAMPION AT 2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES, JOAN DURU (FRA) WINS SILVER, 
PEDRO HENRIQUE (POR) BRONZE, 
JONATHAN GONZÁLEZ (ESP) COPPER
Mexico's Jhony Corzo soaks in the pride of being crowned ISA World Champion. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Biarritz celebrates France's Team Gold Medal, Team Portugal earns Silver, 
Spain Bronze, Mexico Copper
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit 
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
 
Biarritz, France, May 28, 2017 - A historic week of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games in Biarritz, France concluded on Sunday as an edition to go down in the record books. Mexico's 18-year-old prodigy Jhony Corzo earned the Gold Medal in the Open Men's Division, the first-ever individual Medal for Team Mexico that also propelled his team to their first Medal in history with the overall Copper.
 
2017 ISA World Surfing Games Gold Medalist, Jhony Corzo said:
 
"It's an amazing feeling to be crowned World Champion! I don't have words for it. This is something that I wanted ever since I was young and started surfing. This is my first time competing in the ISA World Surfing Games and I got the Gold. It's a dream come true."
 
Rounding out the podium for the Open Men's Division were France's Joan Duru with the Silver Medal, Portugal's Pedro Henrique with the Bronze Medal, and Spain's Jonathan González with the Copper Medal.
 
Team France got off to a blazing start in the week-long competition with the dominant Gold and Silver Medal performances of Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay in the Women's Division on May 22. The French Men also dominated their side of the competition, complementing their Gold Medal that was clinched after Saturday's competition with the individual Silver Medal of Duru and Semifinal finish of Jeremy Flores.
 
Team Portugal earned the Team Silver Medal for an impressive third consecutive year. Team Spain finished their solid run in the event with the Bronze Medal and Team Mexico took the Copper, their first time standing on the medal podium in the event's history.
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"Congratulations to the Team Gold Medalist, Team France, and the individual Gold Medalists Jhony Corzo and Pauline Ado. Jhony and Pauline will stake their names in history as ISA World Champions crowned in Biarritz along with legendary surfer Tom Curren. As all the other ISA competitors, they surfed in true Olympic spirit, for the honor of representing their countries.
 
"Forty-seven nations came together from around the world to surf in this record-breaking ISA World Surfing Games for a phenomenal week of surfing and team camaraderie. We are watching the sport grow before our eyes, with excellent surfers coming from all five continents and many new nations joining the international Surfing family. In three years' time, we will look back on this moment and remember which Olympians in Tokyo 2020 competed in this edition of the event."
 
Sunday morning kicked off with waist to chest high waves and clean conditions at Grande Plage. The Open Men's first Semifinal took to the water where Mexico's Jhony Corzo ignited his run for Gold. After falling behind early, Corzo found a combo of waves that gave him a heat total of 13.70 and sent him into the Final along with Portugal's Pedro Henrique. France's Jeremy Flores was unable to find waves with scoring potential and finished fourth in the heat, bowing from the competition along with Spain's Vicente Romero.
 
In the second Semifinal the European surfers prevailed, as Jonathan Gonzalez's (ESP) 13.90 and Joan Duru's 13.17 sent them through to the finals, eliminating Morocco's Yassine Ramdani and USA's Jordy Collins, who both had inspiring performances deep into the competition.
 
The final got underway as the tide approached its lowest point, drastically changing the shape of the wave at Grande Plage. Jhony Corzo notched an impressive ride in the excellent range, which when coupled with a solid back up score of 6.33, launched him into first position. In the dying minutes of the heat France's Joan Duru landed an air reverse in a last-ditch effort to catch Corzo, needing a high seven-point ride that came up short as a 7.23. Team Mexico let out a sigh of relief and stormed out into the tide to greet their World Champion. Portugal's Pedro Henrique followed in third place with the Bronze Medal and Spain's Jonathan Gonzalez less than a point behind Henrique with the Copper Medal.
 
To cap off the week of competition, the athletes from the top eight countries from the 2016 ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica competed in the ISA Aloha Cup, a tag-team style competition featuring four men and one women on each team. Each athlete rode a total of two waves during the 45-minute-long heats, where the waves from all five team members were summed to get the total team score.
 
The Semifinals and Finals of the ISA Aloha Cup took to the water after the finish of the Open Men's Final. Peru and France advanced through the first Semifinal, setting up for a final showdown with Portugal and USA, who advanced through the second Semifinal.
 
In the Final, Team France emerged victorious in front of the crowd at Grande Plage, giving them another spot atop one of the event's podiums. Team Portugal challenged France until the end of the Final, but couldn't match high scores from the powerful French surfers, finishing with the Silver Medal. Peru earned the Bronze and USA finished with the Copper.
 
Team Rankings
1 (Gold) - France
2 (Silver) - Portugal
3 (Bronze) - Spain
4 (Copper) -  Mexico
5 - Japan
6 - Peru
7 - USA
8 - Brazil
9 - Costa Rica
10 - South Africa
 
 
Open Men Medalists
Gold - Jhony Corzo (MEX)
Silver - Joan Duru (FRA)
Bronze - Pedro Henrique (POR)
Copper - Jonathan Gonzalez (ESP)
 
Open Women Gold Medalists (Women finished on May 22)
Gold - Pauline Ado (FRA)
Silver - Johanne Defay (FRA)
Bronze - Leilani McGonagle (CRC)
Copper - Bianca Buitendag (RSA)
 
ISA Aloha Cup
Gold - France
Silver - Portugal
Bronze - Peru
Copper - USA
 
To replay past days' webcasts, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/live/
 
FRANCE WINS HISTORIC FIRST-EVER  TEAM WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP AT  2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

FRANCE WINS HISTORIC FIRST-EVER TEAM WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP AT 2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

28/05/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 22683593

 

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May 27, 2017
FRANCE WINS HISTORIC FIRST-EVER 
TEAM WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP AT 
2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Semifinal performances by Jeremy Flores and Joan Duru along with Women's Medals from Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay have taken Team France to the Gold Medal position. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
 Individual competition set for Semifinals and Finals loaded with 
world-class talent on Sunday
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
 
Biarritz, France, May 27, 2017 - Heading into the final day of the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games, the ISA is pleased to officially announce that the host country Team France has made history and won their first-ever Team World Championship in the competition. 
 
