LIHU‘E — Australia’s Joel Parkinson made a brilliant return to the pro surfing stage after six months on the sidelines with injury, winning the Reef Hawaiian Pro Sunday to take the lead in the prestigious Vans Triple Crown of Surfing
LIHU‘E — Australia’s Joel Parkinson made a brilliant return to the pro surfing stage after six months on the sidelines with injury, winning the Reef Hawaiian Pro Sunday to take the lead in the prestigious Vans Triple Crown of Surfing series.
Parkinson, 29, is the two-time defending champion of this Hawaiian series that is the final stage of the ASP World Tour.
It was an emotional day for the Australian who has experienced the highs and lows of life en route to the win: The birth of his son last month, the death of close friend Andy Irons two weeks ago, and debilitating injury that forced him off tour.
This week Parkinson has been in devastating form, reports Ocean Promotion, posting the only perfect 10 of the event and the highest heat total of the competition in his opening round. His form has been on-point and on-rail for the duration and deserving of the $20,000 winner’s purse.
“It has been a pretty up and down year emotionally,” said Parkinson. “I cut my foot and I was out of action for six months, I didn’t surf for three months and I didn’t compete for six months. Then I had a baby son so we had some joy, and then Andy (Irons) passed. It’s been one of those years with one good thing then one bad thing. The year is almost over, we’ll get through it and I’m trying to make amends with all good things that can happen from here to December.
“Riding a wave is always one of those things that, no matter what happens in or around your life, you can still ride a wave and forget everything.
Runner-up in the final was Hawai‘i’s Joel Centeio ($10,000), the defending champion coming into the event.
Third was Australia’s Julian Wilson ($5,100) and fourth was fellow Aussie Heath Joske ($4,900).
The highest placed Brazilian surfer was Alejo Muniz (equal 13th); the top US surfer was Huntington Beach’s Brett Simpson (equal 13th); and the top European was Maxime Huscenot (France, equal 25th).
For Wilson and Joske, this was their first 6-star Prime rated final and the pair are now in the running for the JN Automotive Rookie of the Vans Triple Crown award – for the top newcomer to the series.
The 30-minute final was a relatively wave-starved affair with a total of only 11 waves ridden. Conditions over the past week of competition have ranged from double-overhead to head-high on Sunday.
The final of the Reef Clash of the Legends also ran Sunday and was won by Hawaiian Sunny Garcia, a six-time Vans Triple Crown champion in his own right. Runner-up was Australia’s Mark Occhilupo, California’s Tom Curren was third and Aussie Tom Carroll was fourth.
“It was inconsistent and I knew I got lucky because I got three set waves and those guys didn’t get any,” said Garcia, of his 30-minute final. “After I got the first one I figured I didn’t have anything to lose and I paddled them deep.
“I thought it was going to be a mellow thing, and that first heat woke me up to the fact that those guys were hungry and they still want to win so it was anything goes. But it was an honor to surf against those guys.”
The Reef Hawaiian Pro is the first stop of the 28th annual Vans Triple Crown of Surfing, presented by Rockstar Energy Drink. The show now moves seven miles north to Sunset Beach for the men’s and women’s O’Neill World Cup of Surfing. After that, the third and final stop of the series is the Billabong Pipe Masters & the Vans women’s Duel for the Jewel, where the men’s and women’s Vans Triple Crown champions will be crowned.
Live internet coverage happens every day, starting at 7:45 a.m. with “THE CALL” — the Triple Crown’s live daily morning show that features all the latest news, highlights and happenings. The series will also be broadcast live on television around Hawai‘i on Oceanic Time Warner Digital Cable channels 250 and HD1250.
Story and quotes provided by Jodi Wilmott of the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing.
Hunt to see 1000th event
This week, Al Hunt will attend his 1,000th professional surfing event at the O’Neill World Cup of Surfing at Sunset Beach on Oahu’s North Shore. The accomplishment is symbolic of a life dedicated to ensuring the fledging sport of surfing was ushered from its humble beginnings to its current state.
The big man, from Bateau Bay on New South Wales’ Central Coast, has served in a variety of crucial positions including ASP Head Judge, ASP World Tour Manager, ASP World Qualifying Series (WQS) Tour Manager and has been instrumental in the development of the sport since its inception.