PLAYA HERMOSA, Costa Rica — It was a fitting end to an event steeped in a mix of camaraderie and tough competition as Team USA took the overall gold medal over Team France at the Billabong ISA World Surfing Games
PLAYA HERMOSA, Costa Rica — It was a fitting end to an event steeped in a mix of camaraderie and tough competition as Team USA took the overall gold medal over Team France at the Billabong ISA World Surfing Games presented by Monster Energy in Costa Rica. It was the first time that the Americans have won an overall gold medal in since the 1996 World Surfing Games in Huntington Beach, California, states an ISA press release.
Team Hawai‘i finished fourth among the 35 nations that competed, earning the copper medal.
Kaua‘i’s Nage Melamed, 15, was among the final 12 surfers in the women’s bracket that started with 64 competitors. She advanced to the sixth repecharge round before falling to eventual gold-medalist, American Courtney Conlogue and fellow Team Hawai‘i member Alessa Quinzon.
Hank Gaskell and Joel Centeio each made it to the final eight of the massive 128-member men’s open draw. Their combined efforts put Hawai‘i within just a few points of powerhouse Australia, which took the bronze.
From the opening heats of the Games at Playa Hermosa that began August 1, Team USA appeared committed and focused, as they competed against 34 other teams for a spot on the podium. With the final day of competition looming overhead, Team USA stood firm and was able to place five or their eight team members into the three finals, hence becoming the team to beat.
The team was led by Ian Cairns who assumed the position as coach less than one month ago.
“We had good surfers and what we did was to stay very concentrated,” said a low-key Cairns. “This is a long event and it was very important to preserve your energy.
“I am really very happy,” said Cairns of the first American title in more than a decade. “My goal was to come here and win. But also I wanted to establish a different personality for American surfing. I didn’t want to make a lot of noise until things were happening. We built the support, the calmness and we focused on being together and concentrating on doing things well. Later, at the final, we went to the beach to wave the flag.”
Hot on the USA’s heels was the French team, led by ASP World Tour surfer Jeremy Flores. He looked in stellar form throughout the entire contest. France managed to put one athlete in each of the Open, Women’s, and Longboard divisions.
Kick-starting the final day of the contest was the ISA Aloha Cup, run as a tag-team event with five surfers from each team taking turns competing in the hour-long final. The unique format brought the national pride and overall competitiveness that had been simmering to a roaring boil.
Historically, one of the strongest teams in the event and last year’s overall event winner, Team Australia, took the lead in the Aloha Cup at the outset of the heat and managed to hold on to it despite a strong rally from the French Team.
Following the Aloha Cup, the Longboard finalists took to the tepid 4 to 5 foot Costa Rican lineup and put on a tremendous show. The final, that included an American, a Frenchman, an Australian, and a British surfer, brought the thousands of fans that swarmed the beach to their feet, blending old-world noserides and iconic style with modern high-speed turns and speed floats. In the end, France’s Antoine Delpero came out on top as he narrowly edged out Aussie surfer Harley Ingleby with a two-wave combined score of 15.50 points.
In the Women’s final, 16-year-old American Conlogue was surfing on a higher plane as she dismantled her competition with a determined backhand attack on the lefts that earned her a slew of 8- and 7-point rides along with a gold medal.
Heading into the Billabong ISA World Surfing Games, Conlogue was coming off monumental performances this year, including silver medal at the ISA World Junior Championship in Ecuador, and a victory at the US Open of Surfing in Huntington Beach, CA. Judging from her recent competitive dominance, Conlogue has proven that she will be a formidable figure in the sport for years to come.
With her face partially shaded behind a pair of aviator sunglasses, Conlogue remained poised following her gold medal win.
“To be surfing in front of all these people is amazing. It’s been such a great event,” she said. “To be in the final I had to put it all on the line.”
Highlighting the final day’s action was the Open final. Comprised of two Americans—Floridian Cory Lopez and North Carolina native Ben Bourgeois—a Peruvian and a Frenchmen, the level of surfing in the Men’s final showcased just how technically advanced surfing has become throughout the world.
Opening up the heat with a barrage of mind-numbing turns was American Cory Lopez. Despite Lopez’s stellar rail work and progressive turns, France’s Jeremy Flores was the man to beat. Surfing like a man possessed, Flores seemed untouchable, putting his trademark low center of gravity style and lightning fast turns to good work in the final. That surfing earned him a pair of 8-point rides that the other competitors couldn’t touch as Flores went on to win the gold medal.
“I haven’t won too many contests, I’ve always done well, but I hardly ever seem to win,” he said. “For me this is huge.”
final results
FINAL Team Medals (points):
GOLD – United States – 14910
SILVER – France – 13280
BRONZE – Australia – 10996
COPPER – Hawaii – 10856
INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
Open Men
Gold: Jeremy Flores (FRA)
Silver: Cory Lopez (USA)
Bronze: Gabriel VIllarán (PER)
Copper: Ben Bourgeois (USA)
Open Women
Gold: Courtney Conlogue (USA)
Silver: Rosanne Hodge (RSA)
Bronze: Sage Erickson (USA)
Copper: Pauline Ado (FRA)
Longboard
Gold: Antoine Delpero (FRA)
Silver: Harley Ingleby (AUS)
Copper: Ben Skinner (GBR)
Bronze: Tony Silvagni (USA)
Aloha Cup
Gold: Australia
Silver: Francia
Bronze: Peru
Copper: Tahiti
FINAL TEAM STANDINGS
1 – USA – 14910 points
2 – France – 13280 points
3 – Australia – 10996 points
4 – Hawaii – 10856 points
5 – South Africa – 10666 points
6 – Peru – 10180 points
7 – Costa Rica – 9650 points
8 – Venezuela – 9040 points
9 – Brazil – 9000 points
10 – Puerto Rico – 8820 points
11 – New Zealand – 8100 points
12 – Argentina – 7160 points
13 – Tahiti – 6688 points
14 – Ecuador – 6170 points
15 – Panama – 5952 points
16 – Italy – 5670 points
17 – Mexico – 5560 points
18 – Japan – 5324 points
19 – Chile – 5208 points
20 – El Salvador – 4784 points
21 – Ireland – 4568 points
22 – Austria – 4320 points
23 – Barbados – 4128 points
24 – Germany – 4024 points
25 – UK- 3810 points
26 – Guatemala – 3696 points
27 – Switzerland – 3440 points
28 – Jamaica – 2912 points
29 – Canada – 2784 points
30 – Nicaragua – 2656 points
31 – Colombia 2544 points
32 – Trinidad & Tobago – 2240
33 – Bahamas 2240 points
34 – Rep. Dominican – 1680
35 – Aruba- 384 points