Team France got off to a spectacular start with Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay finishing with Gold and Silver in the Women's Division earlier this week, and now Jeremy Flores and Joan Duru have advanced to the Men's Semifinals on Sunday. With these results, no other team is in a position to reach France's point totals. 
 
With the team competition decided, the individual medals will still be highly contested on Sunday afternoon at Grande Plage, Biarritz. Eight surfers' dreams of winning the Gold Medal are still alive. The Semifinal match ups are the following:
 
Semifinal 1:
Pedro Henrique (POR)
Jhony Corzo (MEX)
Jeremy Flores (FRA)
Vicente Romero (ESP)
 
Semifinal 2:
Jonathan González (ESP)
Yassine Ramdani (MAR)
Jordy Collins (USA)
Joan Duru (FRA)
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre said:
 
"Congratulations to Team France for winning their first-ever ISA World Surfing Games Team World Championship. An amazing accomplishment that should be saluted.  
                                                  
"We are only three years from the Olympic Games... Some of these surfers could very well be competing in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
 
"I am also very excited to see the universality of our sport in the semifinals with surfers from Europe, the Americas and Africa vying for the Gold Medal."
 
The seventh day of competition kicked off with Round 3 and 4 in sunny, clean conditions at Grande Plage. The swell increased as expected and the remaining members of the 47 National Surfing Teams left it all in the ocean, pushing as hard as they could for a chance to advance to the final day to win a medal for their nations.
 
The only countries relatively closely trailing France struggled through Rounds 3 and 4, as teams that had solid results in the Women's Division, such as Costa Rica and South Africa, lost the last of their remaining men.  
 
The Quarterfinals finished off the day of competition in continued clean conditions and set the stage for the Semifinals to take place on Sunday.
 
In the first Quarterfinal, Portugal's Pedro Henrique, who finished 5th at the 2016 edition, continued his on-point Surfing that has been on display all week and advanced onto the finals with the last African surfer remaining, Morocco's Yassine Ramdani. Peru's Cristobal de Col and France's Dmitri Ouvre were eliminated, resulting in the first French elimination in the Men's Division
 
One of the top highlights of the Quarterfinals was when the three remaining French surfers, Jeremy FloresVincent Duvignac, and Joan Duru, squared off in the same heat. Thousands flocked to Grand Plage to watch France's top surfers compete at once. Jeremy Flores made it clear that he intends to win Gold and marked the event's highest wave score thus far of 9.33. Flores's heat total of 15.83 was the highest of the Quarterfinals and advanced him into the Semifinals along with teammate Joan Duru (11.10). Vincent Duvignac (FRA) and Luis Maria Iturria (URU) placed third and fourth respectively, ending their run in the event.
 
The final Quarterfinal featured a heroic performance from the 18-year-old from Team USA Jordy Collins. Collins backed up his solid opening score of 6.23 with a huge aerial maneuver that catapulted him into first position, sending him through to the Semifinals along with Spain's Vicente Romero Portugal's Miguel Blanco and Peru's Juninho Urcia were left behind in third and fourth positions.
 
The final day of competition will take place at Grande Plage in Biarritz, France with the first call to start the event at 9:30am local time (CET). The event will be live streamed by the Olympic Channel and France TV, exemplifying the ISA's strategy to bring Surfing to a wider, global audience.
 
Additionally, the ISA will run its unique Aloha Cup competition. The ISA Aloha Cup is a team relay event that includes the top eight teams from the 2016 ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica. Three men and one woman on each team surf in the relay, summing up the wave totals from each athlete in a 40 minute heat. The team that ends up having the highest overall heat score wins. The heats for the ISA Aloha Cup are as follows:
 
Semifinal 1
Peru
France
Costa Rica
New Zealand
 
Semifinal 2
Portugal
USA
Argentina
Japan
 
The schedule for Sunday's competition is as follows*:
 
9:30am call
2 Semifinals Open Men
1 Final Open Men
2 Semifinals ISA Aloha Cup
1 Final ISA Aloha Cup
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
Watch live on www.isaworlds.com
 
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May 27, 2017
FRANCE WINS HISTORIC FIRST-EVER 
TEAM WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP AT 
2017 ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Semifinal performances by Jeremy Flores and Joan Duru along with Women's Medals from Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay have taken Team France to the Gold Medal position. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
 Individual competition set for Semifinals and Finals loaded with 
world-class talent on Sunday
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
 
Biarritz, France, May 27, 2017 - Heading into the final day of the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games, the ISA is pleased to officially announce that the host country Team France has made history and won their first-ever Team World Championship in the competition. 
 
Team France got off to a spectacular start with Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay finishing with Gold and Silver in the Women's Division earlier this week, and now Jeremy Flores and Joan Duru have advanced to the Men's Semifinals on Sunday. With these results, no other team is in a position to reach France's point totals. 
 
With the team competition decided, the individual medals will still be highly contested on Sunday afternoon at Grande Plage, Biarritz. Eight surfers' dreams of winning the Gold Medal are still alive. The Semifinal match ups are the following:
 
Semifinal 1:
Pedro Henrique (POR)
Jhony Corzo (MEX)
Jeremy Flores (FRA)
Vicente Romero (ESP)
 
Semifinal 2:
Jonathan González (ESP)
Yassine Ramdani (MAR)
Jordy Collins (USA)
Joan Duru (FRA)
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre said:
 
"Congratulations to Team France for winning their first-ever ISA World Surfing Games Team World Championship. An amazing accomplishment that should be saluted.  
                                                  
"We are only three years from the Olympic Games... Some of these surfers could very well be competing in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
 
"I am also very excited to see the universality of our sport in the semifinals with surfers from Europe, the Americas and Africa vying for the Gold Medal."
 
The seventh day of competition kicked off with Round 3 and 4 in sunny, clean conditions at Grande Plage. The swell increased as expected and the remaining members of the 47 National Surfing Teams left it all in the ocean, pushing as hard as they could for a chance to advance to the final day to win a medal for their nations.
 
The only countries relatively closely trailing France struggled through Rounds 3 and 4, as teams that had solid results in the Women's Division, such as Costa Rica and South Africa, lost the last of their remaining men.  
 
The Quarterfinals finished off the day of competition in continued clean conditions and set the stage for the Semifinals to take place on Sunday.
 
In the first Quarterfinal, Portugal's Pedro Henrique, who finished 5th at the 2016 edition, continued his on-point Surfing that has been on display all week and advanced onto the finals with the last African surfer remaining, Morocco's Yassine Ramdani. Peru's Cristobal de Col and France's Dmitri Ouvre were eliminated, resulting in the first French elimination in the Men's Division
 
One of the top highlights of the Quarterfinals was when the three remaining French surfers, Jeremy FloresVincent Duvignac, and Joan Duru, squared off in the same heat. Thousands flocked to Grand Plage to watch France's top surfers compete at once. Jeremy Flores made it clear that he intends to win Gold and marked the event's highest wave score thus far of 9.33. Flores's heat total of 15.83 was the highest of the Quarterfinals and advanced him into the Semifinals along with teammate Joan Duru (11.10). Vincent Duvignac (FRA) and Luis Maria Iturria (URU) placed third and fourth respectively, ending their run in the event.
 
The final Quarterfinal featured a heroic performance from the 18-year-old from Team USA Jordy Collins. Collins backed up his solid opening score of 6.23 with a huge aerial maneuver that catapulted him into first position, sending him through to the Semifinals along with Spain's Vicente Romero Portugal's Miguel Blanco and Peru's Juninho Urcia were left behind in third and fourth positions.
 
The final day of competition will take place at Grande Plage in Biarritz, France with the first call to start the event at 9:30am local time (CET). The event will be live streamed by the Olympic Channel and France TV, exemplifying the ISA's strategy to bring Surfing to a wider, global audience.
 
Additionally, the ISA will run its unique Aloha Cup competition. The ISA Aloha Cup is a team relay event that includes the top eight teams from the 2016 ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica. Three men and one woman on each team surf in the relay, summing up the wave totals from each athlete in a 40 minute heat. The team that ends up having the highest overall heat score wins. The heats for the ISA Aloha Cup are as follows:
 
Semifinal 1
Peru
France
Costa Rica
New Zealand
 
Semifinal 2
Portugal
USA
Argentina
Japan
 
The schedule for Sunday's competition is as follows*:
 
9:30am call
2 Semifinals Open Men
1 Final Open Men
2 Semifinals ISA Aloha Cup
1 Final ISA Aloha Cup
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
Watch live on www.isaworlds.com
 
TEAM FRANCE HOLDS ONTO COMMANDING  LEAD HEADING INTO FINAL STRETCH OF  ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

TEAM FRANCE HOLDS ONTO COMMANDING LEAD HEADING INTO FINAL STRETCH OF ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

27/05/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 22677749

 

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May 26, 2017
TEAM FRANCE HOLDS ONTO COMMANDING 
LEAD HEADING INTO FINAL STRETCH OF 
ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Jeremy Flores is received by his team and thousands of fans after his Round 2 heat win. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Men's competition set for a run at the Gold Medal with 
increased swell on Saturday
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
For full team ranking, visit (updated through Round 2): http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/pdf/team-points-wsg-2017-day6.pdf
 
Biarritz, France, May 26, 2017 - Team France has continued their impressive performance at the ISA World Surfing Games and after six days of competition has held onto their lead that was built by the Women's Gold and Silver Medal performances of Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay earlier this week. France is the last team with all male surfers remaining in the competition.
 
The men's competition is set for an exciting showdown with a Quarterfinals on Saturday and with a finish on Sunday if the expected conditions holds true.
 
On the sixth day of competition at Grande Plage the international surfers were greeted by a new swell in the chest-high range, providing plenty of faces and ramps for the athletes to display their progressive surfing.
 
Super star heats were on tap for Friday afternoon with talented match ups such as Joan Duru (FRA) against Leon Glatzer (GER) and Jeremy Flores (FRA) against Raoni Monteiro (BRA).
 
Duru got the better of Glatzer in the first of the stacked heats, topping off his first-place score of 14.84 with a smooth air reverse.
 
When Monteiro and Flores took the water, Flores jumped out to an early lead with solid backhand Surfing causing the local crowd to erupt in cheers. Monteiro saved his best two waves for last, marking an 8.5 and a 6.33 to surpass Flores and take first place. Both surfers will advance through to Round 3.
 
Raoni Monteiro expressed his emotion post-heat:
 
"That heat felt like I was already in the final! Jeremy Flores is a great surfer, we've competed a ton of times on the WSL Championship Tour.
 
"I am so stoked that I was invited to compete for Team Brazil after an unfortunate last-minute injury to Wiggolly Dantas. My team supporting me on the beach helped a lot, they told me to go to the right side of the beach where I found my best waves."
 
The host nation France nearly suffered their first elimination if not for the last-minute heroics of
Vincent Duvignac. Duvignac stood in third place as the final seconds of the heat were winding down, but he was able to find a wave with high scoring potential and marked the highest wave score of the heat with 8.7, moving him from third to first. Duvignac eliminated Germany's
Lenni Jensen and helped keep France atop the team rankings.
 
In the final heat of Round 2, the reigning and two-time ISA World Champion Leandro Usuna (ARG) was defeated by South Africa's Shane Sykes and Spain's Luiz Diaz in a tightly contested heat. With Usuna bowing out of the competition, the lone remaining Gold Medalist left in the event home is the country hero, Jeremy Flores, who won the ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica in 2009.  
 
Round 3 kicked off with the first five heats before the extreme high tide caused the contest to be put on hold.
 
Team Portugal stood out in the first heats of Round 3, as Pedro Henrique scored the round's highest heat score thus far with 14.43, followed closely behind by his teammate, Guilherme Fonseca's 14.00.
 
When Round 3 resumed in the afternoon Team France had another close call as Dimitri Ouvre tied with Chile's Nicolas Vargas' heat total of 8.87. Ouvre's higher single wave score of 5.50 gave him the nod into second place and left Vargas in third, eliminating him from the competition.
 
As part of a strategy to bring the sport of Surfing to new audiences and enhance the coverage of the ISA World Surfing Games, the ISA recently formed a partnership with the Olympic Channel to live stream the ISA World Surfing Games and collaborate on content. The Olympic Channel will live stream the final two days of the contest on May 27 and 28 to their fans around the world. Watch on www.olympichchannel.com.
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"The world's best National Surfing teams have shown their pride, perseverance and camaraderie all week. Now we have arrived at the final stretch where the ISA World Champions will distance themselves from the rest of the field and make history as the first ISA Gold Medalists crowned in Biarritz since 1980.
 
"Don't miss this historic moment and tune in to the live webcast!"
 
The schedule for Saturday's competition is as follows*:
 
8:30am - 10:30am: 8 heats Men Main Event Round 3
10:30am - 12:30pm: 8 heats Men Main Event Round 4
12:30pm - 1:50pm: 4 heats Men Quarterfinals
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 27-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com
 
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May 26, 2017
TEAM FRANCE HOLDS ONTO COMMANDING 
LEAD HEADING INTO FINAL STRETCH OF 
ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Jeremy Flores is received by his team and thousands of fans after his Round 2 heat win. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Men's competition set for a run at the Gold Medal with 
increased swell on Saturday
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
For full team ranking, visit (updated through Round 2): http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/pdf/team-points-wsg-2017-day6.pdf
 
Biarritz, France, May 26, 2017 - Team France has continued their impressive performance at the ISA World Surfing Games and after six days of competition has held onto their lead that was built by the Women's Gold and Silver Medal performances of Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay earlier this week. France is the last team with all male surfers remaining in the competition.
 
The men's competition is set for an exciting showdown with a Quarterfinals on Saturday and with a finish on Sunday if the expected conditions holds true.
 
On the sixth day of competition at Grande Plage the international surfers were greeted by a new swell in the chest-high range, providing plenty of faces and ramps for the athletes to display their progressive surfing.
 
Super star heats were on tap for Friday afternoon with talented match ups such as Joan Duru (FRA) against Leon Glatzer (GER) and Jeremy Flores (FRA) against Raoni Monteiro (BRA).
 
Duru got the better of Glatzer in the first of the stacked heats, topping off his first-place score of 14.84 with a smooth air reverse.
 
When Monteiro and Flores took the water, Flores jumped out to an early lead with solid backhand Surfing causing the local crowd to erupt in cheers. Monteiro saved his best two waves for last, marking an 8.5 and a 6.33 to surpass Flores and take first place. Both surfers will advance through to Round 3.
 
Raoni Monteiro expressed his emotion post-heat:
 
"That heat felt like I was already in the final! Jeremy Flores is a great surfer, we've competed a ton of times on the WSL Championship Tour.
 
"I am so stoked that I was invited to compete for Team Brazil after an unfortunate last-minute injury to Wiggolly Dantas. My team supporting me on the beach helped a lot, they told me to go to the right side of the beach where I found my best waves."
 
The host nation France nearly suffered their first elimination if not for the last-minute heroics of
Vincent Duvignac. Duvignac stood in third place as the final seconds of the heat were winding down, but he was able to find a wave with high scoring potential and marked the highest wave score of the heat with 8.7, moving him from third to first. Duvignac eliminated Germany's
Lenni Jensen and helped keep France atop the team rankings.
 
In the final heat of Round 2, the reigning and two-time ISA World Champion Leandro Usuna (ARG) was defeated by South Africa's Shane Sykes and Spain's Luiz Diaz in a tightly contested heat. With Usuna bowing out of the competition, the lone remaining Gold Medalist left in the event home is the country hero, Jeremy Flores, who won the ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica in 2009.  
 
Round 3 kicked off with the first five heats before the extreme high tide caused the contest to be put on hold.
 
Team Portugal stood out in the first heats of Round 3, as Pedro Henrique scored the round's highest heat score thus far with 14.43, followed closely behind by his teammate, Guilherme Fonseca's 14.00.
 
When Round 3 resumed in the afternoon Team France had another close call as Dimitri Ouvre tied with Chile's Nicolas Vargas' heat total of 8.87. Ouvre's higher single wave score of 5.50 gave him the nod into second place and left Vargas in third, eliminating him from the competition.
 
As part of a strategy to bring the sport of Surfing to new audiences and enhance the coverage of the ISA World Surfing Games, the ISA recently formed a partnership with the Olympic Channel to live stream the ISA World Surfing Games and collaborate on content. The Olympic Channel will live stream the final two days of the contest on May 27 and 28 to their fans around the world. Watch on www.olympichchannel.com.
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre, said:
 
"The world's best National Surfing teams have shown their pride, perseverance and camaraderie all week. Now we have arrived at the final stretch where the ISA World Champions will distance themselves from the rest of the field and make history as the first ISA Gold Medalists crowned in Biarritz since 1980.
 
"Don't miss this historic moment and tune in to the live webcast!"
 
The schedule for Saturday's competition is as follows*:
 
8:30am - 10:30am: 8 heats Men Main Event Round 3
10:30am - 12:30pm: 8 heats Men Main Event Round 4
12:30pm - 1:50pm: 4 heats Men Quarterfinals
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 27-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com
 
THREE DAYS REMAIN TO CROWN FIRST  ISA WORLD CHAMPIONS IN OLYMPIC CYCLE AT  ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

THREE DAYS REMAIN TO CROWN FIRST ISA WORLD CHAMPIONS IN OLYMPIC CYCLE AT ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

27/05/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 22677675
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May 25, 2017
THREE DAYS REMAIN TO CROWN FIRST 
ISA WORLD CHAMPIONS IN OLYMPIC CYCLE AT 
ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Italy's Angelo Bonomelli will take to the water in the Opening heat of Round 3 on Friday. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans 
Competition to resume with Open Men as swell expected to 
increase on Friday morning
 
Biarritz, France, May 25, 2017 - Just three days remain for the ISA World Surfing Games to crown the first ISA World Champions in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic cycle.
 
Competition at Grande Plage is set to resume on Friday morning with Round 2 and 3 of the Open Men Main Event, as the swell is expected to fill in and provide the world's best National Surfing Teams with a platform to put their world class talents on display.
 
The ISA World Surfing Games kicked off on May 20 with the festive Opening Ceremony featuring record-breaking 47 countries united to represent their nations and compete for Gold. The effects of Surfing's inclusion in the Olympic games has left its mark on the 2017 edition of the event. Non-traditional Surfing nations such as, Afghanistan, China, Chinese Taipei, South Korea and Greece, have experienced the wave of global growth and fielded teams for the first time.
 
The Women's competition kicked off the event May 20-22, where the home nation heroes Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay respectively took the Gold and Silver Medals. Costa Rica's Leilani McGonagle earned the Bronze Medal for the second time in three years and South Africa's Bianca Buitendag took the Copper.
 
In the Men's side of the competition, the heats are loaded with world-class talent. Coming up in Round 2 are superstar heats featuring Jeremy Flores (FRA), Joan Duru (FRA), Ian Gouveia (BRA), and the reigning ISA World Champion, Leandro Usuna (ARG).
 
As part of a strategy to enhance the global reach of Surfing and more closely align with the Olympic Movement, the ISA recently signed an agreement with the Olympic Channel to live stream the ISA World Surfing Games and collaborate on content. The Olympic Channel will live stream the event on May 27 and 28 to give fans around the world a look into the Finals of the competition.
 
The Olympic Channel will be showing the World Premiere of their first ever surf movie 'Shredding Monsters' on Friday night in Biarritz. The movie tells the story of five big wave legends Jamie MitchellHugo VauAlessandro MarcianoAndrew Cotton, and Garrett McNamara on the infamous wave of Nazare in Portugal. Mitchel, Vau and Marciano are all in Biarritz to celebrate the premiere. The premiere will take place in the Barriere Casino on Friday night and entry is free. Visitors simply need to download the Olympic Channel app to enter.
 
In additional to the premiere of 'Shredding Monsters', the French Surfing Federation put on a movie screening of 'Biarritz Surf Gang' and 'Dancing in the Waves' and a SUP Race Demo, an ISA discipline, to enhance the environment and surf culture surrounding the event.
 
On this lay day at the ISA World Surfing Games, coaches, athletes, and officials from the ISA's National Federations were invited to attend an educational anti-doping seminar. The seminar was part of the ISA's ongoing commitment to the fight against doping in sport and compliance with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) code.  The seminar included a discussion on topics such as in-competition testing, out of competition testing, registered testing pool, whereabouts administration, therapeutic use exemption forms, and other related topics. The goal was to educate athletes and National Federations about their new responsibilities as an Olympic sport heading to Tokyo 2020.
 
The schedule for Friday's competition is as follows*:
 
8am - 1:00pm: 20 heats Men Main Event Round 2
1:00pm - 4:00pm: 12 heats Men Main Event Round 3
 
*Schedule subject to change. Local time.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 26-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 26 - World Premiere of "Shredding Monsters", an Olympic Channel Production, 8pm CET at the Municipal Casino Theatre, Biarritz
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com.
 
FIERCE ELIMINATION ROUNDS BRING OPEN MEN ONE STEP CLOSER TO GOLD AT THE  ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

FIERCE ELIMINATION ROUNDS BRING OPEN MEN ONE STEP CLOSER TO GOLD AT THE ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES

25/05/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 22662035

 

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May 24, 2017
FIERCE ELIMINATION ROUNDS BRING OPEN MEN ONE STEP CLOSER TO GOLD AT THE 
ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Brazil's Elivelton Santos put on one of the most impressive performances of the morning in Biarritz. 
Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Team France retain early lead in team rankings, look to build on 
Women's medal performances
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/media/     
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
Biarritz, Francia, May 24, 2017 - Fiercely surfed elimination rounds ran on the fifth day of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games in Biarritz, France. The Men completed Repechage Round 1 and 13 heats of Main Event Round 2, eliminating a total of 58 surfers and narrowing the field of hopeful men world champions down to 110.
 
Team France remain one of 14 countries that still has all four of their male surfers in the competition. Given that Team France's Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay respectively took the Gold and Silver in the Open Women Division, they remain in first overall position with four days remaining in the event window.
 
The fifth day of competition took place in a declining swell that provided waves in the waist to chest high range during a sunny, cloudless day at the venue of Grande Plage. The Open Men's Division finished off the sole Repechage Round of the event that had begun the previous evening with some powerful Surfing put on display.
 
Argentina's Felipe Suarez and Norway's Luca Guichard were the stand out performers, facing off in the same Repechage heat. The surfers tied for first in the heat and marked the highest heat total of the round with 14.90 points, bouncing back after their Round 1 Main Event losses.
 
The reigning ISA World Junior Champion and Brazilian surfing prodigy , Weslley Dantas, also rebounded after an uncharacteristically poor performance in Round 1 of the Main Event. Dantas took advantage of the second opportunity that the Repechage Round provides to seed back into the Main Event and stayed in form for his following Main Event heat to finish in first place, sending him into Round 3 of 7.
 
Overall in the Repechage Round, 34 surfers were eliminated from the competition, including Fiji's Lesi Navuwai. As a member of the first-ever Fijian Team to compete in the ISA World Surfing Games, Navuwai did not dwell on his loss, but spoke about his positive experience this week in France:
 
"My experience in France has been amazing, the people in Biarritz are very friendly. All the international surfers that I have met in the water have been welcoming and supportive, chatting about the great waves that we have in Fiji. I just tell them that they need to come to Fiji and see for themselves!"
 
"We are hoping to get more funding next year and bring a full team with women as well."
 
The afternoon continued with the Men's Main Event Round 2 after a contest hold during the high tide. Now moving into single elimination rounds, the athletes left it all in the ocean and put on gutsy performances to make their nations proud and remain in the competition.
 
The second portion of Main Event Round 2 that ran was highlighted by an electric performance from Brazil's Elivelton Santos (BRA) who was able to create speed in the small surf and launch progressive aerial maneuvers to earn the second highest heat total of the round with 16.1.
 
The top performance of Round 2 belonged to Tahiti's Ariihoe Tefaafana, who navigated the smaller afternoon conditions and earned the highest heat total of 16.13.
 
Round 2 will continue with the 20 remaining heats when competition resumes.
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre spoke about the action taking place at Grande Plage:
 
"We have now entered into the second half of the competition and the in-form surfers are beginning to emerge above the rest of the field. In the days that are coming, emotions will run high and the competition will intensify as the event edges closer to crowning world champions. We are witnessing history as Gold Medalists will soon be crowned on Sunday, the first champions in the Olympic Surfing cycle."
 
A call will be made for Thursday's competition at 9am local time (CET). Conditions are expected to be small, with a new westerly swell arriving for Friday in the waist to shoulder high range, therefore a lay day is possible.
 
If competition runs, the schedule will be the following*:
 
9am - Call
9:20am - Possible heat start Men Main Event Round 2
12pm - Call
12:20pm - Possible heat start Men Main Event Round 2
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 25-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 26 - World Premiere of "Shredding Monsters", an Olympic Channel Production, 8pm CET at the Municipal Casino Theatre, Biarritz
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com
 
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May 24, 2017
FIERCE ELIMINATION ROUNDS BRING OPEN MEN ONE STEP CLOSER TO GOLD AT THE 
ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES
Brazil's Elivelton Santos put on one of the most impressive performances of the morning in Biarritz. 
Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Team France retain early lead in team rankings, look to build on 
Women's medal performances
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/media/     
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
Biarritz, Francia, May 24, 2017 - Fiercely surfed elimination rounds ran on the fifth day of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games in Biarritz, France. The Men completed Repechage Round 1 and 13 heats of Main Event Round 2, eliminating a total of 58 surfers and narrowing the field of hopeful men world champions down to 110.
 
Team France remain one of 14 countries that still has all four of their male surfers in the competition. Given that Team France's Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay respectively took the Gold and Silver in the Open Women Division, they remain in first overall position with four days remaining in the event window.
 
The fifth day of competition took place in a declining swell that provided waves in the waist to chest high range during a sunny, cloudless day at the venue of Grande Plage. The Open Men's Division finished off the sole Repechage Round of the event that had begun the previous evening with some powerful Surfing put on display.
 
Argentina's Felipe Suarez and Norway's Luca Guichard were the stand out performers, facing off in the same Repechage heat. The surfers tied for first in the heat and marked the highest heat total of the round with 14.90 points, bouncing back after their Round 1 Main Event losses.
 
The reigning ISA World Junior Champion and Brazilian surfing prodigy , Weslley Dantas, also rebounded after an uncharacteristically poor performance in Round 1 of the Main Event. Dantas took advantage of the second opportunity that the Repechage Round provides to seed back into the Main Event and stayed in form for his following Main Event heat to finish in first place, sending him into Round 3 of 7.
 
Overall in the Repechage Round, 34 surfers were eliminated from the competition, including Fiji's Lesi Navuwai. As a member of the first-ever Fijian Team to compete in the ISA World Surfing Games, Navuwai did not dwell on his loss, but spoke about his positive experience this week in France:
 
"My experience in France has been amazing, the people in Biarritz are very friendly. All the international surfers that I have met in the water have been welcoming and supportive, chatting about the great waves that we have in Fiji. I just tell them that they need to come to Fiji and see for themselves!"
 
"We are hoping to get more funding next year and bring a full team with women as well."
 
The afternoon continued with the Men's Main Event Round 2 after a contest hold during the high tide. Now moving into single elimination rounds, the athletes left it all in the ocean and put on gutsy performances to make their nations proud and remain in the competition.
 
The second portion of Main Event Round 2 that ran was highlighted by an electric performance from Brazil's Elivelton Santos (BRA) who was able to create speed in the small surf and launch progressive aerial maneuvers to earn the second highest heat total of the round with 16.1.
 
The top performance of Round 2 belonged to Tahiti's Ariihoe Tefaafana, who navigated the smaller afternoon conditions and earned the highest heat total of 16.13.
 
Round 2 will continue with the 20 remaining heats when competition resumes.
 
ISA President Fernando Aguerre spoke about the action taking place at Grande Plage:
 
"We have now entered into the second half of the competition and the in-form surfers are beginning to emerge above the rest of the field. In the days that are coming, emotions will run high and the competition will intensify as the event edges closer to crowning world champions. We are witnessing history as Gold Medalists will soon be crowned on Sunday, the first champions in the Olympic Surfing cycle."
 
A call will be made for Thursday's competition at 9am local time (CET). Conditions are expected to be small, with a new westerly swell arriving for Friday in the waist to shoulder high range, therefore a lay day is possible.
 
If competition runs, the schedule will be the following*:
 
9am - Call
9:20am - Possible heat start Men Main Event Round 2
12pm - Call
12:20pm - Possible heat start Men Main Event Round 2
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 25-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 26 - World Premiere of "Shredding Monsters", an Olympic Channel Production, 8pm CET at the Municipal Casino Theatre, Biarritz
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com
 
OPENING MEN'S ROUND AT ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES DEMONSTRATES EXPLOSIVE GROWTH  AND UNIVERSALITY OF SURFING

OPENING MEN'S ROUND AT ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES DEMONSTRATES EXPLOSIVE GROWTH AND UNIVERSALITY OF SURFING

24/05/2017, International, Surfing, International Surfing Association, Article # 22652568

 

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May 23, 2017
OPENING MEN'S ROUND AT ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES DEMONSTRATES EXPLOSIVE GROWTH 
AND UNIVERSALITY OF SURFING
The international Surfing community gathered in Biarritz shows support to their competing athletes from the shore. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Newcomer nations Afghanistan, Greece, Senegal, China inspire on the 
fourth day of competition in Biarritz, France
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/media/
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
Biarritz, France, May 23, 2017 - National flags and team camaraderie were on display on the fourth day of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games. The record-breaking 47 competing nations showcased the universality and growth of the sport of Surfing.
 
Newcomer nations such as, Afghanistan, Greece, Senegal and China, got their chance to show the world the great leaps of growth that their non-traditional Surfing nations have experienced in recent years, and especially since the inclusion of Surfing in the Olympic Games.
 
In a day of Men's Open and Repechage Surfing, Afghanistan's sole representative, Afridun Amu, took to the water in third heat of the day and made history as the first surfer to ever represent Afghanistan in an ISA World Championship.
 
"My participation here represents two things," said Amu. "First, it's fun. Surfing is my passion and I love being here. Secondly, I hope that I can be an ambassador of my country and show people the bright side of Afghanistan that is not portrayed in the news."
 
Greece, Senegal, Chinese Taipei and China, all first-time competing nations, also proudly surfed for their countries, gaining the valuable experience of participating in a world championship.
 
"Greece is a new country to Surfing and we are making our best effort to improve," said Christos Chatzis, the sole representative of Team Greece. "I almost had a heart attack going out in the water because the level of talent here is so high.
 
"My goal is to transfer the message of what is happening at this event to the younger guys in Greece and encourage them to compete next year. Overall, my experience in Biarritz has been like a dream!"
 
Team China also exemplified the universality of Surfing present at the event. Peter Townend, a former World Champion and coach of Team China, spoke about the progress being made in the development of this newly introduced sport in the country.
 
"It's incredible the countries that are represented at this year's edition of the ISA World Surfing Games. I've surfed for my country, I've coached Team USA to Gold, and now I have entered a new phase and have become the first-ever official coach of China's National Surfing Team.
 
"After inclusion in the Olympics, China's National Olympic Committee was motivated to get behind the sport and has been supporting the athletes. We are taking baby steps, but we are making progress.
 
"Coming to this event is mostly a learning experience for my team. We can see where we stand against the best teams in the world and make an assessment on how we can improve ahead of Tokyo 2020."
 
In addition to the inspiring performances from non-traditional Surfing nations, some of the top male surfers in the world also put on a spectacular display of high performance Surfing.
 
In a day full of air reverses and progressive maneuvers, Mexico's Dylan Southworth stood out from the field with the highest heat total of the day with 16.16 followed by Vicente Romero's (ESP) 14.67.
 
Notably, the reigning world champion, Leandro Usuna (ARG), advanced through his heat in second position and will continue onto Round 2, a single elimination round.
 
France's two WSL Championship Tour surfers, Joan Duru and Jeremy Flores, each won their respective heats, looking to compliment the podium finishes of their female teammates Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay.
 
Visiting Biarritz to experience the festivities of the ISA World Surfing Games was IOC Sports Director, Kit McConnell.
 
"It is Surfing's community and passion that attracted Tokyo 2020 and the IOC to the sport," explained McConnell. "We want to embrace that international community and create a connection with the Olympic Movement."
 
"It's incredible to see the universality of Surfing, with countries competing such as China, Chinese Taipei, and Senegal. We hope that through Olympic inclusion we will get more visibility and growth for the sport at a national level.
 
"I am looking forward to seeing some of these nations compete at Tokyo 2020."
 
The schedule for Wednesday's competition is as follows*:
 
7am - 11:15am: 17 heats Men Repechage Round 1
11:15am - 4:55pm: 17 heats Men Main Event Round 2
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
The Surfline official forecast is calling for continued new west swell in the waist to chest high range at Grande Plage.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 24-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 26 - World Premiere of "Shredding Monsters", an Olympic Channel Production, 8pm CET at the Municipal Casino Theatre, Biarritz
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com
 
Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterView our videos on YouTubeInstagram
May 23, 2017
OPENING MEN'S ROUND AT ISA WORLD SURFING GAMES DEMONSTRATES EXPLOSIVE GROWTH 
AND UNIVERSALITY OF SURFING
The international Surfing community gathered in Biarritz shows support to their competing athletes from the shore. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Newcomer nations Afghanistan, Greece, Senegal, China inspire on the 
fourth day of competition in Biarritz, France
 
ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/media/
 
To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/
 
Biarritz, France, May 23, 2017 - National flags and team camaraderie were on display on the fourth day of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games. The record-breaking 47 competing nations showcased the universality and growth of the sport of Surfing.
 
Newcomer nations such as, Afghanistan, Greece, Senegal and China, got their chance to show the world the great leaps of growth that their non-traditional Surfing nations have experienced in recent years, and especially since the inclusion of Surfing in the Olympic Games.
 
In a day of Men's Open and Repechage Surfing, Afghanistan's sole representative, Afridun Amu, took to the water in third heat of the day and made history as the first surfer to ever represent Afghanistan in an ISA World Championship.
 
"My participation here represents two things," said Amu. "First, it's fun. Surfing is my passion and I love being here. Secondly, I hope that I can be an ambassador of my country and show people the bright side of Afghanistan that is not portrayed in the news."
 
Greece, Senegal, Chinese Taipei and China, all first-time competing nations, also proudly surfed for their countries, gaining the valuable experience of participating in a world championship.
 
"Greece is a new country to Surfing and we are making our best effort to improve," said Christos Chatzis, the sole representative of Team Greece. "I almost had a heart attack going out in the water because the level of talent here is so high.
 
"My goal is to transfer the message of what is happening at this event to the younger guys in Greece and encourage them to compete next year. Overall, my experience in Biarritz has been like a dream!"
 
Team China also exemplified the universality of Surfing present at the event. Peter Townend, a former World Champion and coach of Team China, spoke about the progress being made in the development of this newly introduced sport in the country.
 
"It's incredible the countries that are represented at this year's edition of the ISA World Surfing Games. I've surfed for my country, I've coached Team USA to Gold, and now I have entered a new phase and have become the first-ever official coach of China's National Surfing Team.
 
"After inclusion in the Olympics, China's National Olympic Committee was motivated to get behind the sport and has been supporting the athletes. We are taking baby steps, but we are making progress.
 
"Coming to this event is mostly a learning experience for my team. We can see where we stand against the best teams in the world and make an assessment on how we can improve ahead of Tokyo 2020."
 
In addition to the inspiring performances from non-traditional Surfing nations, some of the top male surfers in the world also put on a spectacular display of high performance Surfing.
 
In a day full of air reverses and progressive maneuvers, Mexico's Dylan Southworth stood out from the field with the highest heat total of the day with 16.16 followed by Vicente Romero's (ESP) 14.67.
 
Notably, the reigning world champion, Leandro Usuna (ARG), advanced through his heat in second position and will continue onto Round 2, a single elimination round.
 
France's two WSL Championship Tour surfers, Joan Duru and Jeremy Flores, each won their respective heats, looking to compliment the podium finishes of their female teammates Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay.
 
Visiting Biarritz to experience the festivities of the ISA World Surfing Games was IOC Sports Director, Kit McConnell.
 
"It is Surfing's community and passion that attracted Tokyo 2020 and the IOC to the sport," explained McConnell. "We want to embrace that international community and create a connection with the Olympic Movement."
 
"It's incredible to see the universality of Surfing, with countries competing such as China, Chinese Taipei, and Senegal. We hope that through Olympic inclusion we will get more visibility and growth for the sport at a national level.
 
"I am looking forward to seeing some of these nations compete at Tokyo 2020."
 
The schedule for Wednesday's competition is as follows*:
 
7am - 11:15am: 17 heats Men Repechage Round 1
11:15am - 4:55pm: 17 heats Men Main Event Round 2
 
*Schedule subject to change.
 
The Surfline official forecast is calling for continued new west swell in the waist to chest high range at Grande Plage.
 
The schedule for the remainder of the event is as follows:
 
May 24-28 - Men's Competition, Grande Plage
May 26 - World Premiere of "Shredding Monsters", an Olympic Channel Production, 8pm CET at the Municipal Casino Theatre, Biarritz
May 28 - Closing Ceremony, Grande Plage
 
Watch the event live May 20-28 on www.isaworlds.com
 
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